March 2018 133 C&RL News David W. Lewis, Lori Goetsch, Diane Graves, and Mike Roy Funding community controlled open infrastructure for scholarly communication The 2.5% commitment initiative scholarly communication David W. Lewis is dean of the IUPUI University Library, email: dlewis@iupui.edu, Lori Goetsch is dean of libraries at Kansas State University, email: lgoetsch@k-state.edu, Diane Graves is university librarian emerita at Trinity University, email: dgraves@trinity.edu, and Mike Roy is dean of the library at Middlebury College, mdroy@ middlebury.edu © 2018 David W. Lewis, Lori Goetsch, Diane Graves, and Mike Roy In August 2017, a short paper, “The 2.5% Com-mitment,” was distributed on several email lists.1 The paper proposed that every academic library should commit to invest 2.5% of its total budget to support the common infrastructure needed to create the open scholarly commons. Somewhat to our surprise, the paper and the ideas it contained have generated widespread discussions and interest. The paper was a response to the Elsevier purchase of Bepress and an article by John Wenzler that suggested that academic libraries faced a collective action problem, and that as a result they would never be able to create the open scholarly commons they aspired to.2 Our experience working with open infrastructure projects has also made clear how little funding most of these projects have. We, the authors, believe Wenzler has un- derestimated the academic library community. We believe that with some focused attention on the problem and by raising awareness of the consequences of inaction, we can change our behavior and create incentives for ever larger contributions to the common good. To that end, we have been working to move this agenda forward. We hope all academic libraries will join us in this effort and make the commitment to invest in open infrastructure.3 Why 2.5%? 2.5% was picked because that is what is re- quired if the U.S. academic libraries are to have $100 million annually to support open projects. This assumes 60% participation of all U.S. academic libraries who collec- tively have budgets of about $7 billion.4 It is reported that $100 million is a little less than Elsevier paid for Bepress.5 The figure is ultimately arbitrary. The more important point is the need for the library community to increase investment in common open in- frastructure and open publications. What ul- timately matters is the contribution, not the particular number. What are the goals? The 2.5% Commitment Initiative’s goal is to increase the collective investments from academic libraries towards open common infrastructure, that is, projects that provide software or services that support open scholarship. The first step is to make librar- ies aware of their individual and collective investments in open projects. This informa- mailto:dlewis%40iupui.edu?subject= mailto:lgoetsch%40k-state.edu?subject= mailto:dgraves%40trinity.edu?subject= mailto:mdroy%40middlebury.edu%20?subject= mailto:mdroy%40middlebury.edu%20?subject= C&RL News March 2018 134 tion helps to create a norm for what the ap- propriate level of investment should be. To do this we aim to create a tool that can be used by academic libraries to measure their level of investment in a standard way. This will allow reporting to various library groups —ACRL, ARL, consortiums, etc.—and allow academic libraries to measure how they stand in comparison to their peers, and to track their progress over time. We hope that as a secondary benefit, organizations that operate open infrastructure projects will be encouraged to provide information about what they do and how they do it, and that this information will be more widely avail- able to that library community. What have we done so far? We began with some initial data collection to establish what libraries were doing and what they considered to be a contribution to open infrastructure.6 We had 35 librar- ies report contributions. Many were solic- ited through the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC) and Oberlin Group lists, so it is a somewhat bi- ased sample that includes about half liberal arts colleges and half research universities. Several things became clear as we did this work. First, what should count as common open infrastructure is not a simple question. Our cur- rent thinking is that there are three buckets.7 The first bucket is core open infrastructure projects and organizations. These projects and organi- zations create tools or services that the com- munity uses to build the open commons. This bucket includes DSpace, Fedora, Omeka, Open Journal Systems (OJS), the Digital Preservation Network, LOCKSS, the Directory of Open Ac- cess Journals (DOAJ), CrossRef, and advocacy organizations like SPARC or Confederation of Open Access Repositories. We currently believe these organizations and projects should be not- for-profit. The second bucket is the resources that libraries use to support their institutional repositories. This includes hardware, software, and staff. It might also include funds to exter- nal organizations that either support locally installed systems or