Subject: RLG news
Walter, Because preservation people have had a number of questions related to RLG's restructuring, I am forwarding this condensed press release in case you think it is appropriate to post. Thanks, Patti FORWARDED MESSAGE 06/24/91 10:53 FROM BL.JLH "Jennifer Hartzell": postable press release CONDENSATION of an RLG press release. (The complete release and a background paper on "RLG92" are available via U.S. mail from Jennifer Hartzell, 415-691-2207 or bl.jlh [at] rlg__bitnet.) RLG ANNOUNCES NEW ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE; CREATES COMMISSION TO EXPLORE LIBRARY PROCESSING IN THE 1990S RLIN to Remain Fully Supported; Negotiations with OCLC Terminated June 24, 1991 -- Following the June meeting of the Research Libraries Group's Board of Governors, RLG president James Michalko announced a series of actions that inaugurate the corporation's transition into "RLG92." Restructuring RLG Effective September 1, 1991, RLG will have only two categories of membership -- "general" and "special" -- open to not-for-profit institutions with an educational, cultural, or scientific mission. All current and prospective members are eligible for general membership; smaller institutions can opt for special membership. All members will have unrestricted access to the corporation's projects and cooperative activities as their needs and interests dictate. This summer, all members will elect a new, 15-member Board of Directors to take office on September 1. RLG's standing program committees will be disbanded on August 31, to give way to electronic conferencing and small task forces addressing specific projects. The corporation's business and collaborative activities will be conducted through these means as well as quarterly board meetings, an annual membership meeting, and central staff operations. The board also set annual membership dues for RLG92, effective September 1, 1992, at $25,000 for general members and $3,000 for special members. With a balanced budget for the transitional year beginning on September 1, 1991, RLG management expects to accomplish other changes needed in fee and cost structure, plus new revenue sources, by the beginning of the following fiscal year. New commission formed In conjunction with this initial restructuring, Michalko has created a special commission to consider how RLIN can be improved to meet the current and future technical processing needs of RLG member libraries. "Part of transforming RLG into RLG92 requires restructuring the way in which RLIN provides processing support," Michalko said. "Universities and other research institutions have invested in local information management systems and communication networks. RLG will develop RLIN to acknowledge and leverage these significant institutional investments." The commission will report to Michalko at the end of September. RLG program officer Linda West chairs the group, whose members include: Emily G. Fayen, assistant director of libraries - systems, University of Pennsylvania; Tia Gozzi, director of technical services, Stanford University Libraries; Gerald R. Lowell, associate university librarian for technical services, Yale University; Carol Mandel, director, technical services group, Columbia University Libraries; Lucia Rather, former director for cataloging, Library of Congress; and Jennifer A. Younger, assistant director for technical services, Ohio State University Libraries. Working with the commission will be: Kathleen Bales, RLG software development manager, Ed Glazier, RLG bibliographic quality assurance officer, and Lennie Stovel, RLG intersystems applications manager. Continued support for current RLIN uses As he made his other announcements, Michalko assured present RLIN users that RLG will continue to maintain the system as a full, current resource for processing, shared resources, preservation, and other cooperative activities. "In mapping out RLG's future course, we looked hard at the real nature of RLIN features and the needs they meet," Michalko said. "Two facts are quite clear: a resource like RLIN is essential to the collaborative activities of RLG members, and RLIN can provide needed support for bibliographic processing. RLIN's present functionality will be modified only as superior alternatives are found." RLG Board rejects OCLC proposals for linking systems and transfer of support For many months, RLG and OCLC (Online Computer Library Center) have been discussing an intersystems link between the OCLC and RLIN databases. RLG's initial proposal was to implement a fully functioning link in about a year. The transparent connection RLG proposed would have enabled users to refer searches done in their customary system environment to a file in the other system, and to pay for this usage as part of normal, single-system invoicing. RLG's Board of Governors voted unanimously at their June meeting that the final features, administration, and three-year development time table for the link offered by OCLC would not serve the users of either system as desired and would not be pursued further. Other negotiations to transfer RLG members' current cataloging activity from RLIN to OCLC also fell short of early expectations, and OCLC's offering was unanimously rejected. "OCLC's declared inability to accommodate the business of a group of RLIN-using libraries in less than 'two to three years' -- together with their unwillingness to commit to the kind of intersystems link we needed to take this step -- left us with nothing further to discuss," said Donald W. Koepp, university librarian of Princeton and a member of the negotiating team representing RLG's largest RLIN-using members. *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:7 Distributed: Sunday, June 30, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-7-005 ***Received on Monday, 24 June, 1991