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The Future of the FDLP: From Conversation to Confrontation | Backtalk

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By Jim Jacobs and Melody Kelly Dec 13, 2011

Recent discussions about the state of the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) and the responsibilities of regional depository libraries have morphed from a conversation into a politicized confrontation. Sadly, this threatens to negatively affect not just depository libraries but all libraries and users who rely on a robust FDLP for long-term free access to government information.

While the issues are clear, the confrontation has muddied the waters considerably. We once had a cooperative discussion of how to balance existing legal requirements with a shared goal of moving to a better, digital FDLP. We now have personal attacks on the leaders of the Government Printing Office (GPO) and the FDLP, suggestions to change the legal foundation of the FDLP (USC Title 44), and arguments that are focused on the narrow agenda of a few large research libraries. These divisive, dramatic tactics impede finding common solutions to shared problems.

The Association of Research Libraries (ARL) and the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)—with letters of support by other library organizations in which members of the ARL participate—claim to have discovered a problem so immense that it threatens the very existence of the FDLP and are making assertions that are at best questionable and at worst just plain false.

At the root of the controversy are two proposals—one [PDF] by the directors of regional depository libraries at Michigan State Library and University of Minnesota, and another [PDF] by ASERL. The proposals would reduce the number of paper copies preserved by FDLP by consolidating paper collections and by providing access to digital copies rather than paper copies.

There are four fundamental problems with these proposals.

First, in 2008, the Congressional Joint Committee on Printing (JCP) denied a proposal that would have allowed two regionals in Kansas and Nebraska to share a single collection. It is JCP's decision—not GPO's leadership—that is making this a long-term issue that cannot be solved by short-term demands by a few big research libraries. The right thing to do is to develop an alternative that would be acceptable to JCP (such as using the existing FDLP model of shared or "selective storage" locations within each state).

Second, the ASERL proposal would rely on digital copies of printed publications without addressing the need for authenticating those digital surrogates. Failing to address authentication will endanger the reliability of our digital collections. The FDLP community can work with GPO to develop procedures to solve this problem without changing the US Code. Creating a political battle over this issue could easily result in solutions designed by Congress, not by information professionals.

Third, both proposals assume we can rely on digital surrogates as access-substitutes for existing paper collections. Existing studies of digitization cast doubt on this assumption: many government publications are old and brittle and include more than text; accurate digitization of statistical tables is very difficult and prohibitively expensive with current technologies. While digital surrogates of paper may serve the needs of many users, libraries will still need an adequate number of paper copies for direct user examination when digitization is flawed or inaccurate and for re-digitization with better technologies in the future. We just do not yet have the information we need that would justify the proposed drastic weeding of our valuable paper collections after digitization.

Fourth, the proposals seek to minimize the number of paper copies stored in the FDLP system without first determining how many paper copies are needed for preservation and access. Preliminary studies of this issue do not adequately address the special nature of government publications, assume we will have perfect digital copies to supplement paper copies, and seek only to preserve non-circulating paper copies. The issue of weeding our valuable collections is about access as well as preservation. It is not just about keeping an emergency copy-of-last-resort in a vault or about Title 44 legal requirements. It is about keeping an adequate number of working, usable, loanable copies geographically near their users. A mistake in judgment at this point would result in irrevocable loss of information.

The underlying justification of these proposals is that libraries can lower their costs by weeding their collections. Although reducing costs is laudable if it is a result of increased efficiencies, it is questionable if it results in damaging our collections or neglecting our services.

There is no doubt that Regional and Selective FDLP libraries alike face difficult challenges, e.g., digital authenticity, digital deposit, digital preservation, disintermediation, changing priorities of participating libraries, etc. We need to work together to solve these challenges through cooperative ventures and consensus regarding how best to revise existing rules and procedures. But if the community fragments, we can be certain that, no matter who "wins," there will also be losers. The users of government information will be the ones most hurt by such political battles and infighting. Politics only weakens the GPO and the FDLP at a time when both need all of our support, collaboration, and ingenuity to face these difficult challenges.

