State Librarian Plans to Keep Fighting Censorship in Retirement
Sara Jones says she sometimes feels like sheās fighting an inferno with a spray bottle. As the Washington State Librarian, she is determined to stop censorship in libraries and says she plans to continue battling book suppression when she retires in a few years.
āI donāt want to be hyperbolic, but I think itās a real existential threat to libraries,ā says Jones, who graduated from the in 1999 with a master’s degree in library and information science. āI am putting as much energy into it as I possibly can. I donāt think itās something thatās just going to go away. I think itās got a stronghold in all parts of our country.ā
Jones has worked in various libraries for more than 30 years and previously served as the Nevada State Librarian from 2000-07. She says her work as the Washington State Librarian will be her last, but she plans to be a consultant for libraries nationwide in retirement.
āI think thereās some real work ahead of us to make sure that libraries arenāt erased because people donāt want people to read certain materials,ā Jones says. āI think itās not only a threat to libraries, but I think itās a huge threat to our democracy. We need to really activate a voter group to stand up and support their library.ā
From Law to Libraries
Jones always loved libraries growing up but never imagined she would work in one. Her plan in college was to be a lawyer, but after getting married and moving to a small town, it wasnāt in the cards.Ā So, she decided to give teaching a try, a career her sisters and other family members loved. But after teaching for one year, she saw an ad for a part-time childrenās library assistant, and she made the leap. āI fell in love with library work,ā says Jones. āIt was way better than teaching because I didnāt have papers to grade or difficult parents. Everything was good about it. I couldāve happily been a childrenās librarian my entire career.ā
Library management job opportunities eventually came along, and Jones decided to go for it. One job in particular, a library director position in Nevada, required a master’s degree in library scienceāsomething Jones didnāt have. She accepted the job with the promise that she would get her degree. To do that, she turned to Syracuse for help.
A Top-Tier School
Syracuseās reputation as a top-tier school led Jones to enroll. She also loved the Universityās hybrid in-person and online program that offered flexibility for a working professionalās life, a perk not all colleges offered in the 90s.Ā āI was already working full-time as a library director, so I wanted the best education possible to enhance my experience and opportunities. Syracuse provided that to me,ā says Jones. āThe quality of education I got at Syracuse gave me a lot of confidence.ā
Jones hopes other Syracuse students and graduates feel that same sense of confidence. If she could offer any advice, she would tell students to feel proud of themselves and always be willing and ready to accept new challenges.Ā āBeing accepted into the iSchool is a big deal. You are there because you are smart, talented and ambitious. Embrace it,ā she says. āThe best advice I received from mentors was: āGo for it! You can do it!āā