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REMINDER:

The Federal Library and Information Center Committee

DON'T DELAY. REGISTER NOW FOR THE 22nd ANNUAL FLICC FORUM ON FEDERAL
INFORMATION POLICIES

Evolving Information Policy: Open Access and New Constraints

March 24, 2005--Library of Congress--Washington, D.C.

See  the agenda and registration details below.

The increase in electronic publication and the availability of the
World Wide Web provide new opportunities to expand access to literature
resulting from federally funded research and archive that material to
ensure its long term availability. Like open access initiatives in
academia and publishing trends in both the commercial and nonprofit
sectors, the Federal Government is exploring ways to enhance access to
valuable scholarly information resources.

On February 3, 2005 the National Institutes of Health (NIH) officially
announced its policy to make available through its digital repository,
PubMed Central, all final version, peer-reviewed manuscripts reporting
results of research supported in whole or in part by NIH funding.
Beginning May 2, 2005 the NIH will make these manuscripts readily
accessible to the public within 12 months after publication of an
NIH-supported research study--or sooner if the publisher agrees. NIH's
policy builds on the historic mandate of the National Library of
Medicine to promote the broadest possible access to the latest medical
information in order to improve decision making by medical
professionals, as well as patients and their families.

In the words of the NIH policy, "It has long been NIH policy that the
results and accomplishments of the activities that it funds should be
made available to the public...that widespread access to and sharing of
peer-reviewed research publications generated with NIH support will
advance science and improve communication of peer-reviewed,
health-related information to scientists, health care providers, and the
public... The policy is intended to: 1) create a stable archive of
peer-reviewed research publications resulting from NIH-funded research
to ensure the permanent preservation of these vital published research
findings; 2) secure a searchable compendium of these peer-reviewed
research publications that NIH and its awardees can use to manage more
efficiently and to understand better their research portfolios, monitor
scientific productivity, and ultimately, help set research priorities;
and 3) make published results of NIH-funded research more readily
accessible to the public, health care providers, educators, and
scientists...NIH intends to maintain its dialogue with publishers and
professional and learned societies as experience is gained with the
policy."

Though the argument for broad access to health and medical research
funded by taxpayers is particularly compelling, similar arguments could
be made for most government research: Should the public have to pay a
private sector publisher to learn from research supported by tax
dollars?

At the same time, the threat of terrorism and other security issues
have motivated new exemptions from open access. In addition, Executive
Order 13233, issued by President George W. Bush in November 2001 to
implement the Presidential Records Act, authorizes indefinite
restriction of public access to archived presidential documents that,
under previous rules, were largely available to the public after 12
years. The President and Congress continually struggle to achieve the
proper balance between the citizen's right for access to information
and the government's responsibility to protect certain categories of
information.

What are the implications of these divergent initiatives, which on one
hand promise unprecedented access to information generated by government
funding, while on the other, take from the public purview information
historically accessible to all?

The 2005 FLICC Forum on Federal Information Policies will explore the
opportunities and risks of this evolving information environment and
will consider the impact of both on federal libraries and information
centers.

Date
Thursday, March 24, 2005

Time
9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. (Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. There is no
entry to the Library of  Congress prior to 8:30 a.m.)

Place
Mumford Room, 6th floor, Madison Building, The Library of Congress, 101
Independence Avenue S. E., Washington, D.C. 20540

Metro
Capitol South (Orange and Blue Lines)

Sponsor
FLICC Education Working Group

Registration
$160--FEDLINK Members
$173--Federal Registrants (not FEDLINK Members)
$185--Non-Federal Registrants

Fees include refreshments and resource packet.

Visit the FLICC Educational Programs Web site at
http://www.loc.gov/flicc/feveform.html to register online.

To view a PDF version of this Meeting Announcement, visit
http://www.loc.gov/flicc/ma/2005/ma0519.pdf.

Request ADA Accommodations five business days in advance at (202)
707-6362 TTY or [log in to unmask]

Information
Call FLICC (202) 707-4800; TTY (202) 707-4995

Cancellations
Cancellations must be called into the FLICC office (202-707-4800) 48
hours prior to the start of an educational program or the full fee will
be charged.

Draft Agenda

9:00 - 9:30
Welcome and FLICC Awards Ceremony:
* Kathryn M. Mendenhall, Interim FLICC Executive Director
* James H. Billington, The Librarian of Congress

9:30 - 9:40
Introductory Remarks: James H. Billington

Morning:
OPEN ACCESS

9:40 -10:10
Keynote Speaker:
* Elias A. Zerhouni, Director, National Institutes of Health

10:10-10:30
Break

10:30-11:30
Panel Discussion on Open Access:
Moderator: Jane Bortnick Griffith, Assistant Director, National Library
of Medicine
Panelists:
* Brian Nairn, CEO, Elsevier Science and Medical Division
* David Stern, Director, Yale Science Libraries & Information Services
* Sharon Terry, President and CEO, Genetic Alliance

11:30-11:45
Q & A

11:45-1:00
Lunch (on your own)

Afternoon:
BALANCING ACCESS WITH NECESSARY CONSTRAINTS

1:00-1:40
Afternoon  Keynote:
* J. William Leonard, Director, Information Security Oversight Office,
NARA

1:40-2:40
Panel Discussion on Initiatives to Protect Information:
Moderator: Kathy Eighmey, Director,  Library Services, Department of
Homeland Security
Panelists:
* Michael A. Domaratz, Co-Chair, Homeland Security Working Group,
Federal Geographic Data Committee, U.S. Geological Survey
* Sharon Fawcett, Deputy Assistant Archivist, NARA
* Elizabeth Withnell, Chief Counsel, Privacy Office, DHS

2:40-2:55
Q & A

2:55-3:10
Break

3:10-3:50
Information Industry Perspective on Balance  Between  Access and
Protection:
* Leigh Barrett, Vice President and Lead Analyst, Outsell, Inc.

3:50-4:00
Concluding Remarks: Kathryn M. Mendenhall

Join FLICC for a reception honoring its 40 years of service immediately
after the Forum in the Madison Hall of the Library of Congress

2004 FLICC Awards

The 2004 FLICC Awards are the sixth national presentation of these
honors and recognize the many innovative ways that federal libraries,
librarians and library technicians have fulfilled the information
demands of government, business, scholarly communities and the American
public in Fiscal Year 2004. This year's winners are:

* Federal Library/Information Center of the Year (Large)
Dudley Knox Library, Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California

* Federal Library/Information Center of the Year (Small)
Edwards Air Force Base Library, Edwards Air Force Base, California

* Federal Librarian of the Year
Barbara D. Wrinkle, Chief, Air Force Libraries Branch, San Antonio,
Texas

* Federal Library Technician of the Year
Mary Alice B. Mendez, Library Technician, Defense Language Institute,
English Language Center Library, Lackland Air Force Base, Texas

4:15-6:00
FLICC 40th Anniversary Reception, Madison Hall, Madison Bldg, 1st
Floor

Meeting Announcement MA2005-19