Obama, like Bush, seems to be stifling salmon science

Scientists at NOAA found themselves squelched during the Bush administration. Now, scientists are raising similar concerns about the Obama team, from which they expected support.


100yen/Wikimedia Commons

Klamath River Dam

Department of Interior

Klamath River Dam

The other day, Save Our Wild Salmon associate director Dan Drais called my attention to a Los Angeles Times article about the Obama administration's apparent failure to stop skewing science and bullying scientists, as its predecessor had (infamously) done. "Now scientists charge that the Obama administration is not doing enough to reverse a culture that they contend allowed officials to interfere with their work and limit their ability to speak out," Tom Hamburger and Kim Geiger reported on July 10. " 'We are getting complaints from government scientists now at the same rate we were during the Bush administration,' said Jeffrey Ruch, an activist lawyer who heads an organization representing scientific whistle-blowers."

You want to know why the government still claims dams aren't so bad for salmon, or for the Southern Resident Killer Whales that eat them? The paper reported, "In the Pacific Northwest, federal scientists said they were pressured to minimize the effects they had documented of dams on struggling salmon populations."

I asked Ruch how many such complaints his organization, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) had received. He said three. Had PEER received similar complaints under Bush and even Clinton? "Absolutely," Ruch said.

Justin Kenney, NOAA's director of communications and external affairs, told me, "I know of no instance in which any NOAA scientist was pressured to come to any conclusion other than what the best science available dictated regarding dams or any other avenue of inquiry." Of course, Kenney said, "science doesn't dictate policy," (and it shouldn't, although it should inform policy), so "policy decisions may differ from scientific findings." But he suggested political pressure on NOAA scientists is unlikely, because "NOAA Fisheries' science centers, where our scientists reside, are physically, administratively, and financially separate from the corresponding regional offices (in this case in the Northwest and Southwest), where policy decisions are made."

Ruch didn't buy that. "The last time we surveyed NOAA Fisheries field staff in 2005," he said, “no one ventured the opinion that they were insulated from pressure because they are "physically, administratively and financially separate from the corresponding regional offices.' ”

Five years ago, PEER and the Union of Concerned Scientists surveyed "more than 460 NOAA Fisheries scientists in offices across the country." They reported that "(a) strong majority (58 percent) said they know of cases in which high-level Commerce Department appointees or managers 'have inappropriately altered NOAA Fisheries determinations;' and more than half of all respondents (53 percent) are aware of cases in which 'commercial interests have inappropriately induced the reversal or withdrawal of NOAA Fisheries scientific conclusions or decisions through political intervention.' " The two groups announced that "political pressure is also reflected in the agency's scientific and technical output: More than one third of respondents working on such issues (37 percent) have 'been directed, for non-scientific reasons, to refrain from making findings that are protective' of marine life.' "

"If (the agency scientists) reported being subjected to pressure in 2005," Ruch asked, "what has changed to cancel or nullify those pressures?"

Since Obama's approach to Northwestern salmon issues is indistinguishable from that of Bush, there has been a lot of speculation in some circles about just who might be pulling the strings or calling the shots. It's assumed that the Northwestern congressional delegation must at least be complicit in this business-as-usual approach. What about the pressure on agency scientists? I asked Ruch if he had a sense of how high in the pecking order this sort of pressure might originate. He replied, "Jim Lecky still heads the NOAA Office of protected Resources."

Two years ago, after NOAA awarded Lecky a gold medal, PEER said that in 2002, "Lecky was the official whose actions led to a massive fish kill on the Klamath River. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit later ruled that Lecky’s handiwork 'doesn't even pretend to protect' endangered salmon and 'ignores the life cycle of the species.' "

The organization also said that in 2005, a "Commerce Office of Inspector General report found that Lecky improperly altered a key NOAA biological opinion on the effects of diverting Sacramento River water from the San Francisco Bay Delta to thirsty Southern California to find no jeopardy to threatened and endangered species." And in October, 2008, "Lecky directed agency biologists that since impacts on coral and other marine species as well as effects on ocean temperatures and acidity cannot be traced to any one source of greenhouse gas, no consultation was required on greenhouse gas-producing projects under the Endangered Species Act."

