Melissa Sanders
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melissarsanders.com
Melissa Sanders
@melissarsanders.com
Postgraduate MLIS Student with a Passion for Information Accessibility and Support for Safe Community Library Spaces
melissarsanders.com
5/ Attend and give feedback at strategic planning and policy meetings (so important).
6/ Show up at city council/county supervisor meetings or send comments when issues arise.
7/ USE your library card and check out books (numbers matter).

There are many more ways. List/comment if you have them.
July 7, 2025 at 3:38 PM
2/ Request books by marginalized authors or independent publishers.
3/ Ask your librarian how you are able to support issues that come up (book bans, complaints, etc.).
4/ Join and participate in your local Friends of the Library group (or start one!).
5/ Go to library board meetings.
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July 7, 2025 at 3:34 PM
Yes, this is the most disconcerting. The amount of people who have no data literacy when it comes to online information. This isn’t a partisan issue. All around, people do not know how to read and process information. This is just one of the main reasons why we are here.
March 30, 2025 at 6:32 PM