| Statement of Maria A. PallanteRegister of Copyrights and Director
 United States Copyright Office
 before the
 Subcommittee on the Legislative Branch
 Committee on Appropriations
United States House of RepresentativesFiscal 2015 Budget Request
       March 5, 2014     
 Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Wasserman-Shultz, and Members of the Subcommittee: I  appreciate the opportunity to submit the fiscal 2015 budget request of the  United States Copyright Office. This is an exciting and busy period for the copyright  system and for the Copyright Office. Throughout 2012 and 2013, the Copyright  Office worked toward the goals outlined in the Priorities and Special  Projects of the United States Copyright Office via a public process that  engaged the Office’s stakeholders and the general public. A consistent theme echoed  throughout our public processes is that both the copyright law and the  Copyright Office itself must evolve to meet the needs of the marketplace in  which creative content is accessed, performed and distributed across a wide  variety of consumer platforms. It  is an unusual time for copyright policy. The Chairman of the House Judiciary  Committee, Bob Goodlatte, stated in an April 24, 2013 address, “There is little  doubt that our copyright system faces new challenges today…. Even the Copyright  Office itself faces challenges in meeting the growing needs of its  customers—the American Public.”1 The Chairman was responding to my March 2013 call  for updates to the copyright law, to ensure that it remains effective for  authors and flexible for the public in the 21st century. Following Mr.  Goodlatte’s address, the House Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property  and the Internet has held eight hearings on a wide array of copyright-related  topics, with many more expected throughout the year. In addition, the Office has  engaged in a major effort to update its Compendium  of Office Practices and Policies, the comprehensive internal guidebook used  by Office staff that also serves as a recognized authority consulted by copyright owners, legal practitioners and the courts.   While  these copyright policy activities have been a major focus of the Copyright Office  throughout the past year, we have also maintained other important law and  policy functions including administering the national registration and  recordation systems, engaging in copyright policy discussions domestically and  internationally including in trade agreements and negotiations, and providing  expert support to congressional offices and agencies. In doing so, the Office draws  upon a surprisingly small, expert staff that has been increasingly called upon  to do more with less. Given the key role that the Office plays in the copyright  ecosystem and because copyright industries constitute a substantial and growing  sector of the national economy, it is clear that we must seek increased funding  in the near term to continue providing our basic public services while also  engaging in necessary modernization efforts. I fully recognize the difficult  budget environment within which we exist, but enhanced budget authority for the  Copyright Office should be viewed as a public investment that is both prudent  and sensible.  In terms of the U.S. economy, authors, songwriters,  book and software publishers, film, television and record producers, and others  depend on the copyright registration and recordation systems to protect their  creative works and business interests. Based on a study released in 2013 using  data from 2012,2 these core copyright sectors—whose  primary purpose is to produce and distribute creative works—accounted for  nearly 6.5% of the U.S.  domestic gross product, or exceeding $1 trillion for the first time. The core  copyright industries also employed 5.4 million workers (4.04% of U.S. workers), and that number doubled to over  11.1 million people (8.35% of the U.S. workforce) when those who  support the distribution of copyrighted works were added into the equation. Fiscal 2015 Budget RequestThe  Copyright Office recently completed a major two-year effort gathering  information through a series of public meetings with participants in the  marketplace including authors, publishers, producers, distributors and aggregators, educators, libraries, archives, and end users such as consumer and bar associations.  Results of the effort acknowledge and clarify a number of shortcomings regarding Copyright Office IT systems and services, some of which were already under discussion both within the Copyright Office and throughout the copyright stakeholder community. There is no question that the Office has both near term and long term investment needs. Nonetheless, for this immediate cycle the Copyright Office request put forward for fiscal 2015 as part of the Library's larger budget process is limited to inflationary increases to maintain existing spending levels including staff costs. For fiscal 2015, the request put forth is $53.068 million, offset by fee collections of $27.971 million, and licensing royalty collections of $5.611 million, applied to the Office's Licensing Division and the Copyright Royalty Judges. Specifically, our requests are as follows: 
  
    A 2.8% increase ($1.272 million) over fiscal 2014 for Copyright Basic to support mandatory pay-related and price level increases affecting administration of the Office's core business systems and public services;A 2.6 % increase ($131,000) over fiscal 2014 in offsetting collection authority for the Copyright Licensing Division to support mandatory pay-related and price level increases affecting the administration of the Office's licensing functions; andA 2.7% increase ($41,000) over fiscal 2014 for Copyright Royalty Judges to support mandatory pay-related and price level increases. Copyright Office Special ProjectsAs mentioned earlier, fiscal 2013 marked the conclusion of  many of the projects outlined in the Priorities and Special Projects of the  United States Copyright Office. Three of these projects rise to the level  of special discussion--Technical Upgrades, Compendium Rewrite, and Recording  Documents.
