Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I'm absolutely delighted to be here.
During the day I'm the vice-provost and chief librarian at the University of Alberta. But I'm here representing the Canadian Association of Research Libraries as its president.
We're an organization of 29 of the largest university libraries in the country, but our membership also includes three federal organizations: the Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information, Library and Archives Canada, and the Library of Parliament. Although the last three institutions do not take any part in our advocacy, they are there simply to be part of that network, which is providing Canadians with research content for their various uses.
Over the course of our 30-plus years, we've developed a capacity to partner in the research and higher education arena. We seek effective and sustainable scholarly communication activities. And we promote public policy, encouraging research and broad access to scholarly information.
We've done that over the years also by way of spinoff organizations. The three in particular that will be part of this presentation are the Canadian Institute for Historic Microreproduction, the Canadian Research Knowledge Network, and an organization called Canadiana.org.
We do welcome this opportunity to participate. The issues that you're dealing with are important issues, and they are particularly important to us. Although we have our few minutes today, you will be getting an extensive brief from us that will touch on a number of areas that I won't be touching on today. But they are certainly areas that are important for your energies, issues such as digital repositories, libraries as publishers of digital materials, and, most importantly--and I'll say one or two words about it later--the archiving of digital content.
Today I want to focus, though, on what is actually question five in your inquiry, and that is looking at digital content and particularly where digital content intersects with our users--Canadians of every socio-economic grouping--and making sure those individuals have access to the emerging and digital media.
Certainly, CARL encourages government to continue its efforts to extend broadband coverage to rural and northern communities so that all Canadians can have access to that content. We encourage the federal government to continue its program of ensuring that public libraries have computers that patrons can use for their learning and civic engagement, particularly in the rural areas and in the north.
We also encourage the government to continue to support the development of the library and archives community across Canada by way of the programs of such organizations and institutions, such as Library and Archives Canada and CISTI, the Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information. Both are very important to our well-being.
All of these programs are important in providing the means for researchers, teachers, students, and all Canadians to obtain the information they need in their research, education, and self-development activities.
But the means of access to digital content is only one factor in the digital equation. CARL has been advocating for a long time that government has a direct role to play in providing digital content for Canadians and in so doing to protect existing materials for future generations by digitizing Canada's documentary heritage.
If you come away with one recommendation from my presentation today, it should be that the Government of Canada needs to take a leadership role in preserving Canadian heritage by investing in the digitization of Canada's documentary heritage.
Many of you know well Tom Jenkins of Open Text. He is one of Canada's entrepreneurs and part of our team. He is on the Canadiana.org board. He was quoted in The Globe and Mail a year ago or so, saying that
much of Canada's knowledge and creative output remains on shelves in books, journals, government publications, research reports, films and TV productions, and archives. Less than 1 percent is online. We must mobilize our knowledge resources while supporting and encouraging those creating new content.
The digitization of Canada's documentary heritage has been a strong interest for CARL for many years. Canada's research libraries have the responsibility for the long-term preservation of that heritage and the mandate to make it available to Canadians. Digitization is the current approach to achieving both aims.
Canada's documentary heritage is held in paper or other analog formats in libraries, archives, museums, and other facilities. Of older documents, there are few copies available and they are often in an extraordinarily fragile state.
Once scanned, the lifespan of the original is greatly increased, and the information carried by the original will survive even if the original itself does not. Digital preservation entails its own challenges, to be sure, but they seem to be more tractable than those of the long-term preservation of the physical artifact.
I would say parenthetically that with the leadership of Library and Archives Canada, plus the leadership of many of my CARL colleagues and the CARL libraries, we are developing a network of what are called trusted digital repositories across the country to ingest just the kinds of materials that we're today encouraging you to support the creation of.
The more important reason for digitizing Canada's documentary heritage is to increase access to and use of it by Canadians and by others interested in Canada. Documents dispersed across many libraries and archives are difficult to discover and difficult or expensive for a researcher to consult. Interlibrary loans of rare or fragile documents are often not possible and travel to consult items is unaffordable for many. Many of you will recognize that as the condition today--at least I hope you recognize that.
