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Bills Aim to Give Rhode Island Public Libraries a Break from High Cost of E-books

Legislation would help libraries negotiate more reasonable contracts with e-book platforms and publishers.

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A lot of Rhode Islanders want to read Kristin Hannah鈥檚 latest novel, 鈥.鈥

The e-book version of Hannah鈥檚 Vietnam War narrative had 837 holds across the state鈥檚 libraries as of April 12. Nearly a week later, on Thursday, April 18, that number had risen to 900, according to the statewide . At least four physical copies were still available.

Libraries don鈥檛 pay what consumers do for e-books 鈥 they may pay as much as nine times more, according to the Rhode Island Library Association. They鈥檙e also not technically buying books: Libraries purchase licenses to e-books, not the e-books themselves, and licenses expire. Libraries essentially lease books for a set number of checkouts or duration of time, usually one to two years.

鈥淚f we purchased enough book licenses to satisfy even half of the 800 holds, it would cost us $24,000,鈥 said Julie Holden, assistant library director at Cranston Public Library. 鈥淔or one book. It鈥檚 a book that鈥檚 going to disappear in two years.鈥

The costliness of e-books and audiobooks 鈥 with limits driven largely by book publishers鈥 concerns over revenue, copyright and author compensation 鈥 inspired the state鈥檚 libraries to put their weight behind a pair of bills in the General Assembly: in the House, led by Newport Democratic Rep. Lauren Carson, and in the Senate, led by Democratic Sen. Victoria Gu of Westerly. The bills would leverage state contract law to give public libraries more control over their negotiations with e-book suppliers.

鈥淚f a bridge contractor is building a bridge in Rhode Island to replace the Washington Bridge, they have to build the bridge to the specifications of the state,鈥 Holden said. 鈥淪o that鈥檚 what this is saying: If you鈥檇 like to sell e-books to libraries in Rhode Island using state money, these are our terms. If the bills pass, and the publishers decide they鈥檙e not going to sell e-books to libraries anymore, then we鈥檒l see what happens.鈥

Some of the protections offered by the bills include allowing libraries to determine loan periods and to buy e-books at prices closer to consumer rates. Licensing models which require libraries to pay a fee for each checkout would be eliminated, and libraries would also be able to disclose their license agreements to other libraries.

Several states aim to rein in prices

, , , , , , and all have similar legislation in process this year. Other states have seen support from lawmakers but opposition from the judicial or executive branches. After Maryland鈥檚 General Assembly unanimously passed a bill to protect libraries鈥 purchasing powers in 2022, the U.S. District Court in Maryland on the basis of it being unconstitutional 鈥 an opinion informed by Association of American Publishers鈥 legal battle to prevent the law鈥檚 enactment, Publishers Weekly . In December 2021, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul a similar bill.

Holden, who also chairs Rhode Island Library Association鈥檚 membership committee, said e-books are a towering expense in the state鈥檚 . Public libraries are essentially paying for items they don鈥檛 own. The two major e-book platforms are OverDrive and Hoopla 鈥 the former allows libraries to purchase books for a set amount of time, while the latter makes libraries pay per-checkout. What鈥檚 consistent to both models is a reliance on licensing.

鈥淣ormally a state or municipality would never spend money on something that鈥檚 going to disappear. It鈥檚 not a good investment. It鈥檚 not a good use of taxpayer money,鈥 Holden said.

Around a decade ago, e-book purchases were comparable to hardcover prices, Holden noted. That changed once publisher HarperCollins moved to a licensing model that limited books to 26 checkouts.

鈥淥verall, the prices have risen, and the terms have been restricted,鈥 Holden said. 鈥淪o now we鈥檙e spending money on disappearing products.鈥

That鈥檚 totally different from the consumer space: Look at Amazon鈥檚 and you鈥檒l find books under $1 or books at 80% off. Audiobooks, which Holden called 鈥渁 whole other beast,鈥 also run up costs and libraries pay far more for them than a consumer does. A recent Stephen King audiobook, Holden said, was around $130.

Both time-based and checkout-based licensing have drawbacks, Holden said. With the former, the clock starts running once a book is purchased, meaning libraries are paying for hours, days or even weeks where the book is not being read by library patrons.

The checkout model, meanwhile, means people sometimes have to fight over the limited supply of a book. Holden said Cranston Public Library had to cap its Hoopla expenditures to $1,000 monthly, which translates to roughly $33 a day based on each checkout costing the library around $2 or $3. Most days, the checkouts are already full by 6 a.m., because people are putting in their holds at midnight.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had a lot of people emailing us complaining, calling us begging us to fund this further, so that all the books aren鈥檛 gone at midnight,鈥 Holden said. 鈥淪o now our patrons are staying up until midnight, so they can check out the day鈥檚 quota.鈥

Similar e-book bills have emerged several times in Rhode Island鈥檚 General Assembly 鈥 in , , , and . The Senate Committee on Education did recommend passage of Sen. Hanna Gallo鈥檚 of the bill, but the legislation has not progressed much otherwise.

Rhode Island Current reached out to two of the major e-book retailers about the proposed legislation.

鈥淲e are not prepared to comment at this time,鈥 said David Burleigh, a director of corporate outreach for Overdrive.

Hoopla did not return multiple requests for comment.

Larry Berman and Greg Par茅 鈥 spokespeople for the Rhode Island House and Senate, respectively 鈥 said in a joint statement via email: 鈥淧ublic hearings have been held on both bills in the respective House and Senate committees. Leadership is reviewing the testimony as the bills travel through the normal legislative process.鈥

The price libraries pay for physical books have largely stayed the same, barring regular increases from inflation. But The physical books seen here in the basement of the Providence Public Library likely aren鈥檛 as in high demand as certain e-books, with some digital titles having hundreds of holds (Alexander Castro/Rhode Island Current)

Publishers struggle with shadow libraries

While libraries鈥 budget concerns over e-books is a more recent trend, book publishers have worried about their own finances since 1908, when the emerged. This feature of U.S. copyright law allows the original purchaser of a book to resell their copy. That鈥檚 one reason publishers fretted when the secondhand book market saw exponential growth thanks to Amazon, and it contributes to publishers鈥 more modern preference for licensing over traditional sales, according to a from the Engelberg Center on Innovation Law and Policy.

Brick and mortar libraries must play by the rules of copyright. More harmful to publishers鈥 bottom lines are shadow libraries 鈥 online repositories of pirated e-books and PDFs that are virtually limitless in size. After years of battles over audiovisual content like pirated movies and music, federal attention on illicit libraries has intensified in recent years. A 2023 by the Office of the United States Trade Representative noted that Libgen, one of the more infamous and popular book pirates, has seen legal action from 11 countries 鈥 including the United States, who associated with the site in 2022.

The Dublin, Ohio-based OCLC 鈥 which maintains WorldCat, the largest library catalog with data aggregated from institutions worldwide  鈥 also against one of these shadow libraries in Ohio U.S. District Court in February.

None of this has stopped Libgen from being mirrored, or copied to different servers. One Libgen mirror and search engine boasted a collection of 31,645,836 books as of this writing.

Rhode Island鈥檚 public libraries, meanwhile, can鈥檛 even obtain a digital copy of E.B. White鈥檚 鈥淐harlotte鈥檚 Web,鈥 a children鈥檚 classic that was published 72 years ago.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 purchase it,鈥 Holden said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know why. It鈥檚 just not available for libraries鈥he libraries cannot purchase it.鈥

The Kindle version is currently available on Amazon for $5.99.

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Rhode Island Current maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Janine L. Weisman for questions: info@rhodeislandcurrent.com. Follow Rhode Island Current on and .

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