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Re: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment
- From: Janellyn P Kleiner <jkleiner@lsu.edu>
- Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 18:19:54 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Since I have been in the library profession for 40 years, I know that authors paying for article publication is not new, particularly in the sciences. Those fees were either covered by grants or by academic departments decades ago and still are at some institutions. I am a proponent of that same system today. I know exactly, down to the dollar, what comes to the library as indirect costs from overhead. I know what our percentage of that 50%+ is and that it often differs from campus to campus. I'd venture to say that some libraries never see a penny of that money. It's good to be familiar with how that operation works because you can then lobby for a bigger percentage if you can gain the support of a body of researchers. We've had some success in that area. I am very familiar with grants procedures having written several that brought in more than $10 million - either as the PI, co-PI, and/or member of a team. Our team operated a few years to build and fund our statewide library network until we obtained legislative funding and could stop relying on soft money for network support. Indirect cost funds at our university are targeted to support journal price increases and new subscriptions. I have incorporated grant awards into one of the spreadsheets I use to allocate funds for materials. My philosophy is that indirect cost funds come to academic libraries to support research materials that will enable faculty to obtain more grants. They are not to support faculty publications needed for promotion & tenure. That is the responsibility of academic departments and that is where that responsibility should remain -- certainly not from faculty personal funds. I am realistic enough, however, to know that in certain less productive departments research and publication-wise, personal funds may be all that's available but those departments are unlikely to contribute much in the way of indirect cost monies. Personally, library funds are stretched too far now to further endanger them by taking on page fee charges -- but that's just my opinion. Jane Kleiner Associate Dean of Libraries for Collection Services The LSU Libraries Louisiana State University Baton Rouge, LA 70803 Phone: 225-578-2217 Fax: 225-578-6825 E-Mail: jkleiner@lsu.edu
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