     The Copyright Office’s  Technical Upgrades Project focused on issues relating to the reliability,  security and searchability of Office’s records as well as the ease of use and  convenience of our online services. Public response to the Office’s Federal  Register Notice called attention to shortcomings with the digital repository,  user interface, quality of data and public records, standard identifiers,  information architecture and infrastructure, and customer experience. Many cited basic frustrations, such as the need to access previous  applications for reference, and the need for enhanced features, such as  customized dashboards.  Rewriting the Compendium  of Office Practices and Policies was the most ambitious of our projects. Accomplished  largely by an internal team of senior attorneys and registration experts, the  Office engaged in auditing, reconciling, and documenting current registration  practices. The team devoted special attention to legal developments in the  courts and technical developments for creating and distributing works. A key  goal of the project is to make the Office’s practices more transparent and  accessible. In some cases, the review led to a reevaluation and revision of  existing practices to ensure a more robust registration record. During this  process, it has become clear that this revision is the first step in developing  a registration program for the twenty-first century. The Compendium must remain  a dynamic document that evolves with changes to the marketplace. As with registration, there is no general requirement that  copyright owners record copyright-related documents, including assignments of  ownership, with the Office. Instead, the law provides incentives for recording.  During the previous reengineering effort, the Office tabled updating the  recordation function, which now provides the Office with an opportunity to  remake the recordation function in a manner to best serve the current  marketplace. The Office met with many law firms, businesses and trade  associations to clarify issues relating to recordation. The system would  benefit for having more copyright owners publicly assert their ownership  interests as a condition of maintaining certain remedies of protections. Further,  the Office would benefit from reviewing other systems, such as those used by  local governments, to process documents on public record. By making recordation  less burdensome, the Office can create a more robust public record. The Office  is engaging the public in further discussions on the Recordation program in fiscal  2014 to determine the future of the Recordation Program.  Challenges  of the Current Fiscal EnvironmentThe  Office appreciates the restorations that the Committee provided to the Office  in the 2014 appropriation. However, the Office is still down about 7% from 2010  levels, and Fiscal 2014 has been an especially challenging year because fee  revenue in the first quarter was the lowest it has been in five years. Moreover,  implementation of a new fee schedule in April will make revenue largely  unpredictable for the remainder of the fiscal year.  Title 17 states that fees received remain  available until expended. In some fiscal years, fee collections exceed the  spending authority granted for that particular year, while in other years fee  collections fall below the spending authority. Fees in excess of expenses are  collected and maintained in a reserve fund to be used by the Office in years  during which fee collections fall short. The unpredictability of fee receipts  in fiscal 2014 highlights why it is critical that the Copyright Office maintain  sufficient reserve funds to deal with contingencies effectively. In recent  years, the reserve has fallen below and remained under $5 million; this may  seem a relatively small figure but these funds may nonetheless mean being able  to patch an IT system or staff an important study for Congress.     While  the Office is able to fund two-thirds of its operations with fees, appropriated  dollars are essential to fund the many activities that serve the general  American public and commerce that cannot reasonably be funded by fees for  copyright registration and other services for copyright owners.  We therefore respectfully request that the  Copyright Office budget includes sufficient spending authority as to fees  collected, and sufficient appropriated dollars, but that a reserve remains available  to meet shortfalls in projected receipts so that public services are not  negatively affected.     The  accumulated results of budget cuts and unpredictable revenue income have taken  a toll on the Office’s ability to provide critical services at the level the  public demands. Declining budget support has impacted or will impact the Office  in the following ways: 
  
    Although the Office is currently understaffed, it has reduced new hiring and reduced non-personnel expenditures. These cuts have very real and negative effects on the Office's ability to meet its current demands, and having already made significant and repeated cuts to non-personnel spending leaves precious little flexibility to absorb future cuts.As a result of staff lost in the registration program, the Office is beginning to see increases in registration processing times—meaning that the public is waiting longer to have their registrations processed.The Office continues to reduce IT spending on eCO3 and has maintained previous reductions to the Help Desk for internal and external stakeholders who use eCO. This means that we are delaying updates to the system and stakeholders are waiting longer to get information on eCO.While the Office is doing what it can with existing resources, progress on many IT projects is incremental at best, including:
 
 
         Needed enhancements to the registration system including a secure repository for digital copyright deposits. o	An online system for filing and processing copyright-related documents submitted for recordation. Records of such documents are critical for determining chain of title to copyright-protected works. o	A searchable online catalog of pre-1978 digitized copyright records. Making these records widely available will help address the problem of works whose owners are unknown (often referred to as orphan works).  An online system for filing and processing copyright-related documents submitted for recordation. Records of such documents are critical for determining chain of title to copyright-protected works. A searchable online catalog of pre-1978 digitized copyright records. Making these records widely available will help address the problem of works whose owners are unknown (often referred to as orphan works). Law and PolicyThe Register of Copyrights is the principal advisor to Congress on issues of domestic and international copyright policy. The Copyright Office prepares major studies for Congress on highly complex issues, presides over administrative hearings and public roundtables, testifies before the Congress and coordinates with intellectual property offices in the executive branch. The Office works closely with both copyright owners and users of copyrighted works to sustain an effective national copyright system that balances interests on both sides in issues ranging from enforcement to fair use.  