to external organizations that host repositories. It is probably necessary to include expenditures for both for-profit and not-for-profit organizations in this bucket. So, OCLC, Atmire, Ubiquity Press, 4Science, and even Bepress would count. The final bucket is open content. This bucket would include con- tributions to ArXiv, HathiTrust, or Lever Press. There is some debate about whether funding for article processing fees should count and whether expenditures to for-profit companies should be included. Second, there were also unexpected difficul- ties in establishing staff costs, especially when the work was done by a campus technology organization and not the library itself. Some libraries also had difficulty establishing their total budget, including staffing costs, because they had position lines, but not allocated dollars for staff. All of this made our first efforts at data collection a bit messy. The average budget of the libraries in our sample was $7,633,990, not including salaries. The most investment by a single library was $868,065 and the least was $1,048. On a per student basis, the most invested was $1,048 and the least was $1 with an average FTE investment of $14. The average percentage of the total budget, without salaries was 2.96%, with the highest percentage at 9.4% and the lowest at 0.3%.8 From our limited sample, we found that most large research libraries are contributing at a higher percentage than the average. It is en- couraging that these libraries are making these investments. But we will be doing much better if the rest can catch up and contribute at least at the average level. What comes next? The next step is to build a data collection tool that will allow us to collect data about open investments for a larger number of schools. This will require finding funding and a host institution. We believe both are within reach and hope to have a tool ready in time to collect data by June 2018. The conversation that the 2.5% Commitment has fostered—at a fall SPARC meeting, CNI, and March 2018 135 C&RL News ALA Midwinter—has surfaced several impor- tant issues that go beyond our initiative. The first is the need for a roadmap, for a plan of action that can guide investment. How such a plan would be created and who would best take on the task is not clear. Our recom- mendation would be that existing academic library organizations should take on this task. We can imagine ARL, the Greater Western Library Alliance, the Oberlin Group, or large systems like SUNY or the California State University might create roadmaps to guide their own investments. Initially, these plans might only be for their individual groups, but over time we could bring these plans together on a larger scale. To further this ef- fort, we intend to create a map of the current landscape from the data we have collected.9 This should advance the planning process. Related to the creation of a roadmap is the vexing question of what should count as an investment. Our initial work has been to describe the current landscape, and as such, we did not evaluate the quality of the investment or exclude any particular option. We will need to grapple with the question of what makes the list, and who gets to decide what is on the list.10 Beyond a plan, there have been con- versations about collective investing. This has been talked about as a mutual fund or a United Way model. The idea would be to contribute to a common fund that would make collective investments and guide and assess the projects it was investing in. We believe such an effort, though difficult to organize, would provide an important level of coordination and further collective action. What can you do? 1. Take a close look at your contribu- tions to open access projects and use the spreadsheet on our website at http://schol- arlycommons.net to measure your current investments. Understand that what you are doing now is the first step. 2. Whatever your contributions are, make one more. If you use an open source product like DSpace or OJS and don’t make a finan- cial contribution to the project, consider doing so. If you are not a SPARC member, maybe you should be. If open textbooks would help your students, you should contribute to OpenStax. Or find a different organization or project—DOAJ, Wikipedia, or Impactstory. But make that one new contribution and do it now. 3. Talk to colleagues at peer institutions. Find out what they are doing and how you might collectively set a standard for contribu- tion that raises the bar for you and your peer institutions. Hold each other accountable. 