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AAP-PSP Statement - Cornyn Bill
Of possible interest.
_________________________________________
NEWS RELEASE
Media Contacts:
Barbara Meredith
bmeredith@publishers.org
Scholarly Publishers Oppose Senate Bill Unwarranted measure would
have severe consequences for publishers, scientific societies,
researchers, and U.S. taxpayers
New York, May 9, 2006 - Professional and scholarly publishers
firmly oppose S.2695, the "Federal Research Public Access Act of
2006" introduced by Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) and Sen. Joseph
Lieberman (D-CT). The proposed legislation would require the
majority of recipients of U.S. federal research agency funds to
make their findings free within six months of publication.
Publishers argue that the legislation, if passed, will seriously
jeopardize the integrity of the scientific publishing process,
and is a duplicative effort that places an unwarranted burden on
research investigators.
According to the publishers, the provisions of S.2695 threaten to
undermine the essential value of peer review by removing the
publishers' incentive and ability to sustain investments in a
range of scientific, technical, and medical publishing
activities. The proposed legislation comes at a time when
increased public access to government-funded research is already
occurring in a voluntary and highly effective manner through a
variety of publisher-initiated mechanisms and cooperative
approaches.
"Full public access to scientific articles based on government
funding has always been central to our mission. Competition
demands it and timely access to quality peer-reviewed journals is
fundamental to the scientific process," said Dr. Brian D.
Crawford, chairman of the Professional Scholarly Publishing
Division of the Association of American Publishers (AAP-PSP), and
a Senior Vice President with the American Chemical Society.
Americans have easy access to scientific and medical literature
through public libraries, state universities, existing
private-sector online database, as well as through their
professional, academic, or business affiliations, low-cost online
individual article sales, and innovative health literacy
initiatives such as patientINFORM.
"The Cornyn-Lieberman bill would create unnecessary costs for
taxpayers, place an unwarranted burden on research investigators,
and expropriate the value-added investments made by scientific
publishers-many of them not-for-profit associations who depend on
publishing income to support pursuit of their scholarly missions,
including education and outreach for the next generation of U.S.
scientists," continued Dr. Crawford. "If enacted, S.2695 could
well have the unintended consequence of compromising or
destroying the independent system of peer review that ensures the
integrity of the very research the U.S. Government is trying to
support and disseminate."
Dr. Crawford explained that publishers invest hundreds of
millions of dollars each year in publishing and disseminating
peer-reviewed journals. These investments ensure the quality of
U.S. taxpayer-supported scientific research by subjecting all
articles to a rigorous technical review by experts in specialized
fields prior to publication and pay for the development of
technological innovations that enable broad web dissemination.
"Mandating that journal articles be made freely available on
government websites so soon after their publication will be a
powerful disincentive for publishers to continue these
substantial investments," explained Dr. Crawford. He said
publishers are concerned that S.2695 would result in a
significant loss of revenue from subscriptions, licensing, and
individual article sales, thereby making it difficult for them to
sustain and recoup the investments they make in support of
scientific communication.
The proposed bill was introduced on the first anniversary of the
National Institutes of Health's (NIH) adoption of its Public
Access policy, which encourages the posting of journal articles
based on NIH-funded research within 12 months of publication on
its existing PubMedCentral database -- a policy that gained
PSP/AAP member publisher support and yet remains in its early
stages of government-led implementation. A departure from the
NIH's voluntary approach, the Cornyn/Lieberman bill would mandate
that 11 federal agencies create new systems and data repositories
to enforce internet posting of government funded research within
six months of publication. As the NIH's implementation of the
policy has not yet progressed to the point where its impact can
be assessed, publishers view the introduction of the
Cornyn-Lieberman proposal as premature.
"No evidentiary record exists, and no impact studies have been
conducted, to document the long-term cost to tax payers of
government agencies developing yet another system to promote
public access. Moreover, no consideration has been given to what
the impact of this government mandate will be on publishers and
scholarly societies ability to maintain their broad base of
library and other customers worldwide and invest in independent
peer review systems." said Allan Adler, the Association of
American Publishers' Vice President for Legal and Government
Affairs. He cautioned, "Responsible major U.S. government policy
revisions must be based on a solid, researched understanding of
the long-range impact of any policy changes. This perspective is
conspicuously absent from the proposed legislation, which would
cause severe harm to the publishing community, scientific
societies, and taxpayers."
Mr. Adler said that publishers and scholarly societies urge that
an independent study be conducted to measure the potential impact
that any changes to the existing NIH policy or the adoption of
the proposed Cornyn-Lieberman legislation would have on
scientific quality, the peer review process, and the viability of
numerous journals and societies--as well as the additional costs
that would need to be shouldered by taxpayers.
About the Association of American Publishers
(AAP)The Association of American Publishers is the national trade
association of the U.S. book publishing industry. AAP's
approximately 300 members include most of the major commercial
book publishers in the United States, as well as smaller and
non-profit publishers, university presses and scholarly
societies. The protection of intellectual property rights in all
media, the defense of intellectual freedom and the promotion of
reading and literacy are among the Association's primary
concerns.# # #
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