State law for decades has placed the director of Hennepin County's massive library system on the top shelf.
Lawmakers decided nearly 40 years ago that Hennepin should be the state's only county where applicants for the top library job needed a master's degree in library and information science.
But recent efforts to recruit a new Hennepin library director found the law resulted in a limited pool of candidates with little diversity.
So county officials asked legislators to strike the requirement and it passed with little controversy, save for objections from a group of librarians who feared the change would undercut the profession.
Their concerns were based on the demands visited upon the head of a large government department who oversees 41 branch libraries, 835 employees and an $88 million budget.
"We are not trying to take away the importance of the degree," said Hennepin County Chief Human Resources Officer Michael Rossman. "But we felt very strongly, in the long run, that we want to find the best leader whether or not they have the degree."
Hennepin County launched an extensive national search for an executive director, a position that Rossman compared to the head of a large company. A screening group of county administrators, library board members and Friends of the Library officials came up with a list of several candidates. But officials weren't comfortable hiring any of them, and the search continues.
"We are trying to break down real or perceived barriers that might keep the best applicants from these positions," Rossman said. "These type of barriers can stop people of color and diversity from ever getting a chance to interview."