
Library News from Across the Commonwealth and the Nation*
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Local News đď¸
MBLC Starts Federal Program Rebuild â MBLC Press Release (12/5/2025)
On December 3, 2025, the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) announced it had reinstated all federal grants which were terminated due to Executive Order 14238 signed by President Trump on March 14, 2025. The goal of the executive order was to eliminate IMLS “to the maximum extent consistent with applicable law.”
Related:
- Library Agency Reinstates Grants Canceled by Trump AdministrationâThe New York Times (12/5/2025)
- Library grants restored after court order â The Hill (12/4/2025)
- Libraries and museums get federal funding back after Trump cutsâ NPR(12/4/2025)
Blandford receives $5.4M library grant â The Reminder (12/10/2025)
BLANDFORD â The Porter Memorial Library in Blandford received word earlier this month that the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners has awarded a $5.4 million Small Population library construction grant to the town of Blandford.
New legislation aims to strengthen protections for school and public libraries â Athol Daily News (12/23/2025)
With book-banning attempts on the rise nationwide, Massachusetts legislators are working to strengthen protections for school and public libraries with âAn Act Regarding Free Expression.â Link to full article at Athol Daily
Plans for new East Springfield Library Branch submitted to state â Mass Live (12/31/2025)
SPRINGFIELD â The city has moved one step closer to replacing the East Springfield Branch Library. Designs for a new building are complete.
Link to full article at MassLive
Note: This project is being supported by funding from the MBLCâs Massachusetts Public Library Construction Program.
Who on Cape Cod was recognized for human rights work? âWe rise by lifting each otherâ â Cape Cod Times (12/11/2025)
HYANNIS â Harriet Jerusha Korim’s voice radiated across the room as she led a chorus of “This Little Light of Mine” during the Barnstable County Human Rights Advisory Commission 2025 Human Rights Day Celebration Breakfast. Osterville Librarian Cyndy Cotton, and Hyannis Librarian Antonia Stephens joined hands as they headed to the podium to accept the Rosenthal Award at the Barnstable County Human Rights Advisory Commission’s awards ceremony in Hyannis on December 10, 2025
On the Infinite Lives of the Library â Literary Hub (12/4/2025)
One might say that a libraryâs most abundant resourceâwhat it lends most freelyâis not books and information but time. Time to think, breathe, be, and become. Last spring, in exchange for my service as writer-in-residence, the historic Concord Free Public Library in Concord, Massachusetts lent me six months and the use of a private office upstairs in a refurbished 300-year-old house-turned-working wing just off the Childrenâs Room. The space had everything a writer could want: a desk, comfy chair for reading, privacy, and good light.
National News đď¸
The Supreme Court Just Opened the Door to a New Era of Book Bans â Time Magazine (12/17/2025)
Imagine that you decided to go to your local library to check out a book, but you couldnât find it on the shelf. You ask the librarian for help locating it, but they inform you itâs not availableânot because someone else has checked it out, but because the government has physically removed it after deciding they donât want you to read it.
This isnât the plot of a dystopian novel, itâs the reality that the U.S. Supreme Court has allowed in its recent decision to not hear arguments in the book ban case: Leila Green Little et al. v. LlanoCounty.
US librarians tackle âmanufactured crisisâ of book bans to protect LGBTQ+ rights â The Guardian (12/15/2025)
In at least half a dozen states, librarians have joined forces with civil rights groups to oppose book bans, often facing personal and professional repercussions
Link to article on The Guardian
More Than âDusty Booksâ: Why School Libraries Are Essential Infrastructure (Opinion) â Education Week (12/10/2025)
Itâs a strategic mistake to forget librarians when combating learning loss.
Supreme Court declines to hear appeal on Texas book ban case that allows officials to remove objectionable books from libraries â PBS (12/9/2025)
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) â The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear an appeal on a Texas free speech case that allowed local officials to remove books deemed objectionable from public libraries.
NASA’s Largest Library Is Closing Amid Staff and Lab Cuts â The New York Times (12/31/2025)
Holdings from the library at the Goddard Space Flight Center, which includes unique documents from the early 20th century to the Soviet space race, will be warehoused or thrown out.
Library Agency Reinstates Grants Canceled by Trump Administration â The New York Times (12/5/2025)
The Institute of Museum and Library Services restored the funding after a federal court ruled that moves to dismantle the agency were unlawful.
Related:
- Library grants restored after court order â The Hill (12/4/2025)
- Libraries and museums get federal funding back after Trump cutsâ NPR(12/4/2025)
Book distributor shutting down deals logistical blow to libraries â NPR (12/29/2025)
Baker and Taylor is among a few companies that act as the distribution middle man between libraries and publishers. The company’s announcement that it is shutting down is a blow to librarians.
The cultural works becoming public domain in 2026, from Betty Boop to Nancy Drewâ NPR (12/26/2025)
A new year means a new parade of classic characters and works entering the public domain.
Under U.S. law, the copyright on thousands of creations from 1930 â including films, books, musical compositions and more â will expire at the stroke of midnight on Jan. 1, 2026, meaning they will be free to use, share and adapt after nearly a century.
The Most Popular Books in US Public Libraries in 2025 â Book Riot (12/19/2025)
What were the most popular books checked out in US libraries in 2025? Here are the top fiction and nonfiction titles across 40 libraries.
Related:
- Genre fiction and female authors top U.S. libraries’ most-borrowed lists in 2025 â NPR (12/29/2025)
This Artist Put 2,500 of Her Favorite Books in a Massive Rotating Library on Miami Beach â Smithsonian Magazine (12/8/2025)
The 20-foot-tall installation, titled âLibrary of Us,â featured titles that hold personal meaning for British artist Es Devlinâwho invited visitors to sit on nearby benches and read.
*Links provided to external (non-MBLC) news stories are done so as a convenience and for informational purposes only; they do not constitute an endorsement or an approval by the MBLC. MBLC bears no responsibility for the accuracy, legality, or content of the external site or for that of subsequent links. Contact the external site for answers to questions regarding its content.
