Subject: Preservation microfilm queuing
Just a quick note to clarify statements in Paul Conway's query in the 4/15/93 Conservation DistList on queuing and cataloging in RLIN. It is no longer the case that RLG requires its microfilming project participants to queue the titles they film in RLIN. Effective with the creation of the currently funded Phase IV of the Great Collections Microfilming Project, in which 15 institutions are filming materials from 18 collections, our policy is in fact quite different. Basically, we expect and require institutions to ensure that the international community is aware of filming decisions either through the queueing of a book/serial record or the creation of a prospective film record at the time that filming decision is made. This activity must occur in a timely fashion and can involve inter- active updating and cataloging in the local system or in either OCLC or RLIN. Our intent is to ensure that records appear in OCLC and RLIN at the earliest possible point in the decision process so as to reduce the likelihood of duplication of efforts. Today's cataloging environments are exceeding complex and we are all working toward solutions that support national programs while not disadvantaging local institutions. Thus, RLG's policies for preservation cataloging are as flexible as they can be given the wide array of system implementations and applications. A run-down of the GCMP IV project participants reflects this quite real diversity of strategies. (Note that some institutions are using more than one method, depending on whether or not a "usable" record exists in RLIN, OCLC, or in their local system.) 10 institutions queueing directly in RLIN 1 institution prospectively cataloging directly in RLIN 1 institution prospectively cataloging directly in OCLC 1 institution prospectively cataloging locally & tapeloading to RLIN 2 institutions prospectively cataloging locally & tapeloading to OCLC Directors of technical services in libraries have long understood that the actions of their colleague institutions have immediate and often negative impacts on their own operations, whether the work in question is current cataloging or loading of retrospectively- converted records into national databases. Rather than submerging these issues as private "conversations" I suggest we would all benefit from an open discussion of the implications of various local decisions on the now international preservation community. Nancy Elkington - 415-691-2375 and Laurie Abbott (bl.lxa [at] rlg__stanford__edu) - 415-691-2238 *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:55 Distributed: Wednesday, April 21, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-55-001 ***Received on Tuesday, 20 April, 1993