Sen. Doc. No. 06-047
SPECIAL REPORT
of the
RESEARCH COUNCIL
concerning
THE POLICY
ON
DATA OWNERSHIP, RETENTION, AND ACCESS
AT THE
Presented at the
654th Regular Meeting of the Faculty Senate
Jenny Adams |
Krishna Melnattur |
Iqbal Agha |
John Mullin |
D. Anthony Butterfield |
David Ostendorf |
Charles Clifton |
William Patterson |
Kourosh Danai |
Stanley Scarpati |
Andrea Foulkes |
Jay Schafer |
Dorothy Gilbert |
Lynnette Leidy Sievert |
Paul Kostecki |
Carol Sprague |
Mason Lowance |
Jean Swinney |
Michael Malone |
Martha Taunton |
Ernest May |
Paul Utgoff, Chair |
|
Juan Zamora |
Sen. Doc. No. 06-047
Approved by Research
Council on
The
Various federal
agencies have formulated policies regarding data ownership, retention, and
access. For example, see Part C.53 of
the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) grants management circular A-110,
the Council on Government Relations (COGR) document `Access to and
Retention of Research Data: Rights and Responsibilities,' Chapter 6 of
Steneck's `Introduction
to the Responsible Conduct of Research,' and the various requirements
regarding research data stated by the National Science Foundation (NSF), the
National Institute for Health (NIH), and other government funding agencies.
Some publishers impose requirements on the access to data as a condition for
publication.
The Amherst Campus
policy (this document) applies to all campus research and researchers,
regardless of funding source, if any. For sponsored research, any relevant
policies of the sponsor shall apply in addition to those provided here. Any
apparent conflicts of policies are to be resolved in writing and approved by
the Vice Provost for Research prior to accepting an award, contract, or other
binding agreement.
Data shall be
construed as all recorded information, regardless of medium, and all actual
samples or examples, that were created or gathered and that could serve to influence
or support a research finding or conclusion. Data does not include such items
as research papers cited by the researcher, preliminary notes or paper drafts,
reviews, or related communications, or items that are already the property of
others. This definition is intended to characterize current research norms, not
to modify them.
The
When another research
institution or entity has joint ownership rights to data, agreed in writing
prior to creation of the data, the data shall be owned jointly as agreed. Each
such institution shall have unfettered access rights to the original data. Such
an institution not holding or serving as custodian for the original data may
copy the data and own the copy.
When a creator of
data ceases to be an employee or contractor of the University, the creator must
leave the data in the physical possession of the owner(s), but will continue to
have access rights to the data. The creator may take a copy of the data, at
creator's expense.
The researcher(s) who created the data typically serve as
the custodian of the University's data. Such
researchers act on behalf of the University, without limiting the University's
ownership rights. Data may not be removed from the University premises, except
on a temporary basis when work occurs elsewhere, without written approval of
the Vice Provost for Research. The custodian of the data shall take all
reasonable steps to protect the data from damage or loss,
Sen. Doc. No. 06-047
including damage or loss due to catastrophic
events. The owner of the data shall provide storage space and financial support
as necessary to maintain the data. The University may elect to serve as
custodian of the data, but may not limit the creator's access to those data.
Data shall be
maintained in a manner that prevents alteration or that makes any and all
alterations evident. For example, written data should be recorded in a bound
notebook with numbered pages. If a datum is revised, the reason for revising it
must be documented and dated. Electronic data should be kept on a read-only
medium, or in a read-only mode. The creator of data should be able to document
and defend any modification of the data.
Data shall be
retained for at least three years after its creation. If the data were created
as part of a sponsored research project, then the data shall be retained for at
least three years after the final report to the sponsor has been submitted, or
the ending date of the project, whichever is later. The data shall be retained
for a longer period as dictated by any applicable policy or written agreement.
If more than one minimum period of retention is deemed to apply, the data will
be retained for the longest of these periods. If the data led to the granting
of a patent, then the data shall be retained for the life of the patent and its
extensions. The data shall be retained while any litigation or legal action or
investigation of allegations regarding it is pending. The data shall otherwise
be retained for as long as anyone expresses, in writing, an interest in its
retention. In no case will the data be discarded or destroyed when it is known
to be in use.
Researchers shall
endeavor to make their data publicly available as soon as possible, and to the
extent possible. Access may be delayed while the correctness of the data is
being verified, until an initial publication based on the data appears, for the
minimum period needed to file a patent application, or for any other reasonable
need. Data should be released early if benefit to the public is likely.
No data may be
published or made available in a form that would breach a
confidentiality. For example, the medical and financial records of an
individual are private. The identity of human subjects is also typically held
in confidence. The confidential aspects of confidential data are to be
protected by both the custodian and the owner of the data. This may include
physically securing the data. When a means of hiding the identity of a
protected individual or entity is possible, say by the encoding or removal of
names, such steps will taken so that the data may be made public to the
greatest extent possible. If the data cannot be made satisfactorily anonymous,
it shall not be made public, and the Vice Provost of Research will be informed
of the existence of the data and the reasons that it cannot be made public. The
creator of the data must make every reasonable effort to release the data in a
useful form. If the veracity of confidential research data is challenged, the
creator must cooperate with the Vice Provost for Research to devise a means to
satisfy the challenge. As owner, the University will defend any challenge, with
the cooperation of the researcher. All applicable laws and legal protections
regarding confidentiality will be obeyed.
Data that is
deemed sensitive may require restricted access or other limitations. The owner
and custodian of such data will comply with applicable laws.
Applicable
non-disclosure agreements must be honored. However, the Vice Provost must
approve any non-disclosure agreement ahead of time and be a co-signer. Such
agreements shall generally be of limited duration, to give a sponsor sufficient
time to file a patent application or for other protection.
When a collaboration comes to an end, and data was created during
the collaboration, each member of the collaboration shall retain access to that
data.
MOVED: That the Faculty Senate approve the Policy on Data Ownership, Retention, and Access
at the
52-06