[BOAI] Re: 25, 000 Advocates Urge White House to Open Taxpayer-Funded Research to Everyone

allenk allenk at panix.com
Tue Jun 5 13:29:02 BST 2012


Who pays for the indexing and distribution?

 

 

From: boai-forum-bounces at ecs.soton.ac.uk
[mailto:boai-forum-bounces at ecs.soton.ac.uk] On Behalf Of Iryna Kuchma
Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2012 2:56 AM
To: boai-forum; eifloa
Subject: [BOAI] 25, 000 Advocates Urge White House to Open Taxpayer-Funded
Research to Everyone

 

For Immediate Release
June 4, 2012

For more information, contact:
Andrea Higginbotham
andrea at arl.org
(202) 296-2296 <tel:%28202%29%20296-2296> 

 

25,000 Advocates Urge White House to 

Open Taxpayer-Funded Research to Everyone

"We the People Petition" hits 25,000 signatures in just two weeks

Washington, DC - June 4, 2012  - The movement to make taxpayer-funded
research freely available online hit a new milestone on Sunday when
advocates hit their goal of 25,000 signatures to a "We the People" petition
to the Obama administration. The petition, created by Access2Research (a
group of Open Access advocates, including SPARC's Executive Director,
Heather Joseph), requests that President Obama make taxpayer-funded research
freely available.  

According to the petition site's rules, any petition securing 25,000
signatures within 30 days will be sent to the White House Chief of Staff,
and will receive an official response. The Open Access petition hit the
25,000 mark in half the allotted time.  

"The community is fully engaged in sending a clear message to the
Administration - access to taxpayer-funded information is in the public's
interest, and they want it now," said Heather Joseph, SPARC's Executive
Director.

The petition says: "We believe in the power of the Internet to foster
innovation, research, and education. Requiring the published results of
taxpayer-funded research to be posted on the Internet in human and machine
readable form would provide access to patients and caregivers, students and
their teachers, researchers, entrepreneurs, and other taxpayers who paid for
the research."

The Open Access mandate builds on the National Institutes of Health's
policy, noting that that agency's experience "proves that this can be done
without disrupting the research process," urging the president "to act now
to implement open access policies for all federal agencies that fund
scientific research."

John Wilbanks, Senior Fellow in entrepreneurship for the Ewing Marion
Kauffman Foundation and one of the creators of the petition believes that
the fast uptake by the public signals a new pace in the Open Access debate.
"Opening access to taxpayer-funded research is no longer a policy discussion
happening away from researchers, scientists and taxpayers. People are now
fully part of the conversation, and that changes everything."

"The next step is for the White to House to issue an official response,"
said Mike Rossner, Executive Director at The Rockefeller University Press
and an original sponsor of the petition. "Our hope is that they will act
quickly and will require expansion of the successful NIH policy to all other
major U.S. federal funding agencies."

A number of key organizations outside the academic community endorsed the
petition. The Wikimedia Foundation endorsed the petition and included a
feature article on its Wikipedia's English Homepage. Patients advocacy
groups from Patients Like Me to the Avon Foundation promoted the petition to
their members, as did a variety of publishers, university libraries,
commercial companies and advocacy organizations. 

For further information on the petition, its sponsors and supporting
organizations see the SPARC website at http://www.arl.org/sparc and the
Access2Reserach website at http://access2research.org/.

###

SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition), with SPARC
Europe and SPARC Japan, is an international alliance of more than 800
academic and research libraries working to create a more open system of
scholarly communication. SPARC's advocacy, educational, and publisher
partnership programs encourage expanded dissemination of research. SPARC is
on the Web at http://www.arl.org/sparc/.

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