• PRINT EDITIONS
  • | CONTACT
  • | TEL: 304.645.1206 | E: hello@wvdn.com
Saturday, November 22, 2025
West Virginia Daily News
  • Home
  • News
  • Community
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Government
    • All
    • City
    • County
    • State
    Governor Patrick Morrisey speaks during his press briefing on Wednesday, Jan. 29 after meeting with House and Senate leaders.

    Morrisey Sees Unique Opportunity to Grow West Virginia Economically

    Shelley Moore Capito

    Capito Votes to Confirm Sean Duffy for Transportation Secretary

    Capito, Whitehouse Announce EPW Subcommittee Assignments for the 119th Congress

    Senate President Randy Smith Names Leadership Team, Major Committee Chairmen for 87th Legislature

    Speaker Hanshaw Announces Plans for Upcoming 87th Legislature

    Miller’s Statement on Being Sworn in to her Fourth Term in Congress

    Trending Tags

    • Greenbrier County
    • Politics
    • Senate
    • Monroe County
    • White Sulphur Springs
    • Rainelle
    • Lewisburg
    • Alderson
    • City
    • County
    • State
  • Entertainment
  • PUBLIC NOTICES
    • PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICES
    • PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENTS
    • STATEWIDE LEGALS SEARCH
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Community
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Government
    • All
    • City
    • County
    • State
    Governor Patrick Morrisey speaks during his press briefing on Wednesday, Jan. 29 after meeting with House and Senate leaders.

    Morrisey Sees Unique Opportunity to Grow West Virginia Economically

    Shelley Moore Capito

    Capito Votes to Confirm Sean Duffy for Transportation Secretary

    Capito, Whitehouse Announce EPW Subcommittee Assignments for the 119th Congress

    Senate President Randy Smith Names Leadership Team, Major Committee Chairmen for 87th Legislature

    Speaker Hanshaw Announces Plans for Upcoming 87th Legislature

    Miller’s Statement on Being Sworn in to her Fourth Term in Congress

    Trending Tags

    • Greenbrier County
    • Politics
    • Senate
    • Monroe County
    • White Sulphur Springs
    • Rainelle
    • Lewisburg
    • Alderson
    • City
    • County
    • State
  • Entertainment
  • PUBLIC NOTICES
    • PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICES
    • PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENTS
    • STATEWIDE LEGALS SEARCH
No Result
View All Result
West Virginia Daily News
No Result
View All Result
Left to right, Monika Jaensson (Jaensson Law, judge), Brianna Duckworth-Kazner (Go Duck Media, judge), Sean O’Kelly (XAPP Design, judge), Connor Golden (United Bank, judge) Brian Dennis (Fayetteville Series), Natasha Zoe (JarHead Kitchen), Elizabeth Love (NRG Video) Alexander Durand (Mountain Table), Isaiah Beckett (10 House Music), Devon Fitzgerald (NRGRDA/WV Hive), Amy Showalter (NRGRDA/WV Hive, and Matt Nichols (NRGRDA/WV Hive).

Winners of Southern WV Business Idea Pitch Competition Celebrate with Cash Prizes, Technical Assistance and Potential Growth

November 21, 2025

Governor Patrick Morrisey Appoints Gerald Titus to West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals

November 21, 2025

Greenbrier County Public Library Fund Drive Dec. 4

November 21, 2025
L to R: Angel and Mike Moore, representing Peoples Bank, and Charlie and Sheila Callison representing the local Elks lodge, selecting winter coats to purchase for the project.

Lewisburg Elks Provides Winter Wear to Ronceverte Elementary Students

November 21, 2025

Trump signs bill requiring DOJ release of Epstein files

November 21, 2025

Tags

Art BU Business Carnegie Hall Charleston college Community County Court Dear Abby Dr EPA Fair Family Featured Gov Grant Greenbrier Greenbrier County Greenbrier East health Home Justice Land Last Lewisburg Local Man New NY Obituary Plan Project Ronceverte School Son State The Greenbrier University US VA Virginia West Virginia White Sulphur Springs WV
QR Code

Some West Virginia lawmakers are interested in banning books. Just don’t call it a book ban

by Ian Karbal
in State News
December 14, 2022
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
28
SHARES
201
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Capitol was busy last Monday, as state lawmakers met for some of their final public discussions before the legislative session begins in January. In chambers and committee rooms, they gathered to hear about abuse in state-run psychiatric facilities, the state’s budget priorities, and the overburdened foster care system. 

