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RE: AAAS 2010 pricing ... and still extra for ScienceXpress
The UC Libraries agree that it is outmoded and out of step for
AAAS to charge a separate fee for Science Xpress. We have
encouraged AAAS for many years to drop this practice, which no
other publisher adopts. The price of Science is already high for
many of us, on top of which this fee imposes an additional
penalty. The current economic environment, in which so many
providers are holding the line on pricing, offers AAAS a terrific
opportunity to revisit this policy and align itself with the rest
of the scientific and scholarly publishing world in making
as-soon-as-publishable articles a standard feature of its
electronic publishing program.
AAAS colleagues, your subscribers worldwide would welcome such a
positive development.
Ivy Anderson
Director of Collections
California Digital Library
University of California, Office of the President
(510) 987-0334 (voice)
(510) 287-3825 (fax)
ivy.anderson@ucop.edu
http://cdlib.org
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
[mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of
bernd-christoph.kaemper@ub.uni-stuttgart.de
Sent: Wednesday, July 29, 2009 5:03 PM
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Subject: AAAS 2010 pricing ... and still extra for ScienceXpress
Dear colleagues,
AAAS informed us some time ago, that prices for site licenses for
Science online would increase 3.8% for both their global FTE and
usage-based rates.
There will be no price increase for the remote site fee ($400),
no price increase on Science Signaling (last years 15% discount
for new customers is extended another year for *all* customers),
no price increase for the archive, Science Classic, no price
increase for ScienceXpress.
What I cannot understand is why AAAS still charges separately for
electronic prepublications (ScienceXpress), while as far as I
know all other publishers consider "online first" as part of
their normal service.
To maximize the annoying factor of this policy, AAAS has chosen
to charge a flat rate for this service instead of a certain
percentage of the base rate for Science online.
In contrast to societies like AIP who have used tiered pricing to
make journals more affordable (or keep them affordable) for
smaller institutions, the AAAS policy has the effect that many
libraries of smaller institutions cannot afford or justify the
extra investment to provide these prepublications (which can
appear 8-12 weeks online before regular publication in the
journal).
E.g., in 2009, the list price for FTE based institutions was
$2310 (< 1000 FTE)
$3870 (1000...2999)
$5440 (3000...11999)
$6990 (12000...24999)
$8540 (25000...39999)
$9930 (40000...49999)
$12430 (50000...75000)
while Usage-based pricing ranged from
$9265 (10000...24999 FT downloads)
$11435 (25000...49999)
$13325 (50000...89999)
$15715 (90000...200000) to
$23935 above
ScienceXpress comes at a flat rate of $825 (or alternatively as a
membership benefit for AAAS members), this is 12% of the site
license price for a medium to large site of 12000...25000 FTE, or
9% or lower for usage based sites. For the smallest institutions
(< 1000 FTE), however, the price for this add-on amounts to
already 36% surcharge.
Best regards,
Bernd-Christoph Kaemper, Stuttgart University Library