FW: Open access news

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From: Goldman, Ava (Ava_Goldman@CalPERS.CA.GOV)
Date: Tue Sep 07 2004 - 10:36:56 PDT


Subject: FW: Open access news
Date: Tue, 7 Sep 2004 10:36:56 -0700
Message-ID: <781B30BA0EB0904F8203EC15339A3B69FF51E2@hqk110.calpers.ca.gov>
From: "Goldman, Ava" <Ava_Goldman@CalPERS.CA.GOV>

Good morning,
Here is the latest legislative news on open access to biomedical
literature. From the ALA Legislative News. Permission given by Aline
Soules.

Association of College and Research Libraries supports open access to
National Institutes of Health funded research (from Ray English, Chair,
ACRL Scholarly Communications Committee, Ray.English@oberlin.edu)
<mailto:Ray.English@oberlin.edu>

The Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) strongly
supports reforms that will make federally funded biomedical research
openly
accessible and available on line and at no extra cost to the American
public.

ACRL has sent letters to Dr. Elias A. Zerhouni, director of the National

Institutes of Health (NIH) and to members of Congress encouraging them
to
ensure that peer-reviewed articles on taxpayer-funded research at NIH
become fully accessible. The letter to Dr. Zerhouni is available online
at
http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlissues/scholarlycomm/nihltr.htm
<http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlissues/scholarlycomm/nihltr.htm> .

In addition, ACRL has joined the Alliance for Taxpayer Access, an
informal
coalition of libraries, patient and health policy advocates, and other
stakeholders who support reforms that will make publicly funded
biomedical
research accessible to the public. ACRL also encourages libraries and
institutions to join the Alliance.

Today the vast majority of research funded with public dollars is
available
only through increasingly costly journal subscriptions (often costing
thousands of dollars annually for a single journal), institutional
licenses
(more than a million dollars annually for many universities), or per
article purchases (as much as $30 per article). Alliance supporters
believe the current system of subscription-based access to scientific
research is economically unsustainable and effectively impedes the
dissemination and
use of research that has been paid for with public dollars.

Libraries and institutions wishing to join the Alliance for Taxpayer
Access
will find more information on its website: www.taxpayeraccess.org
<http://www.taxpayeraccess.org> . A
membership form is available at:
http://www.taxpayeraccess.org/member.html
<http://www.taxpayeraccess.org/member.html>

4. An Open Letter to the U.S. Congress Signed by 25 Nobel Prize Winners
August 26, 2004
Dear Members of Congress:

As scientists and Nobel laureates, we are writing today to express our
strong support for the House Appropriations Committee's recent direction
to NIH to develop an open, taxpayer access policy requiring that a
complete electronic text of any manuscript reporting work supported by
NIH grants or contracts be supplied to the National Library of
Medicine's PubMed Central. We believe the time is now for all Members of
Congress to support this enlightened policy.

Science is the measure of the human race's progress. As scientists and
taxpayers too, we therefore object to barriers that hinder, delay or
block the spread of scientific knowledge supported by federal tax
dollars including our own works.

Thanks to the Internet, today the American people have access to several
billion pages of information, frequently about disease and medical
conditions. However, the published results of NIH-supported medical
research for which they already have paid are all too often inaccessible
to taxpayers.

When a woman goes online to find what treatment options are available to
battle breast cancer, the cutting-edge, peer-reviewed research remains
behind a high-fee barrier. Families looking to read clinical trial
updates for a loved one with Huntington's disease search in vain because
they do not have a journal subscription. Libraries, physicians, health
care workers, students, researchers and thousands of academic
institutions and companies are hindered by the costs and delays in
making research widely accessible.

There's no question, open access truly expands shared knowledge across
scientific fields -- it is the best path for accelerating
multi-disciplinary breakthroughs in research.

