For Immediate Release: September 3, 2009
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337
U.S. FISH & WILDLIFE SCIENTISTS GAIN RIGHT TO PUBLISH — Elimination of “Policy Review” for Technical Articles to Reduce Political Interference
Washington, DC — The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service will now allow its scientists to publish without management approval, a major step toward protecting scientific integrity from political manipulation, according to documents released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). During the Bush administration, political re-writes of Fish & Wildlife Service scientific studies on endangered species became fodder for scandal, congressional hearings and lawsuits – with some of that litigation still ongoing.
In an August 19, 2009 announcement to agency scientists, the following changes were highlighted:
“This is a sea change in the scientific freedom given to service professionals,” stated PEER Executive Director Jeff Ruch, whose organization has highlighted past abuses in political alteration or suppression of agency science. “Now the question is why the right to publish should not be extended to all federal scientists.”
While applauding agency efforts aimed at “encouraging and empowering employees to publish and to do so using their official agency and office affiliation,” PEER notes that there are gray areas of danger for scientists:
Many of these issues, including whistleblower protection, are supposed to be addressed in a government-wide initiative launched by President Obama back in March. Although the President’s order set a July 9 deadline for promulgating new scientific integrity policies, nothing has been produced nearly three months later.
“We are hearing on a daily basis from agency scientists in agencies such as NOAA that nothing has changed except their management has become even more secretive,” Ruch added, pointing out that the vast majority of managers who interfered with scientists and retaliated against perceived dissidents remain in place. “Thousands of government scientists are still waiting for the rhetoric about transparency and integrity to become reality.”
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Read the FWS policy on publishing
See the announcement of two new FWS-sponsored peer review journals
Look at prohibition against sharing draft documents
Examine the stalled White House scientific integrity effort
Compare NOAA policy or prior review before publication or speeches
Revisit science scandals at FWS under Bush
Review PEER concerns about the scientific integrity record of the new FWS Director