BILL NUMBER: AB 609	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MAY 9, 2013
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 23, 2013
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 1, 2013

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Nestande
   (Coauthors: Assembly Members Beth Gaines, Maienschein, 
and Olsen   Olsen,   and Skinner  )

                        FEBRUARY 20, 2013

   An act to add Chapter 2.5 (commencing with Section 13989) to Part
4.5 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, relating to
state government.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 609, as amended, Nestande. State-funded research.
   Existing law authorizes the Department of General Services to
carry out various powers and duties relating to assisting a state
agency in the management and development of intellectual property
developed by state employees or with state funding, including, among
other duties, developing a database of state-owned intellectual
property using specified data.
   Existing law authorizes state agencies and departments to, upon
request, share records and information related to intellectual
property generated by state employees or with state funding with the
department. Existing law also imposes certain restrictions on
employees and former employees of the department with respect to
divulging certain information provided by state agencies and
departments regarding intellectual property.
   This bill would enact the California Taxpayer Access to Publicly
Funded Research Act. The bill  , notwithstanding any other
law, would require a state agency that provides grant funding
resulting directly in research for the purpose of specific research
undertakings to develop a public access policy. The bill would
require the public access policy to, among other things, include a
requirement that electronic versions of final manuscripts or a
specified link to an electronic version of original research papers
accepted for publication be submitted to the state agency and the
California State Library, and to provide free online public access to
those final peer-reviewed manuscripts or published versions, as
specified.   would establish minimum publication
requirements for a person receiving funding, in whole or in part, in
the form of a research grant from a state agency. The   bill
would require the grant recipient to provide for public access to
any publication of a state agency-funded invention or state
agency-funded technology, as specified, including ensuring that an
electronic version of the final peer-reviewed manuscript is submitted
to the funding agency or to an appropriate publicly accessible
database approved by the agency, and is made publicly available no
later than 12 months after the official date of publication. 

   This bill would, until January 1, 2018, require, not later than
December 1, that each state agency submit an annual report on the
state agency's public access policy to the Governor, the Senate
Committee on Rules, and the Speaker of the Assembly.  
   The bill would make legislative findings in support of granting
public access to state-funded research and inventions. The bill would
also express the intent of the Legislature to encourage all grantees
to abide by the publication requirements outlined in the California
Code of Regulations for stem cell research California Institute for
Regeneration Medicine grants, as specified. The bill would exempt a
grantee that receives funding from an agency that has an existing
publication requirement that meets or exceeds the requirements of
this bill. 
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Chapter 2.5 (commencing with Section 13989) is added to
Part 4.5 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code, to read:
      CHAPTER 2.5.  STATE-FUNDED RESEARCH


   13989.  This act shall be known and may be cited as the California
Taxpayer Access to Publicly Funded Research Act.
   13989.2.  For purposes of this chapter,  the following
definitions shall apply: 
   (a)     "State 
 "state  agency" shall mean an entity within the executive
branch, including, but not limited to, all departments, boards,
bureaus, commissions, councils, and offices. Neither the University
of California, nor the California State University, is included in
the definition of state agency. 
   (b) "Direct research" shall mean research resulting directly from
grants from state agency funding for the purpose of specific research
undertakings.  
   (c) "Policy" shall mean the public access policy established
pursuant to Section 13989.4.  
   13989.4.  (a) Notwithstanding any other law, each state agency
that provides funding in the form of a research grant to a grantee
for direct research shall develop a public access policy that shall
do the following:
   (1) Include a requirement that electronic versions of the author's
final manuscripts, or a link to an electronic version of the author'
s final manuscript in an open access digital repository of original
research papers that have been accepted for publication in
peer-reviewed journals and result from research supported from state
agency funding, be submitted to the funding state agency and the
California State Library.
   (2) Provide free online public access to such final peer-reviewed
manuscripts or published versions as soon as practicable, but not
later than 12 months after publication in peer-reviewed journals.
   (3) To the extent in compliance with copyright or patent
protection, produce an online bibliography of all research papers
that are publicly accessible under the policy, with each entry linked
to the corresponding free online full text. The California State
Library shall produce and maintain the online bibliography under this
paragraph.
   (4) Provide for the long-term preservation of, and free access to,
published research findings in a stable digital repository
maintained by the California State Library or in any repository
determined by the California State Library to meet these conditions.
   (5) Be developed in conjunction with any other state agencies that
provide funding for direct research or that underwrite the cost of
facilities, equipment, hardware, information resources, personnel, or
otherwise fiscally support direct research.
   (6) Authorize the use of grant money for publication costs, which
include fees charged by a publisher, including, but not limited to,
color and page charges, or fees for digital distribution.
   (b) The policy described in subdivision (a) shall exclude all of
the following:
   (1) Research progress reports presented at professional meetings
or conferences.
   (2) Laboratory notes, preliminary data analyses, notes of the
author, phone logs, or other information used to produce the final
manuscript.
   (3) Classified research, research resulting in works that generate
revenue or royalties for the authors, or patentable discoveries, to
the extent necessary to comply with copyright or patent protections.
   (4) Authors who do not submit their work to a peer-reviewed
journal or works that are rejected for publication in such journals.
   (5) State-funded research grants entered into pursuant to a
contract prior to the effective date of this chapter where the terms
and conditions of that contract prohibit the public dissemination of
the research or are otherwise in conflict with the provisions of this
chapter.
   (6) Any data, including supplemental data, that has the potential
to reveal a person's identity.  
   13989.4.  The Legislature finds and declares the following:
   (a) The state is home to many of the world's top research
universities, national laboratories, and leading-edge high-technology
companies that generate significant intellectual property.
   (b) It is in the interest of the state to ensure that the results
of state-funded research are promptly developed and protected and to
ensure free public Internet access to the results, where appropriate.