Journal subscriptions can be prohibitively expensive. In the single
field of biology, journals average around $1,400 and the price is almost
double that in chemistry. These already-high prices are rising fast, far
in excess of inflation and the growth of library budgets. An individual
who cannot obtain access to a journal in a library may buy copies of
solo articles they need, but that can cost them $30 or more for each
article.

The National Institutes of Health has the means today to promote open
access to taxpayer-funded research through the National Library of
Medicine. If the proposal put forth in the House of Representatives is
adopted, NIH grantees may be expected to provide to the Library an
electronic copy of the final version of all manuscripts accepted for
publication, after peer review, in legitimate medical and scientific
journals. At the time of publication, NIH would make these reports
freely available to all through their digital library archive, PubMed
Central (PMC).

There is widespread acknowledgement that the current model for
scientific publishing is failing us. An increase in the volume of
research output, rising prices and static library budgets mean that
libraries are struggling to purchase subscriptions to all the scientific
journals needed.

Open access, however, will not mean the end of medical and scientific
journals at all. They will continue to exercise peer-review over
submitted papers as the basis for deciding which papers to accept for
publication, just as they do now.

In addition, since open access will apply only to NIH-funded research;
journals will still contain significant numbers of articles not covered
by this requirement and other articles and commentary invaluable to the
science community. Journals will continue to be the hallmark of
achievement in scientific research, and we will depend on them.

The trend towards open access is gaining momentum. Japan, France and the
United Kingdom are beginning to establish their own digital repositories
for sharing content with NIH's PubMed Central. Free access to taxpayer
funded research globally may soon be within grasp, and make possible the
freer flow of medical knowledge that strengthens our capacity to find
cures and to improve lives.

As the undersigned Nobel Laureates, we are committed to open access. We
ask Congress and NIH to ensure that all taxpayers get their money's
worth. Our investment in scientific research is not well served by a
process that limits taxpayer access instead of expanding it. We
specifically ask you to support the House Appropriations Committee
language as well as NIH leadership in adopting this long overdue reform.

Signed by Twenty Five Nobel Laureates

Name, Category of Nobel Prize Awarded, Year

Peter Agre, Chemistry, 2003
Sidney Altman, Chemistry, 1989
Paul Berg, Chemistry, 1980
Michael Bishop, Physiology or Medicine, 1989
Baruch Blumberg, Physiology or Medicine, 1976
Gunter Blobel, Physiology or Medicine, 1999
Paul Boyer, Chemistry, 1997
Sydney Brenner, Physiology or Medicine, 2002
Johann Deisenhofer, Chemistry, 1988
Edmond Fischer, Physiology or Medicine, 1992
Paul Greengard, Physiology or Medicine, 2000
Leland Hartwell, Physiology or Medicine, 2001
Robert Horvitz, Physiology or Medicine, 2002
Eric Kandel, Physiology or Medicine, 2000
Arthur Kornberg, Physiology or Medicine, 1959
Roderick MacKinnon, Chemistry, 2003
Kary Mullis, Chemistry, 1993
Ferid Murad, Physiology or Medicine, 1998
Joseph Murray, Physiology or Medicine, 1990
Marshall Nirenberg, Physiology or Medicine, 1968
Stanley Prusiner, Physiology or Medicine, 1997
Richard Roberts, Physiology or Medicine, 1993
Hamilton Smith, Physiology or Medicine, 1978
Harold Varmus, Physiology or Medicine, 1989
James Watson, Physiology or Medicine, 1962

Press Contact:
Dr. Richard J. Roberts
(Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine,1993)
Tel: (978) 927-3382
Fax: (978) 921-1527
Email: roberts@neb.com <mailto:roberts@neb.com>

Barbara Ryken
Government Relations
NCNMLG

Library Director
John A. Graziano Memorial Library
Samuel Merritt College
400 Hawthorne Avenue
Oakland, CA 94609

Phone: (510) 869-8692
FAX: (510) 869-6633
e-mail: bryken@samuelmerritt.edu


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