That sentiment actually was stated in 1976 in one of the royal commissions of the government of the time, which looked at the same situation that you're looking at today, except in a different medium. The medium of that time was microform. It's the same issue, though: making Canadiana accessible to all Canadians.
There are many projects under way today. I'm not trying to suggest to you that we are not without progress. Things are happening. Library and Archives Canada, as I've said, has digitized many Canadian government documents. Your own Library of Parliament has digitized the debates of the House of Commons and Senate for almost all of the 20th century.
The University of Toronto Libraries are working with others, including my own institution, the University of Alberta, to digitize millions of out-of-copyright books. My own institution, the University of Alberta, has embarked upon a digitization project of 30 million pages of early Canadiana--Canadiana published up until 1923. Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec has digitized a great many collections of French language materials. As a more niche example, but an example representing a lot of things happening in the country, Simon Fraser University has a project to digitize publications relating to various immigrant groups in the country.
So a lot of things are happening, but “digitization” is a word that covers many processes. I won't go into them all today. It's complex. It's difficult. It means assigning what's called “metadata” in terms of being able to find things, indexing the text itself, and just making everything discoverable online. These are challenges, to be sure.
But they're all excellent projects and they're all precedents from which you can build a multi-institutional national project. As you can imagine, they represent a very small percentage of the voluminous number of documents that have yet to be protected. That volume is estimated to be at about 40 million titles, and we can't even estimate the amount of manuscript or archival materials we should be looking at.
The federal government has not been without a contribution, and we do want to thank the Department of Canadian Heritage. For example, in the CARL context, we had a grant of $200,000 to support the creation of a software tool that is now assisting all of our libraries in doing what I just mentioned: assigning metadata to digitized collections. I think a couple of you were actually there; I know that Mr. Uppal was there a year or so ago when we launched that. It has been used extraordinarily well.
There is a bit of irony in all of this. For some of those projects I mentioned, it's a bit of a sad reality, I guess--the University of Alberta project, for example, and the University of Toronto project--in that most of the resources for the digitization of Canadiana in those projects are coming from an American philanthropist and not from Canadian sources or the Canadian government.
We think there should be maybe be a little more investment. We don't want a Google, particularly, where we have to digitize our heritage and then buy it back. That's something we are trying to avoid if we can do so.
We note that the recently launched digital consultation mentions the need for digitization. We'll make further comments on that through the process they're engaged in.
We also believe, however, that the development and marketing of value-added services around the collections might present cost-recovery possibilities, and certainly it represents possibilities for partnerships with the private sector.
Many of those materials I mentioned just a few minutes ago are being used by educational publishers, by all sorts of individuals in the educational media exploiting what we already have digitized. And we can only assume that the more content that's out there, the more opportunity there will be for those kinds of private sector partnerships and those kinds of private sector publishers. It's a big industry and we think we can contribute to it.
The availability online of our national wealth of historical documents would be a boon to that creative sector, saving writers and other creators much time and trouble and encouraging cultural creation in and about Canada.
I want to briefly touch on the issue of copyright. The research library community firmly believes and asserts that creators should indeed be compensated for their work. The issues we project to you today with regard to retrospective digitization primarily focus on out-of-copyright materials. But we did want to suggest that CARL is in the process of compensating creators and publishers to the tune of about $250 million a year through our usage of those materials, through our purchase of those materials, and through licence fees we pay to Canada's various collectives.
As an association, we have participated in the government consultation, and we would be pleased to provide this committee with a copy of our comments. Our libraries want to be a part of the discussion when the government introduces the new copyright reform package, which we hear will be fairly soon.
We thank the heritage committee for inviting us to present today. We have appreciated the opportunity to underline for you the engagement of Canada's research libraries in the use, dissemination, and even the creation of digital media. We would be pleased to answer any of your questions.
Thank you.