EPA Scientists Losing Access to JournalsCuts in Subscription Budgets Take Scientific Journals and Eco-News Offline
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is sharply reducing the number of technical journals and environmental publications to which its employees will have online access, according to agency e-mails released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). This loss of online access compounds the effect of agency library closures, meaning that affected employees may not have access to either a hard copy or an electronic version of publications.
Citing budgetary shortfalls, cancellations of online subscriptions will be felt more sharply in some EPA offices and regions than others. For example, one e-mail notes: "Region 3 [Mid-Atlantic Region] needs to cut its journal renewals about in half and the journals in question are very expensive." Other offices will face cuts of as yet unspecified but likely comparable dimensions.
Citing budgetary shortfalls, cancellations of online subscriptions will be felt more sharply in some EPA offices and regions than others. For example, one e-mail notes: "Region 3 [Mid-Atlantic Region] needs to cut its journal renewals about in half and the journals in question are very expensive." Other offices will face cuts of as yet unspecified but likely comparable dimensions.
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