When I asked Kenney about this, he checked, then told me flatly that: "Mr. Lecky was not involved in drafting oversight or approval for any of those biological opinions." I asked Ruch about that. He responded that I should simply check the "jurisdiction of OPR, headed by Lecky and (the) list of species, including anadromous fish, for which it claims jurisdiction.” (NOAA websites explain that OPR is "a headquarters program office of NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries Service, or NMFS) . . . with responsibility for protecting marine mammals and endangered marine life," including 28 listed populations of Pacific salmon and steelhead, and the Southern Resident Killer Whale.)

In any case, PEER believes that the problems go beyond individual officials to a nationwide policy that restricts scientists' freedom of speech — even when they're off the job. On July 12, PEER filed a rule-making petition, asking Commerce Secretary Gary Locke "to rescind a Bush administration policy requiring National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and other agency scientists to obtain pre-approval to speak or write, whether on or off-duty, about scientific topics deemed 'of official interest.' "

Three years ago, the Commerce Department issued an administrative order that prevents agency scientists from disclosing information without prior review or approval, even if they do it on their own time, acting as private citizens. There's an exception for basic research that would normally be subject to peer review. However, "all written and audiovisual materials that are, or are prepared in connection with, a Fundamental Research Communication, must be submitted by the researcher, before the communication occurs, to the head of the operating unit, or his or her designee(s), for approval in a timely manner.” The order says that "approval or non-approval (may not) be based on the policy, budget, or management implications of the research." An employee can appeal a decision within the Department of Commerce.

For a non-official communication of interest, any NOAA "employee shall provide to the head of the operating unit or Secretarial office, or their designee(s), timely advance notice of the occurrence and subject matter of ... All written and audiovisual materials that are, or are prepared in connection with, a Non-Official Communication of Interest must be submitted before the communication occurs to the head of the operating unit or Secretarial office, or their designee(s), for a review to be concluded as soon as is reasonably practicable (but, under no circumstances whatsoever, shall the period of review exceed fourteen days)."

"This is a gag order on scientists and has no place in an administration that claims to be transparent," Ruch said in a press release.

PEER's rule-making petition argues that the Commerce Department order "restricts free speech rights, creates a chilling effect on scientific communications, and undermines both the principles of the 'Public Communications' policy and President Obama's goals for scientific integrity and transparency within Executive branch departments."


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Comments:

Posted Thu, Aug 12, 6:34 a.m. Inappropriate

The federal government--namely the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers--also claims that hosing all the native vegetation from thousands of miles of federal levees is not likely to adversely affect ESA species, including salmon. The federal government--namely the National Marine Fisheries Service and the US Fish and Wildlife Service, which are responsible for implementing recovery plans for ESA-listed species--quietly looks the other way when the Corps forces local governments to search out and destroy native riparian habitat that these species need for bare survival, not to mention recovery.

This is one of the many reasons I say that NMFS stands for "not much fish science."