Author Information

Jim Jacobs is Data Services Librarian Emeritus at the University of California, San Diego, and Melody Kelly is Adjunct Professor at the College of Information at the University of North Texas, Denton. Submissions for Backtalk should be 850 to 900 words and sent to Michael Kelley at mkelley@mediasourceinc.com




Reader Comments (7)


Under your third problem you mention "existing studies" re: digital surrogates as access-substitutes for existing paper collections. Could you provide citations to the studies you're referencing? Thanks!

Posted by Tim Knight on December 14, 2011 01:20:33PM

Clearly Mr. Jacobs and Ms. Kelly are in need of getting their facts correct. Their first point ignores the existence of seven multi-state regionals that have been created and approved by GPO. Their point also relies on a CRS opinion that does not resolve the "geographic question" as to the area to be served by regional depository libraries. Reliance on such thinking ignores the many multi-state consortia that exist in the library community. The author's second point is an even worse fabrication, the ASERL model is based on the concept of "Centers of Excellence" which matches a library's collection and service strengths and a committment to create and preserve collections by specific agency or topic. Digital copies would be created as an ADDITIONAL ACCESS point and not replace the tangible copy. As for authentication, the library community would like to work with GPO to answer any issues related to authenication of digitized publications. The question arises though, if a Federal Depsoitory Library received a publication in paper format and digitized it at preservation level standards, does that not provide a true representation of the orginal piece? My institution and many other libraries have mature digital departments that follow national standards and even engage in major national digitization projects funded by the federal government. Where is GPO? As for the author's third point focuses on very narrow issues that can not be resolved to their satisfaction, however, I would point out that many libraries also rely on several major vendors for access to the United States Congressional Serial Set, a publication rich in images and statistical tables, if these same objections are true then why have these products been so popular? Finally, the fourth issue is but a strawman, the ASERL IMLS grant and guidelines seeks to have multiple copies available throughout the southeast and has no setminimum, which in my opinion would be based on the expertise of the community and the perceived needs of the users. The ASERL model identifies the potential ability to maintain as many copies as possible and links that with collection expertise. I encourage anyone with questions about the ASERL project to contact any of the participants and ask questions. The members have always been open to questions and criticism from the beginning of the project. see www.aserl.org In conclusion, the information offered by the author's is inaccurate. ASERL has always welcomed the conversation, provided transparency on their project, reached out to the community, and responded openly. We wish to continue the discussion and avoid the "politiced confrontation" this piece continues.

Posted by Bill Sudduth on December 14, 2011 02:08:05PM

Thanks for asking about the "existing studies" re: digital surrogates as access-substitutes. The key research has been done at Yale. See: Green, Ann, Sandra K. Peterson, and Julie Linden, Supporting Economic Development Research: A Collaborative Project to Create Access to Statistical Sources Not Born Digital, A Report to the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (New Haven, CT: Yale University, 2005) <http://ssrs.yale.edu/egcdl/Yale_EGCDL_report_0505.pdf>. and Linden, Julie, and Ann Green, ‘Don’t Leave the Data in the Dark’, D-Lib Magazine, 12 (2006) <doi:10.1045/january2006-linden>. Also see some mention of the difficulty of accurately digitizing statistical tables in: Bicknese, Douglas A., "Measuring the Accuracy of the OCR in the Making of America" (Ann Arbor, Mich.,: University of Michigan, School of Information, 1998) <http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moagrp/moaocr.html>. Blando, Luis R., Junichi Kanai, Thomas A. Nartker, and Juan Gonzalez, "Prediction of OCR Accuracy" http://blando.info/luis/docs/PredictionOfOCRAccuracy-SDAIR95.PDF Faisal Shafait, Ray Smith. "Table Detection in Heterogeneous Documents", 9th IAPR Workshop on Document Analysis Systems, DAS’10. Boston, MA, USA, June 2010. http://www.dfki.uni-kl.de/~shafait/papers/Shafait-Table-Detection-DAS10.pdf Joseph, Lura E., "Image and Figure Quality: A Study of Elsevier's Earth and Planetary Sciences Electronic Journal Back File Package", Library Collections, Acquisitions, and Technical Services, 30 (September), 162-168 <doi:10.1016/j.lcats.2006.12.002>. LDI Project Team. Harvard University Library. "Measuring Search Retrieval Accuracy of Uncorrected OCR: Findings from the Harvard- Radcliffe Online Historical Reference Shelf Digitization Project", August 2001, <http://preserve.harvard.edu/resources/ocr_report.pdf> (16 February 2004). Schonfeld, Roger C., and Ross Housewright, "What to Withdraw: Print Collections Management in the Wake of Digitization", Ithaka S+R, 29 September 2009, p. 28 <http://www.ithaka.org/ithaka-s-r/research/what-to-withdraw>. Tanner, Simon, Trevor Muñoz, and Pich Hemy Ros, "Measuring Mass Text Digitization Quality and Usefulness", D-Lib Magazine, 15 (2009) <doi:10.1045/july2009-munoz>. And see discussion of this issue here: "Public comments and response to Ithaka S+R Models draft report" by James R. Jacobs <http://freegovinfo.info/node/3193>

