Dear Sarah,
For similar reasons we will certainly be cancelling our subscription to the American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology (also published by The Thoracic Society) We are a JISC Band D HEI with a large Health Faculty but no medical school and have been quoted a price based on Tier 3. As I understand it the paid for content covers the current 12 months, after that it is freely available, and when you add in that access is restricted to on campus - a 728% rise is ridiculous.
We are committed to acquiring electronic content over print but do resent the removal of our option to retain an affordable subscription in favour of one we cannot possibly justify. I also agree that Tiering is a very blunt instrument when judging a department's ability to pay ... to quote a colleague - 'it has gone from being one of our best-value journals to one of our worst in one step'
Regards
Alison.
Acquisitions Manager (Learning Information Services)
Edinburgh Napier University
-----Original Message-----
From: An informal open list set up by UKSG - Connecting the Information Community [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Sarah Pearson
Sent: 25 January 2011 11:44
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [lis-e-resources] Cost of American Journal Of Respiratory And Critical Care Medicine renewal
Hello there,
Apologies for the delay in replying to this email on the price increase for 'American Journal Of Respiratory And Critical Care Medicine'. At University of Birmingham, we are currently in the process of discussing this price increase with the publisher too.....
We have been quoted on tier 3 for 2011 which is an increase of over 600% from what we paid last year. When budgets are flat or declining, a single increase of this magnitude can wipe out an entire departmental budget for the year. We already made our cancellations and renewals prior to this price increase being reported in November. Having paid for all of our other subscriptions, I'm afraid that this increase being reported will not be paid from the budget. No matter how well used a title is, if a library budget cannot support the increase, then other measures for funding need to be looked at including document supply / pay per view and departmental subscriptions. None of these options are popular in the current funding climate but then there are no options left for libraries.
Societies who increase their institutional subscriptions by this percentage are clearly out of touch with the financial climate in which their customers and end users are operating and I'm afraid their subscription revenue will be hit as a result. I am not a big fan of tiering because we at Birmingham inevitably get hit by any tiering looking at usage, FTEs, research income, JISC band, Medical school etc and they don't always map to the funding capacity for resources budgets within a particular department as opposed to the institution as a whole. However, if a tier pricing model is to be implemented by a publisher, then it needs to be implemented incrementally and not in one massive hike of this sort.
I'm sure that our high usage will mean that an ILL purchase is still more expensive than a 2011 subscription factoring in cost per use historically. However, it comes down to a library's ability to pay when they have already spent / committed the subscription budget at this point in the year.
Best Wishes
Sarah
Sarah Pearson
E-Resources & Serials Coordinator
Library Services
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham
UK
B15 2TT
Email: [log in to unmask]
Tel: 0121 414 5825cid:c7dbf6ef-5a3f-4a50-bc13-e8dc98eb5397
-----Original Message-----
From: An informal open list set up by UKSG - Connecting the Information Community [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Dominic Benson
Sent: 29 November 2010 18:25
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [lis-e-resources] Cost of American Journal Of Respiratory And Critical Care Medicine renewal
Hello
So it seems. The days of print + free online are well and truly over. Now you can only add a print order to some Society titles if you have an (expensive) online subscription.
For this title there is a massive hike for "tier 2" institutions, ie: 6-200 users. Our usage statistics do not support the uplift in the fee, so we may well have to cancel the sub.
We're also perturbed at another society's definition (re-definition?) that a single site license => access within library building only, meaning we've had to upgrade the license again with a vast increase in cost. This title is also at risk of being cut.
These sorts of machinations certainly help making our renewal decisions easier. Document delivery on demand, here we come.
Kind regards,
Dom Benson
--
[log in to unmask]
Electronic Resources Librarian
Brunel University Library, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UK, UB8 3PH
-----Original Message-----
From: An informal open list set up by UKSG - Connecting the Information Community [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Maureen Richardson
Sent: 29 November 2010 16:54
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [lis-e-resources] Cost of American Journal Of Respiratory And Critical Care Medicine renewal
Hello
American Journal Of Respiratory And Critical Care Medicine
Can I check if anyone has had huge price increase? We paid £452 last
year for print only but quoted over 1500 this year. Seems cannot have
print only now. Ebsco are checking this price is right but if it is -
increase is over 300% - in fact nearer 400%!
Maureen
Maureen Richardson
Electronic Resources Manager
Information Resources
University Library
Edge Hill University
St Helens Rd
Ormskirk
Lancashire L39 4QP
[log in to unmask]
Telephone: 01695 58 4684
Fax: 01695 58 4592
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UKSG groups also available on Facebook and LinkedIn
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