As noted above, Congress is now involved in a particularly busy period of copyright review and possible copyright revision that is especially important and rather rare. This kind of review has not occurred for decades. The Register and the Copyright Office are playing a critical role in supporting this ongoing congressional review, and have also engaged in a multi-year effort to update and improve Copyright Office services. The Copyright Office participates in important U.S. negotiations relating to intellectual property, for example, treaties and free trade agreements, at both the bilateral and multilateral levels. The Office also works with the Department of Justice on critical copyright cases. Fiscal 2013 In  fiscal 2013, the Office provided ongoing support to Members of Congress upon  request and through formal assignments. The Office prepared a major report on copyright  small claims. The report proposed that Congress create a process where parties  can more efficiently pursue small copyright infringement matters. The Office also  worked on a study of how current copyright law affects and supports visual  artists and how a federal resale royalty right for visual artists would affect  current and future practices of groups or individuals involved in the creation,  licensing, sale, exhibition, dissemination, and preservation of works of visual  art. The office held public roundtables on the issue in fiscal 2013 and  published its report on resale royalties in early fiscal 2014. The Office also  began a renewed review of the problem of orphan works and mass digitization,  issuing a formal request for public comments in early fiscal year 2013. The  Office will hold public roundtables on this issue in the Spring.     On the international front, the  Office continues to participate on U.S. delegations to World  Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) regarding a variety of global issues.  In June 2013, a senior member of the Office joined the U.S. delegation to  WIPO’s diplomatic conference that resulted in the historic Marrakesh Treaty to  Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons Who are Blind, Visually  Impaired, or Otherwise Print Disabled. The Office also continued to provide  significant technical advice and support for ongoing negotiations of the Trans-Pacific  Partnership.  Registration and Recordation Registration  Program:  Since the end of 2013, the Office experienced growth  of the number of claims on hand. The growth is directly related to loss of  staff to process these claims. At current staffing levels, the growth in  unprocessed claims will likely continue unabated and lead to increased  processing times and other problems the Office has historically experienced  during periods of reduced production.  Document Recordation:  As discussed earlier, the Office will utilize  its first Kaminstein Scholar in Residence, a well recognized authority on U.S. copyright  law, to prepare a full report on the possible future state of recordation,  which is expected at the end of fiscal 2014.  The Office’s goal is to build an online filing  system for document recordation that will meet the expectations of stakeholders  who routinely engage in online commerce. Document recordation is of paramount  importance to the copyright community and providing electronic and fully  searchable functionality is a major goal.   Statutory LicensingThe Copyright Office administers certain  statutory license provisions of the U.S. Copyright Act, which involves setting  royalty rates and terms and determining the distribution of royalties for those  licenses. These licenses cover activities including the making and distribution  of phonorecords of musical works, secondary transmissions of radio and  television programs by cable television systems and secondary transmissions of  network and non-network stations by satellite carriers. In fiscal 2013, the Office’s Licensing  Division collected nearly $316 million in royalty fees and distributed  approximately $324 million in royalties to copyright owners, according to  voluntary agreements among claimants or as a result of determinations of the  Copyright Royalty Judges. The Division also continued a multiyear business  process reengineering program designed to decrease processing times for the  examination of statements of account, implement online filing processes, and  improve public access to Office records. The new processes will be implemented  and refined throughout fiscal 2014, 2015 and beyond. AcquisitionsIn addition to the registration program,  whereby works deposited through the registration program are made available to  the Library of Congress, the Copyright Office also administers the mandatory  legal deposit of works published in the United States, whereby certain  publishers must deposit two copies of published works with the Library of  Congress. In fiscal 2013, the Office managed the combined deposit of 641,723 copies  of books, motion pictures, and other creative works for the Library’s  collection, valued at approximately $29.4 million, which the Library would  otherwise have had to purchase. Because more and more journals,  magazines, and newspapers are "born digital," the Copyright Office is  working with the Library and with publishers to obtain and manage serials that may  only appear in electronic formats. The Office's current work sets the stage for  the Library's broader electronic acquisition strategy, which will ultimately  enhance and diversify the Library's collections to capture and reflect American  digital culture. Fees  for ServicesOn  November 14, 2013, the Office delivered a study of the costs it incurs and the  fees it charges with respect to the registration of claims, recordation of  documents, and other public services, pursuant to its authority under 17 U.S.C.  § 708(b). The statute requires that the Office establish fees that are  "fair and equitable and give due consideration to the objectives of the  copyright system." 17 U.S.C. § 708(b)(4). The Office is following two  guiding principles for determining fees—the establishment of sound fiscal  policies and a budget derived largely from offsetting collections, and the pricing  of services at a level that encourages participation in the registration and  recordation processes. The Office anticipates implementing the new fees in  early April 2014. Conclusion Mr. Chairman, I want to thank you for your consideration of our budget request today and for the Committee's past support of the U.S. Copyright Office. Thank you in particular for considering the funding we require to sustain a first-rate staff and meet necessary expenses, enabling us to perform our core duties under the law and build the infrastructure necessary to support America's copyright system in the years ahead.   
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