Mud Baby

Posted Thu, Aug 12, 10:17 a.m. Inappropriate

Conversely, we have heard of government "scientists" planting grizzly bear fur on barbed wire fencing to expand the mapped area under their particular agency's control. In an attempt to - among other things - justify a larger budget request. We've, likewise, had federal, state, and local officials call even seasonal drainage ditches "critical habitat" for the endangered Chinook Salmon. Why? To promulgate stricter regulation (and therefore agency relevance, power and control) AND to - you guessed it - allow that agency to nose in the trough of salmon recovery money (an endangered species looks soooooo much better on a grant application!). For every example of government scientists being "squelched" by an administration (the implication being in bowing to pressure from those big, bad Corporations), there is an example of a government "scientist" exaggerating - and, frankly, falsifying - "science" in pursuit of, nothing more noble, than money and power. There is a reason a group titled Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (as opposed to Private Employers for Environmental Irresponsibility?) is crying this charge. The same motivation drives the NEA to decry to woefully inadequate funding of our education system. Citizens paying the bills shouldn't, always, assume their motives are anything more than the typical hyperbole ("if we don't get more tax money, the "most vulnerable" are going to DIE!!!) of self-serving bureaucracies and interest-groups (the parasitic cadre of consultants, non-profits, ad nauseum that follow government money like hyenas follow a wounded wildebeest) lobbying for a greater slice of the taxpaying public's pie.

BlueLight

Posted Thu, Aug 12, 12:19 p.m. Inappropriate

Thanks, Mud Baby and BlueLight for reminding us that the problems industry, aka business-as-usual, has two flanks, not one.

Awareness of assumptions and paradoxes, ego withdrawal, and reflection prevent solutions from making problems worse. Humans are capable of sustaining such thoughts—since at least the early 1970s, essential clues have come from Bateson, Bohm, Diamond, Shiva, Chew, Foster, Loveleock, Speth, Deb, and many others.

Yet, if current attempts to re-globalize are measure, the appearance of doing-something is far far too entrenched to sidestep world-wide ecological degradation and the question becomes will the problems industry make adaptation as tragic as humanly possible, or will enough be enough?

The lovely weather must be getting to me.

afreeman

Posted Thu, Aug 12, 12:46 p.m. Inappropriate

Thx for shining a light on this dark muck. Maybe a followup piece can look at the role of BPA in squelching salmon science

nonydog

Posted Thu, Aug 12, 12:54 p.m. Inappropriate

Well what if scientists told us that we should stop eating beef? I'm fairly sure that no one would be terribly surprised. The arguments have been out there for several decades now that the beef industry and the beef product is less than environmentally and nutritionally benign. Higher ups at the federal level would remind us that there would be economic and social prices to be paid if we all stopped eating beef and likely would tut-tut the scientists. Scientists would respond that they are the ones who know the truth of the matter and should be allowed to influence policy in a more vigorous fashion. So who do you want to speak for federal agencies? both the scientists and the suits would be my guess which seems to be what's happening here.

I think unspoken theme of the article is that Mr. Chasan wants the Snake River dams removed ( I make this assumption because of previous articles he has written). If salmon restoration were the only issue that bears on that question I would probably agree with him.

kieth

Posted Thu, Aug 12, 1:04 p.m. Inappropriate

"If salmon restoration were the only issue that bears on that question I would probably agree with him."

Unfortunately, Kieth, many of the dogmatic idealogues guiding these processes do not consider any side (or alternative) but their own. (Especially costs and impacts to a public many of them hold in contempt.) It is why we see well-intentioned regulations (requiring fire-retardant chemicals in children's pajamas, for instance) come to obstruct common sense progressions and - even - give birth to unintended consequence problems (fire retardant chemicals in Puget Sound). Our "experts" usually aren't as expert as they would have us believe.

BlueLight

Posted Fri, Aug 13, 10:39 a.m. Inappropriate

Curiously, the others who commented here all seem to ignore the real issue -- that Obama has again proven himself to be Barack the Betrayer.

Thus they seem to sidestep the fact Mr. Chassen's disclosures are yet more proof of the imbecility of our "hope," yet more evidence "change we can believe in" was never anything but a Big Lie.

I wonder when we will wake up to the ultimate lessons of the 2008 election: that our franchise is compromised to meaninglessness; that beneath the distractions of rhetoric, DemocRat and GOPorker have become (correctly spelled) synonyms; that no matter for whom we vote, we are allowed only reactionary Republicans.

And – most of all – that the one “change” brought about by Obama (for whom I too voted) is the fact we can no longer sanely deny the inescapable depth of our powerlessness.

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