In an astonishing move, the Association of
Universities and Colleges Canada (“AUCC”)
announced yesterday on April 24, 2012 that it has withdrawn from the controversial
Copyright Board Post Secondary tariff hearing in which, among other things, Access Copyright sought a 1,300% increase over its previously
negotiated basic rate, proposed to be licensed and paid for non-existing rights
such as linking and display, and demanded powers for intrusive surveillance, auditing and
reporting of the digital and email activities of universities, students and
staff.
After taking all but a handful of its members by
surprise by agreeing
on April 16, 2012 to virtually all of the
above (except with the never realistically serious 1,300% figure reduced to a
still enormous 800% increase, meaning $26.00 a year per student), AUCC stunned
a lot of people yesterday by simply withdrawing from the hearing. Period.
Here’s the text of the letter from its outside
counsel, Glen Bloom:
On April 16, 2012 AUCC and Access Copyright agreed
upon the terms of a model licence agreement which AUCC is recommending that its
members outside Quebec enter into with Access Copyright. I enclosed a copy of
the model licence agreement.
The licence agreement that an AUCC member enters into
with Access Copyright based on the model licence agreement (the “Member
Agreement”) will licence that member to copy published works within Access Copyright’s
repertoire. A Member Agreement will be for a term commencing January 1, 2011
and terminating December 31, 2015. In view of section 70.191 of the Copyright
Act, the Interim Tariff that issued in the proceedings before the Board
concerning the Proposed Tariff, and the Proposed Tariff when certified, will not apply to any AUCC member
who enters into a Member Agreement.
Access Copyright has also agreed with AUCC to support
the position, if taken by an AUCC member that has signed a Member Agreement,
that the member should not be required to further participate in proceedings
before the Board concerning the Proposed Tariff, including participating in
surveys or providing further information as to its copying activities.
In view of AUCC’s agreement with Access Copyright,
AUCC hereby withdraws its objection to the Proposed Tariff.
The whole
letter can be seen here. Note the surprising
concession, as highlighted, that there will be a certified tariff. Many,
if not most, observers and stakeholders in the academic community might have
expected that, if it had decided to settle, AUCC would have at least insisted
that AC’s application for this tariff be dropped, at least as far as AUCC’s members
are concerned. That is what a settlement usually involves.
It appears that the withdrawal of AUCC moved in the
last few days from being merely a possibility to a "done deal"
and that yesterday’s announcement came as complete surprise to many if not
most AUCC members. They are now evaluating their positions.
Immediate questions that come to mind are these:
- What is the status of AUCC members that object to the model license negotiated by AUCC, and who presumably don’t want to see an even worse mandatory certified tariff forced upon them?
- Why didn’t AC drop the tariff application, as least as far as AUCC members are concerned – in exchange for the very sweet agreement that presumably many AUCC members will sign – especially those who yield to the “limited time offer”, which Prof. Katz has called an “an offer that they can’t refuse.”?
- What is the status of the AUCC members that AC and the Board regard as effectively delinquent regarding what they consider to be satisfactory responses to the interrogatories? AUCC was supposed to respond to that issue yesterday, April 24, 2012.
- What will happen to the survey that was left up in the air by AUCC? Will those members that don’t cave in right away to the model license be subjected to some unilaterally imposed survey?
- In any event, were the parties going to agree to the methodology of a survey even before the Supreme Court rules in the K-12 case? A serious issue in the K-12 case at the Board level was that, as CMEC itself eventually admitted, the basic underlying survey should have been done “differently” in light of the CCH v. LSUC decision, which was not fully take into account when the survey methodology was agreed to.
- Is AUCC simply walking away from the Copyright Board hearing, and leaving its dissatisfied members to cope for themselves?
- Would the Copyright Board recognize these members as ongoing objectors, and if so in what manner?
- If those members who don’t like the model agreement can’t somehow continue the fight at the Board, will the Board simply proceed in their absence and give AC all, or most, of what it asked for on a mandatory basis?
- What effect will the withdrawal of the first fiddle objector (AUCC) have on ACCC, which represents community colleges and which has let AUCC take the lead up to now? What about university teachers and students who are on the record but who have not been particularly active to date?
- If this development is a sour “lemon” to some institutions (e.g. the three dozen or so “opt-outs” and others that may not be satisfied with result), what options are open to them to turn can it into lemonade – maybe even “spiked lemonade”? This may well be a possibility if the AUCC’s abrupt departure clears the deck for a fresh and very vigorous approach by institutions that don’t want to sign the model license and may therefore decide to fight to the finish.
I have to say that I have been watching, studying,
writing about and/or participating as counsel in Copyright Board hearings and
court proceedings arising from them for about 25 years and I have never seen
anything comparable to this situation.
HPK