FTLF Blog
By Rory Steele, Executive Director, Freedom to Learn Foundation
The Freedom to Learn Foundation (FTLF) is honored to stand shoulder to shoulder with a powerful coalition of literary and educational organizations in Penguin Random House v. Menke, challenging Iowa’s sweeping school book ban law, Senate File 496 (SF 496).
On July 24, 2025, we signed a robust amicus brief alongside nine other organizations—including the Association of American Publishers, American Booksellers for Free Expression, the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, and the Independent Book Publishers Association—urging reversal of this unconstitutional law.
SF 496, signed into law in May 2023, broadly bans any book in K–12 school libraries that contains descriptions of sexual acts or references to gender identity or sexual orientation (for students through sixth grade). It has already triggered massive book removals—hundreds of titles by revered authors such as Toni Morrison, George Orwell, James Joyce, Margaret Atwood, John Green, Jodi Picoult, and Malinda Lo have been swept off shelves, regardless of context or educational merit.
In March 2025, U.S. District Judge Stephen Locher reinstated a federal injunction blocking SF 496’s enforcement, declaring it “likely facially unconstitutional” and highlighting that it had removed books “not pornographic or obscene” from school libraries across Iowa. This is the second time Judge Locher has blocked the law—the first injunction was issued in December 2023, briefly reversed by the Eighth Circuit, and then reinstated for more constitutional review after remand under Moody v. NetChoice.
With this amicus brief, the Freedom to Learn Foundation takes a stand for:
Joining this respected coalition brings our mission to life:
These efforts are urgent because censorship is spreading rapidly: more than 30 states have introduced or passed book ban bills since 2023, many using copycat language designed to criminalize librarians, defund public libraries, and impose centralized lists of “prohibited” titles. Without a coordinated response, these policies risk becoming entrenched and normalized.
By supporting broad coalitions of educators, librarians, students, and civil rights advocates, we are not just reacting to censorship—we are creating a national framework for intellectual freedom that prioritizes diverse voices, respects professional expertise, and affirms every student’s right to explore ideas without fear.
The stakes could not be higher: if SF 496 is allowed to stand, it will become a model for other states to follow—not only banning books, but chilling free expression and undermining professional librarianship.
We invite you to join this fight:
Follow and share our mission: Join us on social media to stay connected and help us amplify this movement:
This fight is about more than one law—it’s about whether we allow censorship to decide what future generations can read, learn, and imagine. By standing with our coalition partners, the Freedom to Learn Foundation is committed to defending intellectual freedom and educational equity wherever they are threatened.
We are grateful to everyone who has stood with us so far, and we need your voice now more than ever. Speak out, share this message, and join us in building a future where every student has the freedom to explore ideas without fear. Together, we can turn the tide against censorship and protect the stories that shape a free and democratic society.
With appreciation,
Rory Steele
Executive Director
Freedom to Learn Foundation