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PLOS Responds to Proposed OMB Rule on Science Funding and Policy

July 14, 2026
in Policy
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PLOS Responds to Proposed OMB Rule on Science Funding and Policy

PLOS Responds to Proposed OMB Rule on Science Funding and Policy

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A proposed federal rule published by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) on May 29, 2026 could reshape how US research grants fund publication and dissemination. The change would revise OMB guidance for federal financial assistance and, critics say, risks weakening the independence of researchers while diminishing the visibility and reusability of federally funded work.

At the center of the debate is a provision under § 200.461 that would treat many publication costs as generally unallowable, unless a statute requires them or an award manager approves them case-by-case. Supporters argue that public spending should be scrutinized; opponents counter that the rule offers few workable alternatives for maintaining open access.

PLOS, an open science publisher, warns that removing broad support for publication costs would not just alter budgets—it would alter behavior. If researchers anticipate that open dissemination may be denied, fewer results may be shared openly, slowing discovery and reducing opportunities for verification, replication, and computational reuse.

PLOS also points to research with economic framing: open science benefits extend beyond the moment a paper appears. Wider access can lower duplication, speed up synthesis, and accelerate the translation of findings into clinical and technological applications. In this view, publication and reuse are not optional “extras” but core infrastructure for turning taxpayer-funded results into public value.

The organization notes that the debate about publishing costs is often treated as if public access were tied to a single business model. However, costs of open dissemination interact with the wider costs of closed access, including subscription systems that can restrict who reads and applies the research.

PLOS cites the need for transparency without conflating transparency with prohibition. Cost scrutiny, it argues, should identify more sustainable and accountable pathways—rather than assume that open dissemination can be avoided. The rule, critics say, would treat openness as a risk to be minimized instead of a goal to be enabled responsibly.

Beyond policy, PLOS emphasizes that open, structured research supports machine reading and AI-driven analysis. As computational tools and automated discovery become more embedded in research, accessible and well-governed outputs—articles, data, code, and methods—may increasingly determine scientific impact.

Finally, PLOS raises an international dimension. Limiting support for dissemination could reduce collaboration and knowledge exchange across borders—undercutting how science advances in practice and weakening the global standing of US-funded research.

It urges OMB to revise the approach so that reasonable, necessary costs supporting open dissemination, integrity checks, and long-term stewardship remain allowable when they align with federal award objectives.

Subject of Research: Federal research funding policy; open access and research dissemination
Article Title: OMB Proposal Could Constrain Open Publication Costs, PLOS Warns
News Publication Date: July 10, 2026
Web References: https://explore.plos.org/open-science-economic-benefits
References: OMB-2026-0034; § 200.461 (OMB guidance on federal financial assistance)
Image Credits: Not provided
Keywords: OMB; federal grants; open science; public access; publication costs; research integrity; scholarly publishing; computational reuse; AI and open research; international collaboration

Tags: effects of federal funding rules on researcher independenceimpact on scientific publication costsimplications for scientific transparencyimportance of publication reuse and verificationOMB federal guidanceopen science benefits for innovation and clinical translationOpen science policyPLOS stance on science policy reformspotential barriers to open disseminationresearch dissemination and open accessrole of government regulation in research practicesUS research funding
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