A coalition of leading open-access research publishers is warning against a move in the US Congress to reverse a Biden administration order to make federally funded research findings immediately and freely available.
Joe Biden聽announced the shift聽a year ago, aiming to end decades of open-access debates by setting a 2025 deadline for ending any paywalls on the published results of federally funded research.
Republican leaders in the US House of Representatives, however, have advanced a fiscal year 2024聽聽with language that 鈥 without any explanation for their position 鈥 would block the Biden order.
The heads of eight leading open-access-format science publishers wrote to Republican lawmakers warning that their plan 鈥渨ill prevent American taxpayers from seeing the societal benefits of the more than $90 billion [拢70 billion] in scientific research that the US government funds each year鈥.
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Campus resource: Open access is inevitable 鈥 only the 'how' remains up for discussion
鈥淪cience for the few who can access it 鈥 as opposed to the many who pay for it 鈥 is inefficient as scientific or governmental policy,鈥澛, which include Plos, eLife, Frontiers and PeerJ.
Experts tracking the situation generally acknowledged that the provision was probably unlikely to become law, given the opposition it would generate from Mr Biden and Democrats who control the Senate. The academic publishing consulting firm Clarke & Esposito ridiculed the provision, saying that its industry sources deny that traditional subscription-based publishers have any involvement in the Republican effort to kill the Biden administration order issued last August by Alondra Nelson, then director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
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鈥淩ather, the language in the bill is a far more blunt instrument drafted by far-right members of Congress opposed to all things they perceive as 鈥榳oke鈥,鈥 Clarke & Esposito say in聽. 鈥淓ssentially, a search for words such as 鈥榙iversity,鈥 鈥榠nclusion,鈥 and 鈥榚quity鈥 turned up the Nelson Memo, which has the word 鈥榚quitable鈥 in its title, and thus it became one of the many聽government activities to be targeted for defunding聽by the bill.鈥
Yet the political threat cannot be dismissed, said Michael Clarke, managing partner at Clarke & Esposito, given the caustic state of politics and the eventual need for trade-offs in any federal budget deal. 鈥淚f the Democrats and the White House have to pick their battles, is defence of the Nelson Memo high enough priority to make the cut?鈥 he asked.
The mere inclusion of the issue in the budget bill suggests a fight ahead, acknowledged Julia Kostova, the director of US publishing development at Frontiers. 鈥淲hile it may be small, the risk is that in all the upcoming negotiation for the bill鈥檚 position on various contested issues, the Nelson Memo is traded away,鈥 Dr Kostova said.
A leading association of academic publishers, the STM Association, said that it has had concerns about the Nelson Memo, but has been working toward its implementation and did not ask lawmakers for any effort to block the initiative.
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At the same time, said the association鈥檚 chief executive, Caroline Sutton, 鈥渨e understand that Congress has had concerns about oversight of public access policies. These concerns may be reflected by this provision.鈥
The draft federal budget written by House Republicans would increase overall research and development spending by 19 per cent, while its counterpart in the Democrat-controlled Senate would cut it by 4 per cent, according to analysis provided by the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
The House version, however, would sharply cut some key parts of National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation, while primarily reserving increases for military accounts. Both the House and Senate versions 鈥渨ould make drastic cuts to basic research 鈥 51 per cent and 48 per cent respectively in FY 2024鈥, said Joanne Padr贸n Carney, the association鈥檚 chief government relations officer.
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