A number of years ago, a young man came to the reference desk with a question for the Social Science, Philosophy & Religion department librarians. He asked me why books about gay men were next to the shelves with incest and sexual bondage books. He said that wasn't how he was at all. His face showed deep hurt and from his expression, I read that as a gay man who came of age in the 21st century, he had never experienced the kind of marginalization, ostracization, and ridicule I had seen my friends fight when I was his age. It had likely never occurred to him that the Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) itself would assign lesbians, gay men, bisexual people and transgender people (LGBT people) to a call number, 301.4157, as a kind of "abnormal sexual relations" (modified 14th edition of the DDC). But, as a librarian and classificationist, I knew that earlier call numbers had been more demeaning.

That patron encounter, one of thousands I've had in my fifteen years as a reference librarian LAPL, affected me deeply and I resolved that when the appropriate time came, I would do my best to implement reclassification of LAPL library materials to the current version of the Dewey Decimal Classification call numbers applicable to LGBT life. While we librarians can't take away the history of discrimination and neglect of civil rights of LGBT people, we can reflect the world increasingly made right and fair in how we group our books, DVDs and other materials on the library shelf.

Library catalogers, classificationists and LGBT academic community continue to debate how materials on LGBT life should be represented in libraries. The time may come when there is general agreement that sexual orientation does not adequately or appropriately represent the LGBT community and a new classification structure will be created. As progress is made on that front, LAPL will bring its collection into the currently agreed upon classification.

With that, I invite you to review the small, but growing, reclassified LGBT collection at Social Science, Philosophy & Religion department at Central Library and at your local branches. Thanks go to the heroic efforts of the LAPL Catalog department, the cooperation of Science & Technology department which collects works on sexuality, and the LAPL LGBT Services Committee. Our many dedicated clerks who affix new call number stickers, revise penciled entries and move the books from the old location to the new are also to be thanked in this venture.

And the new numbers from the 22nd edition of the DDC (with LAPL modifications) are

306.76 - Sexual orientation

306.762 – Asexuality

306.764 - Heterosexuality

306.765 - Bisexuality

306.766 - Homosexuality

306.7662 - Male homosexuality (gay men)

306.7663 - Lesbianism

306.768 - Transgenderism

306.7681 - Transsexualism