But around the Capitol, they were met with posters posing a provocative question: “Kid porn in WV Schools?” 

Next to the Senate chambers, several members of an unnamed group using the hashtag #ProtectOurChildren sat at a table. They talked with passing lawmakers and handed out flyers showing explicit and cartoon-like illustrations of sexual activity. They said West Virginia kids could access the drawings in public school libraries, but the examples came from books in a Wood County public library, and not a school. 

Post-it notes on the group’s posters promised more information to lawmakers who could attend an open meeting held, oddly enough, in the Agricultural Commissioner’s personal office, but only three showed up to hear from the group’s leader, South Charleston resident Dennis Westover. 

At the meeting, Westover showed slides that included a children’s book about Ruby Bridges, the first Black child to desegregate a Louisiana elementary school, a biography of Ruth Bader Ginsburg aimed at young adults, and an illustrated book starring a child wearing androgynous clothing. These topics, Westover said, should be banned because he finds them objectionable, uncomfortable, or antithetical to his faith.

“I am a Christian and my worldview is no longer expressed in the schools,” Westover said. “I don’t want the LGBTQ worldview expressed in the schools either.”

Westover had a small, but receptive audience who were eager to discuss how to message book banning efforts to the public. 

“You gotta be careful, because as soon as you try to ban something, you’re declared racist or whatever and all that stuff,” said incoming state Senator Jay Taylor, R-Preston. “We’d be torched if — we can’t do book banning. It’s gotta be about ‘age appropriate.’”

On a local level, multiple West Virginia schools and libraries have come under fire for material made available to young people based on themes of sexuality and race. Nationally the free expression nonprofit PEN America has found that books are being banned from schools and libraries at a record rate, most dealing with LGBTQ themes.

“We’re seeing this narrative here in West Virginia and we’re seeing it nationally,” said Eli Baumwell, advocacy director at the West Virginia ACLU. “There are some people who have forgotten that we have a fundamental right to expression.”

Westover’s group hasn’t yet put forward actual legislative language for their proposals. But once they do, the bill will need a sponsor and support from leaders of the GOP supermajority to get on a committee agenda and, ultimately, the floor.

The three lawmakers who showed up for the planning meeting — Taylor, Sen. Michael Azinger, R-Wood, and Del. Margitta Mazzochi, R-Logan — don’t have that kind of power or position. But at least one powerful lawmaker was involved: Sen. Patricia Rucker, R-Jefferson, arranged the meeting after being contacted by Westover. Rucker is the former Senate education chair who is expected to be put in charge of a new select committee dealing with charters and other alternatives to public schools.

Rucker said she supports the notion of banning “explicit and obscene” material in schools, but was unaware Westover’s group also wanted to ban books about subjects they find distasteful.

“The role of the Legislature is not picking out curriculum, not dictating and micromanaging the instruction, but there should be parameters,” Rucker said. “It’s gotta be material that is appropriate to the age.”

Last year, however, she was the lead sponsor of a bill that could have restricted conversations around similar materials in West Virginia public schools: the measure passed both chambers but didn’t become law on a procedural issue. Rucker contended that her bill was never intended to stymie such conversations entirely. She also said that she doesn’t believe there is anything inherently inappropriate about, for example, LGBTQ issues, but that a line should be drawn around descriptions of sex and sexual organs.

In the meeting earlier this week, Sens. Taylor and Azinger discussed how to frame a potential school book banning bill. One suggestion was writing a bill making sure all material in schools is “age appropriate.” Another involved adapting the language of Florida’s so-called “Don’t Say Gay” law that outlawed discussions of gender and sexuality in kindergarten through third grade classrooms, and in any way that isn’t “age appropriate” for older grades.

Senate Education Chair Amy Grady, R-Mason, said she would consider addressing sexually explicit or obscene material in school libraries “if I see evidence that it is a problem in West Virginia schools,” though she noted she had not yet seen that evidence.

