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RE: Matt Cockerill's comments [Wellcome Trust and OA fees thread]
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Matt Cockerill's comments [Wellcome Trust and OA fees thread]
- From: "Kiley ,Robert" <r.kiley@wellcome.ac.uk>
- Date: Tue, 3 Apr 2007 17:50:42 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Paul: You are correct when you say that the Wellcome has not set an upper limit. However, if a publisher set a price that was significantly higher than the norm, then we would want to know why. Obviously the Trust has to right to decide that a fee is too high and will not meet these costs. The Trust did consider adding an OA element to its existing grants, but decided that whilst we are in this interim phase - with many publishers now beginning to offer a hybrid OA option - it was easier (for our grantees) to simply say that these costs would be covered by the Trust. Keeping things easy for the researcher is important - if we lose the support of the researcher, then OA will not happen. Currently the Trust is putting a lot of effort into making our researchers aware of their grant obligations (namely to make their research outputs freely available), and the benefits of OA. Consequently, at this stage we felt that expecting them to make a value-for-money decision with regard to which journal they should publish in would be additional, unwelcome burden. This situation of providing black grants to universities to cover OA costs (see: http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/doc_WTX036803.html) will be kept under review, and if we feel that this is not working effectively, then we will look to find another way of meeting these OA costs. The obvious alternative would be to require grantees to add an OA cost to their grant applications. This has its own problems - grants expiring before papers are published, unknown costs, money tied up that many not be used etc - but it may be an option we have to consider. Best regards Robert -----Original Message----- [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Paul Peters Sent: 02 April 2007 23:22 To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Re: Matt Cockerill's comments [Wellcome Trust and OA fees thread] Robert, Thank you for correcting my misstatement, since this is an important issue that I would like to fully understand. If you have not set an upper limit for what the Wellcome Trust is willing to pay a publisher, then how is this amount determined? As far as I know, you have not yet told a publisher that their hybrid open access option is too expensive for Wellcome to pay, is this correct? What sort of metrics do you use to decide whether the price that you have been asked to pay is reasonable? If the "funder pays" model takes off, what mechanism do you envision for ensuring healthy competition in the publishing market? I want to make it very clear that I have the highest regards for the leadership taken by the Wellcome Trust within the open access movement, and I believe that Wellcome has been one of the greatest catalysts for change. However, I want to make sure that with this change comes not only increased access to scholarly literature, but also a more functional publishing market. Because of the leadership taken by the Wellcome Trust, I imagine that a number of funding agencies may base their open access policies on your model. So, I think it is very important to properly understand the impact that this policy will have on the publishing market. The inefficiencies within the subscription market are largely responsible for the rise of the "serials crisis." In turn, the "serials crisis" served as one of the main motivations behind the open access publishing model. So, when looking at the details of how we would like open access publishing to work, we must be very careful not to create a whole new set of inefficiencies. Paul Peters Head of Business Development Hindawi Publishing Corporation http://www.hindawi.com
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