WAYNE F. MCGOWN, Deputy Secretary, Department of Administration
On behalf of the Wisconsin Council on Printing, created by sec.
You advise that the computer-assisted composition unit of the State Printing Section has the ability to accept a variety of copy inputs and, through an automated text editing program, produce camera-ready copy. The material involved is already on the computer. The Department would use the same format as would be used for the production of public documents. The service to West Publishing Company would consist solely of a pass-through of material already on the computer tape to produce the hard copy on photosensitive paper. The Department proposes to charge the corporation the full cost of services at the same rates charged state agencies for similar service. The corporation would use the camera-ready copy in the production of West's Wisconsin Legislative Service and would effect a savings of rekeyboarding and proofreading.
A pass-through would consist of resetting levers or keys on the machine, so that the camera-ready "copy" would be in a format desired by West Publishing Company, and pressing the button which activates the machine. I am advised that the only hard copy (end product) which the unit produces is camera-ready "copy" on photosensitive paper. It will not reproduce material stored on computer tape on film. Camera-ready "copy" is text material in a form which can be photographed and stored on film which is used in the printing process.
This opinion assumes that the state has authority to have the computer-assisted composition unit and that the unit itself is not used for the purpose of printing of materials included within Art.
I do not view the constitutional provision or those opinions or cases as prohibiting the state from operating a machine which produces copy ready for a contract printer.
In 59 OAG 145 (1970), it was stated that sec.
The corporation could receive copies of the session laws under sec.
I do not view sec.
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