rdm policy and recovering costs

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Funders’ data policies and costing RDM in grant applications Sarah Jones DCC, University of Glasgow [email protected] Twitter: sjDCC Funded by:

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An introduction to UK funders' research data management policies and how the costs of supporting RDM can be recovered via grant applications.

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Page 1: RDM policy and recovering costs

Funders’ data policies and costing RDM in grant applications

Sarah JonesDCC, University of [email protected]

Twitter: sjDCC

Funded by:

Page 2: RDM policy and recovering costs

RESEARCH FUNDER DATA POLICIES

Page 3: RDM policy and recovering costs

Research funders’ policies

www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/policy-and-legal/overview-funders-data-policies

Page 4: RDM policy and recovering costs

Summary page for each funder

www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/policy-and-legal/research-funding-policies/ahrc

Page 5: RDM policy and recovering costs

Key differences in policies

• EPSRC does not want DMPs in grant applications

• Preservation periods range from 3 years to in perpetuity – most funders ask for 10+ years

• ESRC and NERC support designated data centres

• ESRC and NERC may withhold the final grant payment if data aren’t offered for deposit

• Cancer Research UK states explicitly that it will NOT provide additional funds for RDM

Page 6: RDM policy and recovering costs

Ultimately funders expect:

• timely release of data- once patents are filed or on (acceptance for) publication

• open data sharing- minimal or no restrictions if possible

• preservation of data - typically 10+ years for data of ‘long-term value’

See the RCUK Common Principles on data policy: www.rcuk.ac.uk/research/Pages/DataPolicy.aspx

Page 7: RDM policy and recovering costs

RCUK Common Principles in brief1. Make data openly available where possible

2. Have policies & plans. Preserve data of long-term value

3. Metadata for discovery / reuse. Link to data from publications

4. Be mindful of legal, ethical and commercial constraints

5. Allow limited embargoes to protect the effort of creators

6. Acknowledge sources to recognise IP and abide by T&Cs

7. Ensure cost-effective use of public funds for RDM

www.rcuk.ac.uk/research/Pages/DataPolicy.aspx

Page 8: RDM policy and recovering costs

COSTING RDM INTO GRANTS

Page 9: RDM policy and recovering costs

RDMF: funding RDM event25th April 2013 at Aston University

www.dcc.ac.uk/events/research-data-management-forum-rdmf/rdmf-special-event-funding-research-data-management

Included a panel with representatives from BBSRC, EPSRC, NERC, MRC, STFC and the Wellcome Trust to answer 30 questions submitted by audience. A written response is now online.

Blog reports:

• Supporting research data management costs through grant funding: http://blogs.rcuk.ac.uk/2013/07/09/supporting-research-data-management-costs-through-grant-funding

• A conversation with the funders: www.dcc.ac.uk/blog/conversation-funders

• Funding RDM: https://research-computing.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/2013/05/01/funding-rdm

• For which RDM activities will UK research funders pay? http://mrdevidence.jiscinvolve.org/wp/2013/05/01/for-which-rdm-activities-will-uk-research-funders-pay

Page 10: RDM policy and recovering costs

Eligible costs

The RCUK Common Principles state that:

“It is appropriate to use public funds to support the management and sharing of publicly-funded research data.”

At the RDMF, funders clarified that all elements of RDM specific to a research project are allowable.

Institutions need to manage their public funding streams to allocate appropriate budgets to RDM.

Page 11: RDM policy and recovering costs

How should costs be recovered?

It is for institutions to decide which elements to recover:• Directly (i.e. directly allocated or incurred on grants)• Indirectly (by using QR funding or indirects on grants)

If the cost of RDM services and infrastructure is already recovered via your institution’s indirect cost rate, it cannot also be applied for as a direct cost.

Guiding principle: don’t charge for the same thing twice

Page 12: RDM policy and recovering costs

What to charge and how?Direct costs• In-project costs that must be incurred before the end of the grant• Potentially hardware, staff, expenses, costs of preparing data for deposit...• Could include charges levied by repositories (pay once store forever)• May also include costs ordinarily recovered indirectly (e.g. storage) if the

requirement is exceptional and exceeds the norm

Indirect costs• The general cost of providing RDM services and infrastructure• Designated data services should be used if provided• Outsourcing to a third-party is also an option

Remember to make a clear justification for any costs

Page 13: RDM policy and recovering costs

Be specific for each grant

• A flat rate charging structure for RDM services (e.g. 10% of each grant) is not appropriate.

• The value of a research grant is not a good proxy for the volume or complexity of data it may generate.

• Base costs on each specific case and make a clear justification for them. They should be auditable.

Page 14: RDM policy and recovering costs

Key messages• All costs are eligible, but:

– Direct costs must be incurred before a grant ends– Nothing can be double funded (recovered indirectly and as a direct)

• Researchers are expected to use designated data repositories.

• There is no rule of thumb to measure the proportion of a grant that may acceptably be spent on research data management.

• A clear justification of resources is needed for each specific case.

Page 15: RDM policy and recovering costs

Thanks – any questions?

DCC guidance, tools and case studies:www.dcc.ac.uk/resources

Follow us on twitter: @digitalcuration and #ukdcc