Wednesday, June 29, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 17 ORDINANCE From Page 1 Arbor City Attorney Stephen Postema proposed that council specify the specifics regarding the issue of permitting medical mari- juana in the city. Sandi Smith (D-Ward 1) - another strong proponent of the ordinances - said the while the process was extensive, she felt it was necessary in order to develop legislation that best serves Michi- gan residents on an issue they find significant. "I supportit because it's some- thing that the state of Michigan voters have indicated is important to them," she said. Smith added that city coun- cil spent more than a year debat- ing the issue because she feels the state did a poor job in laying out the city's responsibilities in regards to medical marijuana policy. Mike Anglin (D-Ward 5) echoed Smith's sentiments, say- ing that the city had little state guidance on these ordinances and that he was particularly pleased with the anonymity clause that ensured caregivers' names would not be recorded with the city. However, Anglin said he would like to eventually see addi- tional work done to the zoning ordinance because, while it guar- antees that no marijuana will be sold near grade schools, it does not factor in preschools and other childcare facilities. City Council members Ste- phen Rapundalo (D-Ward 2) and Marcia Higgins (D-Ward 4) voted against the ordinances, and Tony Derezinski (D-Ward 2) was absent for the vote. Rapundalo said he voted against the ordinances because he believes the discrepancy between local and federal law may potentially hinder the coun- cil's approved plans. He added he would have liked to wait and see what the state policy would be regarding this issue, as they will also be working on similar legisla- tion. Rapundalo added that he voted against the ordinances because they didn't include enough regu- lation to protect neighborhoods. Dennis Hayes, an Ann Arbor attorney with a background in drug-related legalities, said the ordinances took a long time to pass because the council started with "highly regulated" legisla- tion and that eventually became more lenient as council realized certain technicalities may impede patients from seeking help from caregivers. The recently approved ordi- nances were an attempt to dem- onstrate that the city would be stricter in regards to marijuana than it has been in the past, Hayes said. He added that because the topic is usually taboo in politics - except in more presumably liberal cities like Ann Arbor and Berkeley - politicians strive to adhere anti- marijuana policy. However, he argued that poli- ticians should discuss it more openly, noting 74 percent of peo- ple in Ann Arbor voted for legal- izing medical marijuana in 2008, more than the percentage who voted for Obama in the presiden- tial election. "It's somewhere between stu- pid and ignorant how we treat medical marijuana and marijuana in general," he said. Chuck Ream, owner of the dispensary MedMAR Pharma- ceuticals Inc., said that while he has some concerns about the pub- lished document, Ream praised the council for stepping out of their comfort zone and learning all about the medical marijuana industry before voting on the finalized ordinances. "It was a good process because the council was learning all the way ... When they learned some- thing new, they made changes," he said. HathiTrust aims to expand digital collection * of resources through orphan works project To increase access to digital works, 'U' launches new program By BETHANY BIRON Editor in Chief After seven years and the digi- tization of millions of volumes as part of the Google Books Library Project, the University may soon be able to boast an even larger number with the help of the newly announced orphan works project. John Wilkin, associate Uni- versity. librarian, said the orphan works project is an initiative to identify books that may have unknowinglycrossedintothepub- lit domain after copyright holders have deceased. The project will play an integral role in helping to augment the HathiTrust Digital Library - a collaborative venture between the University and 52 other libraries around the world to digitize works and make them accessible to the public. Wilkin, who is also the execu- tive director of HathiTrust, said that while the Google Books Library Project has been success- ful thus far in allowing for the dig- itization of a multitude of works from each of the campus libraries, it ultimately has been hindered by copyright law that may ren- der a particular work unusable until it receives approval from the rights holder. Engaging in the orphan works project allows for an increased amount of resources to be available to University mem- bers as well as the general public, he said. "I think there's a lot of hope that when we digitize the library's collection that it transforms things, and it does, but so much is constrained by copyright," Wilkin said. "So we've been able to open up far more than we ever have before." According to Paul Courant, the University's dean of librar- ies, the process of finding copy- right holders is "laborious" since it entails extensive and thorough research. Additionally, he said it requires consulting with various book retailers to ensure that the work is not on sale somewhere, and thus making it no longer eli- gible to be considered an orphan. He added that despite the dif- ficultly, allowing these works to be accessible to the campus commu- nity is important in establishing an environment that fosters the sharing and utilization of schol- arly information and resources. "We've always wanted to make use of these works ... we decided it was very natural since all of our students and faculty already are completely eligible to read these books," Courant said. "We're just making it easier to read them in a somewhat differ- ent way. Similarly, University spokes- woman Kelly Cunningham said the orphan works project is a cru- cial part of the HathiTrust's mis- sion to provide access to literature and scholarly work to the greater campus community. "This is part of the library's mission to preserve knowledge and to share knowledge, espe- cially with their own communi- ty, and this kind of just fits right along with what their goals and aspirations are for the University library," Cunningham said. Wilkin echoed Courant's sentiment that the process will be challenging, and said that attempting to prove the absence of a copyright owner can be dif- ficult, particularly in making the final decision to include the work in the database. "It's really about trying to prove a negative and those sorts of processes are very hard," he said. "You're trying to prove that there is no rights holder out there, but the process of making that determination is extraordinarily difficult and we've got a nice crew of people with legal backgrounds working on this." Additionally, Wilkin said a website will be developed in about three weeks that will list items the University has determined as orphans so that the public can peruse the collection and uncover if they hold rights to any of the works. Alleged orphans will sub- sequently have 90 days before they can be declared as part of the project. If a work is published after the 90 days and a copyright holder claims rights to the work, Wilkin said HathiTrust will immediately deactivate access to the particular work and hold a discussion with the rights owner to determine future action. However, Wilkin said for the most part living copy- right holders are enthusiastic about being included in the data- base and that the University often has authors contacting them from around the world to be included in the project. "Typically when we contact a rights holder about a work, the rights holder says 'Oh please open access of that work to everybody in the world,"' he said. He added that the orphan works project at the University is one of the first of its kind, and while similar efforts have been made at other institutions, it is the forefront of a new program that will likely attract notice from oth- ers around the nation. "It would be wrong to say orphan works digitization hasn't happened, but it hasn't hap- pened for the published record in this way, and not on any sort of scale," he said. "We are singular in this regard. We will be doing something that the world will be watching and I mean that quite seriously. Other research librar- ies are going to be paying close attention to this and it will begin to shift their activity as they come along." GET THE DAILY IN YOUR E-MAIL Subscribe to one of our e-newsletters at michigandaily.com/subscribe