Dear Serialists
(please excuse the multiple postings)
Another
company is looking at the Elsevier model and using it. Unfortunately,
unlike Elsevier where a library might get more content than they could pay for
and unlike Elsevier which does not require that a library participate,
Wiley is requiring all multi-site libraries to have a no-cancellation, minimum life
time spend. Add insult to injury, we are not a multi-site library by any
other vendor’s definition! But Wiley has designated us so. Without
recourse.
So, I am
sending this letter to many people at Wiley and in the library community.
Please, help resist these kinds of publisher practices.
*****
I am writing to you today in your capacity as someone
concerned with [higher education, customer service] at John Wiley and
Sons.
Wiley provides an EAL license which has three major
features: two year agreement, a guaranteed minimum spend (no cancellations
without adding titles) (ala Elsevier) and, for that ‘lock-in,’
libraries will have a cap on the annual inflationary increases. Wiley requires
multi-site libraries – which they have declared we are – enter into
an EAL license for electronic journal content.
We have two problems with this rigid requirement:
1.
Wiley is now treating my university as a multi-campus
university. Let me assure you that all other vendors treat us a single site
because, while we have libraries in Minneapolis and St. Paul, we have a single
IP address, single president, and a single Accounts Payable for all campuses
(including Rome which has 4 seminarians studying abroad!).
2. The EAL license is required for all
online journal content we purchase from Wiley/Blackwell in 2010. Currently, our
online-only spend is about $3,000, our print +online is over $33,000, and our
total spend is about $66,000 for journal content with Wiley. What does
that mean for the University of St. Thomas? We would not be able to
cancel – i.e. lower our ‘current’ spend. That means that as
tuition dollars dry up, as the university’s contribution to the libraries
shrink, we cannot cancel titles in the Wiley contract. It’s ironic that
while we would be locked into a multi-year contract during these incredibly
unpredictable and difficult financial times, Wiley could change their title
list at will – buying or selling titles as the market dictates.
We have
spoken with your representative, Diane Conroy, and there are no alternatives IF
we want online journal content from Wiley. She is adamant.
Hence, our
only option is to cancel all of our online content. I assume that is not
Wiley’s goal but the only one we see available to us since we cannot
agree to a multi-year, dollar spend commitment. We will cancel what we
can – I can see about $30,000 in cancellations (27 titles) without too
much pain. We will purchase print-only in the cases where we have had print
+online and we will cancel our online-only and move back to print-only.
As we all know, even good content that is print-only will become marginalized
by our users and as it does, we’ll easily be able to justify canceling
the remaining print titles. And, of course, we will not be purchasing new
journal content from Wiley.
When
September comes, if we have no agreement with Wiley for 2010 permitting
cancellation and permitting single year subscriptions, we will have to take
these draconian steps.
I will be
sharing this letter with the Wiley board of directors, others in Wiley
management, the serials community, the licensing community and other colleagues
in the library community.
Thank you for
your attention.
Sincerely,
CC:
Warren J. Baker, President
California
Polytechnic State University
Bonnie Lieberman,
Senior Vice-President for Higher Education
John Wiley and Sons
Clifford Kline, Senior Vice-President
Customer Service and Distribution
John Wiley and Sons
******************************************
Linda
Linda
Hulbert, Associate Director
Collection Management and Services
O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library #5004
University of Saint Thomas
2115 Summit Avenue
St. Paul, MN 55105
Phone: (651)
962-5016 Fax: (651)
962-5486 email: lahulbert@stthomas.edu
The journal article you find is the journal article you were
looking for