4. Begin conversations with faculty and your administration to build support for an institutional commitment to common open infrastructure. The goal today may be 2.5%, but in the not too distant future, it will be 5.0%, and as more content becomes open, it will be even higher. You need to start building the case for campus support today. Final word One of the participants in our first round of data collection shared with us this comment, “As the word of the year was just announced as complicit there is much to be said about where the other 97.5% of the library budgets go, and if that aligns with long-term values.” We all need to stop and think about where all of our money goes. We have choices. They are not always easy, but it is up to us to spend in ways that will remake scholarly communication so that it serves our faculty and students, and the rest of the world, as well. Please help us make the 2.5% Commitment a movement alongside the open access move- ment. It is an attempt to get us all, as members of the academic library community, to work together by making larger investments to the common good. We have been encouraged by the interest and the conversations that have been generated. But interest and conversation are not enough. At the end of the day what matters is money. There is no sustainable path for the open infrastructure projects that the academy needs without ongoing funding from academic library budgets. The stakes http://scholarlycommons.net http://scholarlycommons.net C&RL News March 2018 136 are very real as commercial publishers are, as we speak, carrying out plans for further en- closing the academic commons. All libraries need to step up, and they need to do so now. Notes 1. David W. Lewis, “The 2.5% Commit- ment,” September 2017, https://scholarworks. iupui.edu/handle/1805/14063. 2. John Wenzler, “Scholarly Communica- tion and the Dilemma of Collective Action: Why Academic Journals Cost Too Much,” College & Research Libraries 78, no. 2 (Febru- ary 2017):183-200. doi: https://doi.org/10.5860 /crl.78.2.16581. 3. The initiative website is https:// scholarlycommons.net. You can follow us on Twitter at @in4open. 4. U.S. Department of Education, Aca- demic Libraries: 2012. First Look (Washing- ton, D.C.: National Center for Educational Statistics, January 2014), 10-12, https://nces. ed.gov/pubs2014/2014038.pdf. 5. The Financial Times reported Elsevier paid $115 million for Bepress. See David Bond, “Relx Buys Bepress to Boost Academic Publishing,” Financial Times, August 2, 2017, https://www.ft.com/content/c6f6c594 -7787-11e7-a3e8-60495fe6ca71. 6. We reported on the results of this initial investigation at the Coalition for Network Information Fall Meeting in Washington, D.C., on December 11, 2017. The slides for this presentation can be found at https:// scholarlycommons.net/2017/12/10/cni2017/. 7. The draft list of investments that we used can be found at https://scholarlycommons. net/the-list/. 8. We would not make strong claims based on this data since the sample is small. 9. We are taking inspiration from the diagram of Elsevier’s acquisitions in the academic knowledge production process created by Alejandro Posada and George Chen. See Alejandro Posada and George Chen, “Preliminary Findings: Rent Seek- ing by Elsevier: Publishers are Increasingly in Control of Scholarly Infrastructure and Why We Should Care,” The Knowledge Gap: Geopolitics of Academic Pr oduc- tion (blog), September 20, 2017, http:// knowledgegap.org/index.php/sub-projects / r e n t - s e e k i n g - a n d - f i n a n c i a l i z a t i o n -of-the-academic-publishing-industry /preliminary-findings/. 10. Cameron Neylon in a thoughtful critique of the 2.5% Commitment proposal has explored the question of investment qual- ity. See Cameron Neylon, “Against the 2.5% Commitment,” Science in the Open (blog), January 5, 2018, http://cameronneylon.net /blog/against-the-2-5-commitment/. A ss o ci a ti o n o f C o lle g e & R e se a rc h L ib ra ri e s 5 0 E . H u ro n , C h ic ag o IL 6 0 6 1 1 | 8 0 0 .5 4 5 .2 4 3 3 | ac rl @ al a. o rg All titles are available from the ALA online store: http://www.alastore.ala.org/ FR O M A C R L N EW P U B LI C AT IO N S 978-0-8389-8939-5 978-0-8389-8933-3978-0-8389-8943-2 min-pubsad_march18.indd 1 2/7/2018 9:38:49 AM https://scholarworks.iupui.edu/handle/1805/14063 https://scholarworks.iupui.edu/handle/1805/14063 https://doi.org/10.5860/crl.78.2.16581 https://doi.org/10.5860/crl.78.2.16581 https://scholarlycommons.net https://scholarlycommons.net https://nces.ed.gov/pubs2014/2014038.pdf https://nces.ed.gov/pubs2014/2014038.pdf https://www.ft.com/content/c6f6c594-7787-11e7-a3e8-60495fe6ca71 https://www.ft.com/content/c6f6c594-7787-11e7-a3e8-60495fe6ca71 https://scholarlycommons.net/2017/12/10/cni2017/ https://scholarlycommons.net/2017/12/10/cni2017/ https://scholarlycommons.net/the-list/ https://scholarlycommons.net/the-list/ http://knowledgegap.org/index.php/sub-projects/rent-seeking-and-financialization-of-the-academic-publishing-industry/preliminary-findings/ http://knowledgegap.org/index.php/sub-projects/rent-seeking-and-financialization-of-the-academic-publishing-industry/preliminary-findings/ http://knowledgegap.org/index.php/sub-projects/rent-seeking-and-financialization-of-the-academic-publishing-industry/preliminary-findings/ http://knowledgegap.org/index.php/sub-projects/rent-seeking-and-financialization-of-the-academic-publishing-industry/preliminary-findings/ http://knowledgegap.org/index.php/sub-projects/rent-seeking-and-financialization-of-the-academic-publishing-industry/preliminary-findings/ http://cameronneylon.net/blog/against-the-2-5-commitment/ http://cameronneylon.net/blog/against-the-2-5-commitment/