
House bill would open up taxpayer-funded research
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04/19/10 03:06 PM ET
Rep. Mike Doyle (D-Penn.) wants federally funded research to be available for free online within six months of appearing in a peer-reviewed journal.
The government funds billions of dollars worth of research projects, but the results are often locked up into expensive scientific journals without easy access to the public. Doyle's Federal Research Public Access Act "will give the American people greater access to the important scientific research results they've paid for," he said in a statement.
The bill would require federal agencies with annual research budgets of $110 million or more to submit an electronic copy of the final manuscript that has been accepted by publication in a peer-reviewed journal. Manuscripts that have been produced even partially with federal money must be available online no later than six months after it appears in the journal.
Last year, similar legislation was introduced by Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John Cornyn (R-Texas) that would require online access to unclassified research funded with tax-payer dollars from agencies including Department of Agriculture, Department of Commerce and Department of Defense. NASA, the National Science Foundation and Environmental Protection Agency also fall under the requirements.
A number of research universities wrote a letter of support of the proposal.
"The broad dissemination of the results of scholarly inquiry and discourse is essential for higher education to fulfill its long-standing commitment to the advancement and conveyance of knowledge," wrote the authors from Princeton, Stanford, Cornell, Carnegie Mellon, Ohio State and Syracuse universities, among others.
"The Internet and digital technology are powerful tools for removing access barriers and enabling new and creative uses of the results of research," they wrote.
The government funds billions of dollars worth of research projects, but the results are often locked up into expensive scientific journals without easy access to the public. Doyle's Federal Research Public Access Act "will give the American people greater access to the important scientific research results they've paid for," he said in a statement.
The bill would require federal agencies with annual research budgets of $110 million or more to submit an electronic copy of the final manuscript that has been accepted by publication in a peer-reviewed journal. Manuscripts that have been produced even partially with federal money must be available online no later than six months after it appears in the journal.
Last year, similar legislation was introduced by Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John Cornyn (R-Texas) that would require online access to unclassified research funded with tax-payer dollars from agencies including Department of Agriculture, Department of Commerce and Department of Defense. NASA, the National Science Foundation and Environmental Protection Agency also fall under the requirements.
A number of research universities wrote a letter of support of the proposal.
"The broad dissemination of the results of scholarly inquiry and discourse is essential for higher education to fulfill its long-standing commitment to the advancement and conveyance of knowledge," wrote the authors from Princeton, Stanford, Cornell, Carnegie Mellon, Ohio State and Syracuse universities, among others.
"The Internet and digital technology are powerful tools for removing access barriers and enabling new and creative uses of the results of research," they wrote.
House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) is a co-sponsor, as is Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Communications, Technology and the Internet Chairman Rick Boucher (D-Va.). The bill was introduced last week.







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