The extra costs of photocopying and scanning material will not be passed on to students. Photo / Thinkstock
The extra costs of photocopying and scanning material will not be passed on to students. Photo / Thinkstock
Universities are going to have to cumulatively shoulder an extra $330,000 financial burden because of an increase in copyright licences, but the cost won't be passed on to students.
And a test case in the Court of Appeal will affect the universities' ability to negotiate future costs of copyright licencefees.
The licensing body for publishers, journals, newspapers and magazines, Copyright Licencing Limited (CLL), which licences photocopying and scanning of material for students, applied to increase the fees from $20 per fulltime student to $26, with an annual consumer price index adjustment.
The universities affected are Auckland, Waikato, Massey, Victoria, Lincoln, Canterbury, Otago and the Auckland University of Technology.
Universities New Zealand executive director Chris Whelan said in December last year they settled with CLL on an increase of about $23 per student on behalf of the universities.
An Auckland University spokeswoman said the cost would not be passed onto the students because there was legislation that set how much students paid in fees.
A technical aspect of the issue went through the court system and a ruling from the Court of Appeal was released today.
It said the universities found the price increase by CLL "unacceptable".
"They pointed to declining demand, the result of digital media supplanting photocopied materials."
The universities wanted the licences to be declared a set of licences, while CLL wanted them declared a scheme, the Court of Appeal ruling said.
If the licences could be declared a scheme, they could be altered collectively, while a set of licences would need to be individually altered.
The Copyright Tribunal agreed with CLL and ordered they be declared a scheme, but the High Court reversed that decision.
The Court of Appeal has now reversed the High Court decision and again ruled the licences a scheme.
Mr Whelan said the ruling created a principle that universities would not be able to negotiate costs in 2017 when the next negotiations take place.
The universities' lawyer John Katz said it was too early to know if an appeal on the ruling would be lodged.