   (c) The expansion of innovation with the investment of taxpayer
dollars in the form of publicly funded grants could generate public
benefit, including, but not limited to, reinvestment in research,
development of new innovations, and jobs created from these types of
research.
   (d) It is the intent of the Legislature that any grantee who
receives funding in the form of a research grant from a state agency
abide by the publication requirements outlined in subdivisions (a) to
(d), inclusive, of Section 100303 of Title 17 of the California Code
of Regulations, as amended on March 21, 2013, and in effect on July
1, 2013.  
   13989.6.  (a) Not later than December 1, annually, each state
agency shall submit a report on the state agency's policy to the
Governor, the Senate Committee on Rules, and the Speaker of the
Assembly.
   (b) The report shall include, but not be limited to, all of the
following:
   (1) A statement of the effectiveness of the policy in providing
the public with free online access to papers on research funded by
the state agency.
   (2) A list of papers published in peer-reviewed journals that
report on research funded by the state agency.
   (3) A corresponding list of papers made available by the state
agency as a result of this act.
   (c) (1) A report to the Legislature pursuant to this section shall
be submitted in compliance with Section 9795.
   (2) This section shall become inoperative on January 1, 2018,
pursuant to Section 10231.5.  
   13989.6.  (a) Any grantee that receives funding, in whole or in
part, in the form of a research grant from a state agency shall
provide for free public access to any publication of a state
agency-funded invention or state agency-funded technology, as
provided in this section.
   (b) For any manuscript that is peer reviewed and accepted for
publication in a scientific journal, the grantee shall ensure that an
electronic version of the final peer-reviewed manuscript is
submitted to the funding agency or to an appropriate publicly
accessible database approved by the agency, including, but not
limited to, the California Digital Library, PubMed Central, or the
California Digital Open Source Library, to be made publicly available
no later than 12 months after the official date of publication.
Manuscripts submitted to the California Digital Open Source Library
shall be exempt from the requirements in subdivision (b) of Section
66408 of the Education Code. The grantee shall make reasonable
efforts to comply with this requirement through submission of the
manuscript to an approved publicly accessible database, including
notifying the funding agency of submission. If the grantee is unable
to submit the manuscript to an approved publicly accessible database,
the grantee may comply by providing the manuscript to the funding
agency, no later than 12 months after the official date of
publication. In lieu of the final peer-reviewed manuscript, the
grantee may submit the final published article.
   (c) For publications other than those described in subdivision
(b), including meeting abstracts, the grantee shall comply by
providing the manuscript to the funding agency no later than 12
months after the official date of publication.
   (d) Grantees are responsible for ensuring that any publishing or
copyright agreements concerning submitted articles fully comply with
this section.
   (e) Grantees are authorized to use grant money for publication
costs, including fees charged by a publisher for color and page
charges, or fees for digital distribution.
   (f) This chapter shall not apply to a grantee that receives
funding from a state agency or funding agency that has an existing
publication requirement that meets or exceeds the requirements of
this section, on or before the effective date of this chapter.