Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for taking the time to hear from CARL today.
I'm here as the president of the Canadian Association of Research Libraries, although I'm also a librarian and the vice-provost at the University of Alberta, with oversight for libraries, but also for some cognate units, including the university press and the bookstore.
CARL is the leadership organization for the Canadian research library community. Our members include the 29 major academic research libraries across Canada. They support research and innovation by facilitating access to scholarly information. They provide library services to support teaching, research, and learning at Canada's largest universities.
We at CARL were pleased to see Bill C-32. Updating of the Copyright Act is long overdue, and we are happy to see some helpful provisions that would permit our libraries to respond to the changing needs of their patrons.
Librarians at academic institutions are constantly encountering copyright issues. On our campuses we assist both users and creators. We facilitate access while respecting rights. This is what we do. This is what we will always do. With this in mind, I will focus my remarks today on why education is appropriately included as a fair dealing purpose.
Many technological changes in the library and in the classroom over the past 15 years have had a significant impact on the ways in which librarians acquire and make available content for research and instruction. For our universities and their graduates to be competitive in the international information economy, it is crucial that students, instructors, and librarians take full advantage of emerging technologies.
It is time to recognize, as other countries already have, that the contemporary university environment does not easily separate its activities according to the current fair dealing categories. In today's classrooms and libraries, research, personal study, review, criticism, and instruction are intertwined. The boundaries of these activities often overlap. The inclusion of education among other fair dealing purposes allows for new and innovative teaching methods while encouraging student creativity through broader use of information in all formats.
Some have claimed that the inclusion of education as a fair dealing purpose will lead to wholesale copying of entire works. This assertion ignores the fact that libraries and universities respect copyright under the present set of fair dealing purposes, and it wrongly assumes that an additional fair dealing purpose will automatically lead to abuses.
We recognize that fair dealing has to be fair. The mass copying that certain groups have talked about is never fair dealing under the current act and will not become so under an amended act. The inclusion of education as a fair dealing purpose will not change what is acceptable as fair dealing. All fair dealing copying remains firmly subject to the fairness test established by the Supreme Court. Libraries have been circumspect, even cautious, when exercising their fair dealing rights, and this is highly unlikely to change.
Currently, Canadian university libraries spend more than $300 million annually on the purchase or licensing of content. This will not change either with the addition of a new fair dealing purpose.
This is not a question of saving money. We won't be spending any less. Indeed, I think we'll be spending much more. This is a question of addressing the realities of the modern classroom and the modern library in support.
Finally, I would like to remind the committee that Bill C-32 is a package of provisions that aim to balance the needs of users and creators. The removal of education as a fair dealing purpose would destroy any balance in this bill—that is, in our judgment.
There are many provisions that address the needs of copyright holders. We must remember that Canadians from all regions expressed a desire to broaden fair dealing, and the inclusion of education among current fair dealing purposes addresses this.
I have one final note. A very important part of the role of the research library is to preserve our great works and our great collections and ensure the safety of these cultural products by organizing, cataloguing, and archiving what is created. This is in pursuit of preserving this human record in perpetuity for Canadians not only five years from now but also, believe it or not, 500 years from now. That is part of what we do.
Our community is concerned that any restrictive changes to the bill--they're not proposed at the moment--may compromise our capacity to preserve information in perpetuity. We ask that the committee take this into consideration when it is proposing amendments.
I'd like to thank the committee for its hard work and for taking the time to listen to us today.
I'd be pleased to answer any of your questions.