Thanks to Mark Arend for sharing.
Questions answered.
1. Can a library ban extremists from using library meeting rooms and facilities?
2. Can a public library adopt a policy forbidding the use of library meeting rooms for any political or religious purposes?
3. Can a public library limit the use of library meeting rooms and facilities to library card holders or residents of their immediate communities?
4. Can a public library require extremists to sign a contract to use library
meeting rooms and facilities?
5. Can a public library charge a fee for use of library meeting rooms or facilities?
6. Can a public library require demonstrators to obtain insurance or post a bond before they are allowed to use library meeting rooms or facilities?
7. What other types of restrictions, such as noise and location restrictions, can a public library place on extremist speakers?
8. What actions may a public library take if it believes that violence or property damage will occur if an extremist uses its meeting rooms or facilities?
9. What steps can a public library take to maintain security, peace and order at the library if an extremist uses its meeting rooms or facilities?
10. Must a public library allow extremists to hand out literature in the library?
11. May a public library regulate solicitation in its meeting rooms and facilities?
12. May a public library ban the display of offensive symbols by extremists using its meeting rooms or facilities?
13. Can a public library refuse to include extremist material from its collection?
14. Can a public library block extremist Web sites from its computers?
15. Can privately funded “public” libraries exclude extremist speakers from
their meeting rooms and facilities?
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