 |
Orphan Works Update
by The Board of the Illustrators' Partnership
|
The Orphan Works Act will not leave the Judiciary Committee before fall.
That’s the news from Ms. Corinne Kevorkian, Senior Vice President, General
Counsel & Secretary of F. Schumacher & Co., one of our allies in the fight
against the Orphan Works Act:
“On July 20, the Decorative Fabrics Association, the National Textile
Association and the American Manufacturing Trade Action Coalition sent [a]
letter in opposition of the Orphan Works Act to the leadership of the House
Judiciary Committee.
“We have since heard from members of [Representatives] Coble and Inglis'
staff that, because of the concerns raised by the textile industry, the
bill is not coming out of the House Judiciary Committee before Congress
recesses for the summer, which is good news.
“In the meantime, DFA and NTA continue to have discussions with staff
members in Senators Specter's, Hatch and Leahy's offices in order to
put the marker down in the Senate that this proposed legislation has
serious problems. NTA and DFA will also try to schedule meetings with
staff members of the full HJC [House Judiciary Committee].”
Textile companies joined this fight shortly after June 20th, when we met
with greeting card companies and others at the Jacob Javits Center in
Manhattan. It was they who brought this bill to the attention of the
textile and manufacturing industries and all groups met by conference call
on July 11th to discuss strategies for opposing HR5439.
Our congratulations to the textile manufacturers for getting the word out
to these critical Congressmen. In their letter, the organizations said
this:
“Unfortunately, HR5439 poses a significant new and unanticipated risk to
the textile and home furnishing sector. Under the bill, commercial or
non-commercial infringement of any visual art, past, present, and future,
regardless of age, country of origin, published or unpublished, is
permissible whenever the rights holder cannot be identified or located.
Because the U.S. Copyright Office does not have a searchable database
for visual designs (and no such searchable database otherwise exists) the
rights holder of many creative designs will go unidentified — even
in cases where the rights holder would have clearly sought to protect its
legitimate rights or where such designs were previously or are currently
exploited by the rights holder.”
This development points up the need to keep writing our Congressional
representatives with clear and reasoned arguments for defeating or
seriously amending the Orphan Works Act.
Our groups continue to work towards amending or killing this poorly
conceived legislation.
— The Board of the Illustrator’s Partnership
This may be posted or forwarded in its entirety to any interested
party.
|
Site copyright © 2003 Illustrators’ Partnership of America.
845 Moraine Street, Marshfield, MA 02050
781-837-9152
All rights reserved. |
|