Posted by Jim Jacobs on December 15, 2011 06:41:13PM

The Association of Southeastern Research Libraries finds the content of this op-ed piece to be inaccurate and its tone unhelpful. As Bill Sudduth, a veteran Government Information Librarian at a Regional Depository Library, points out in his comment above, there are inaccuracies and innuendo here. These serve to raise the political temperature, not improve it. ASERL has asked for face-to-face meeting with GPO's senior leadership for months to address these issues. We are hopeful such a meeting will happen in the not-too-distant future. Specific to the comments by Jacobs and Kelly: The 2008 CRS decision regarding the Kansas-Nebraska proposal was about an issue that was significantly different than the recent proposal submitted by the University of Minnesota to provide service to the residents of Michigan. Although the Michigan-Minnesota issue does not affect ASERL libraries directly, we do not believe that a specific CRS decision should be applied broadly to any type of cross-state service proposal. The ASERL proposal for managing FDLP collections in the South is about print retention -- to build better print document collections, and to improve access and use by improving cataloging of those collections based on subject strength and local needs, and developing local expertise about the collections. The commitment to improve the cataloging and discoverability of these collections is significant, and should be welcomed by advocates for public access to government information. Initial results from pilot sites have shown tremendous increases in the use of documents collections cataloged under this program. And importantly, nowhere in the plan does ASERL advocate for the wholesale weeding or replacement of print FDLP collections with digital surrogates. The issue of authenticated digital copies remains unanswered at the federal level and long overdue. It may be that current national standards for preservation-level digitization will meet those needs. Once federal standards for authenticating digital copies are established, ASERL will seek to incorporate those requirements into our guidelines. However, ASERL library deans/directors felt strongly that we cannot wait to implement the broader program while waiting for this question to be answered. We agree with the authors that libraries need to retain an "adequate number of paper copies for direct user examination." Again, building improved, comprehensive-as-possible paper collections of federal documents distributed across the region -- and improving the discoverability of these resources -- are the overall goals of this program. We also believe these improved paper collections must be supplemented by digital access, both to serve the preferences of the overwhelming majority of users and to reduce wear and tear on the aging paper collections. Lastly, ASERL's plan for managing FDLP collections in the Southeast Region has been under development for several years, after consultation with and positive responses from GPO until recently. It is disturbing that our response to GPO's change in interpretation is considered by the authors to be a "confrontation" and a "personal attack on the leaders of the Government Printing Office (GPO) and the FLDP." It has never been the intent of ASERL to personally attack anyone, and if ASERL is the offending party, we request specific examples of these "personal attacks" so we can examine them and attempt to avoid such miscommunication in the future. Again, we look forward to meeting face-to-face with GPO's senior leaders to discuss the issues and rectify any misconceptions. We also welcome additional opportunities to share our perspectives and our desire to advance the availability and use of government information in a forward thinking manner.

Posted by John Burger on December 16, 2011 11:56:49AM

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