The Library is for Everyone - But Our Commission Just Voted Otherwise
At the July 21 Commission meeting, Anderson County had a choice: defend our libraries as inclusive public spaces — or hand them over to a censorship agenda wrapped in conspiracy and culture war. Despite powerful testimony from residents, the Commission chose the latter. They voted to appoint a man who "absolutely agrees" with a known book banner — just because he “goes about it differently.” This wasn’t leadership. It was performance. And our libraries, our staff, and our community deserve better.
The Bill is Coming Due: This Is Why We Do The Work
The cuts aren't abstract. They're here, and they're hurting us now. When Washington freezes funds, local schools like Oak Ridge lose essential programs, leaving families scrambling. We're showing up anyway, redefining what's possible—even in counties with a fraction of the resources. Because this work isn't about permission; it's about commitment.
When the Fire Starters Want the Keys
Two commissioners who’ve worked to censor our libraries now want to lead them. Unless someone else steps up, they’ll get the keys. We’ve said it before: you don’t put an arsonist in charge of the fire station.
This is how public institutions are dismantled — not all at once, but from the inside out.
You Don’t Put an Arsonist in Charge of the Fire Station
After leading last year’s attacks on our public libraries, Commissioner Anthony Allen now wants to chair the Anderson County Library Board — the very institution he tried to undermine. If selected, he would control the meeting agendas, lead discussions, and steer the future of our libraries. This isn’t about good governance. It’s about power and control. We have two chances to stop this — and the first is July 10.
We Showed Up.
Nearly 1,000 people lined the Oak Ridge Turnpike to defend something too many take for granted: the right to speak up when power goes unchecked. This was a response to fear. To intimidation. To Trump-style politics that treat dissent as disloyalty.
But East Tennessee showed otherwise.
No on ICE: Norris Chooses Community Over Fear
When a resolution to support ICE’s 287(g) program quietly appeared on the Norris City Council agenda, the community didn’t stay quiet. They showed up, filled the room, and made it clear: not in our town. The result? A unanimous vote to remove the resolution from the agenda - and a powerful reminder of what happens when people pay attention.