“I’m not aware of any meaningful discussions among the Republican caucus about any potential bills to regulate the content in public libraries in the entire two years I’ve been there,” said House of Delegates spokesperson Ann Ali in an email, adding that House Speaker Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay, and House Education Chairman Joe Ellington, R-Mercer, wouldn’t be commenting on the issue. Last year Hanshaw, Ellington and Grady, as well as Senate President Craig Blair, R-Berkeley, voted for Rucker’s bill that could have censored classroom discussions.

While leadership remains mum, other lawmakers seem open to the idea of considering an effective book ban. Sen. Jack Woodrum, R-Summers, had concerns after speaking with Westover’s group, and said he wouldn’t be surprised if the subject came up in the Legislature.

“If you had the news on this morning, you’d have seen a discussion of kids’ books sort of promoting delaying puberty and sex changes and that kind of thing,” Woodrum said. “The topic’s gonna be around: what is the content aimed at young children?”

Westover, the man spearheading the grassroots effort to bring the issue to the attention of lawmakers, made national headlines last year after getting arrested weeks after the Jan. 6 riot in Washington, D.C. outside the then-fenced off Capitol building with a handgun, his will, and a list of lawmakers from a group called “stop the steal.” He said he had no intention to harm anyone and pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge for carrying an unlicensed pistol. His guilty plea was withdrawn after he completed the terms of a deferred sentencing agreement with community service.

Back in the Capitol, Westover ended his presentation to the lawmakers and Agriculture Commissioner Kent Leonhardt. All said they were supportive of his efforts.  

“I’m with this guy, but it’s not like — this has nothing to do with my office,” Leonhardt said. “I don’t want this tied to the Department of Agriculture.”

As he left his small meeting, Westover was elated.

“Now I have a couple of senators,” he said.

While Westover was making his presentation, upstairs, other members of his group lobbied passing lawmakers. When interims ended, Westover estimated they reached roughly half of the state’s senators and a quarter of delegates.

As he wound his way through the Capitol halls, back to the table where his volunteers were handing out materials to lawmakers, he was recognized by Del. Kathie Crouse, R-Putnam. The two embraced, and as Crouse walked away, Westover asked, “Can I list you as with us, that it’s time to get rid of this junk in schools?”

Crouse said yes. Later, she said “Our children need to be taught the main subjects. They don’t need to be taught an agenda.”

This story was originally published by Mountain State Spotlight. Get stories like this delivered to your email inbox once a week; sign up for the free newsletter at https://mountainstatespotlight.org/newsletter

Reach reporter Ian Karbal at iankarbal@mountainstatespotlight.org

This page is available to subscribers. Click here to sign in or get access.

Ian Karbal

Tags: LawUSVirginiaWest Virginia

Related

State News

Capito Announces West Virginia’s Approval for Broadband Funding

November 21, 2025
Shelley Moore Capito
State News

Capito Applauds Trump Administration’s Proposed Rule to Update WOTUS Definition

November 17, 2025
State News

Treasurer Pack Releases 2026 Legislative Priorities

November 17, 2025
State News

WV Superintendent of Schools Elected to National Board

November 17, 2025
Load More
[adrotate group="11"]
Next Post
West Virginia to become first state in the country to digitize vehicle titles

West Virginia to become first state in the country to digitize vehicle titles

West Virginia Daily News

The West Virginia Daily News has been serving the Greenbrier Valley and southeastern West Virginia since 1852.

Learn more

Information

  • Home
  • Subscribe to the WV Daily News
  • Grants & Assistance
  • Submit News and Events
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ethics, Standards & Corrections
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2022 The West Virginia Daily News, powered by ECENT CORPORATION. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Menu Item
  • _____________
  • Home
  • Editions
  • News
    • Local News
    • National News
    • State News
    • Crime
    • Business and Tech
  • Community
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
    • Local Sports
    • High School Sports
    • College Sports
  • Government
    • City
    • County
    • State
  • Entertainment
  • Public Notices

Copyright © 2022 The West Virginia Daily News, powered by ECENT CORPORATION. All Rights Reserved.