U.S. Scientists Say They Are Told to Alter Findings

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THE NATION
U.S. Scientists Say They Are Told to Alter Findings
More than 200 Fish and Wildlife researchers cite cases where conclusions were reversed to weaken protections and favor business, a survey finds.


By Julie Cart, Times Staff Writer


More than 200 scientists employed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service say they have been directed to alter official findings to lessen protections for plants and animals, a survey released Wednesday says.

The survey of the agency's scientific staff of 1,400 had a 30% response rate and was conducted jointly by the Union of Concerned Scientists and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.

A division of the Department of the Interior, the Fish and Wildlife Service is charged with determining which animals and plants should be placed on the endangered species list and designating areas where such species need to be protected.

More than half of the biologists and other researchers who responded to the survey said they knew of cases in which commercial interests, including timber, grazing, development and energy companies, had applied political pressure to reverse scientific conclusions deemed harmful to their business.

Bush administration officials, including Craig Manson, an assistant secretary of the Interior who oversees the Fish and Wildlife Service, have been critical of the 1973 Endangered Species Act, contending that its implementation has imposed hardships on developers and others while failing to restore healthy populations of wildlife.

Along with Republican leaders in Congress, the administration is pushing to revamp the act. The president's proposed budget calls for a $3-million reduction in funding of Fish and Wildlife's endangered species programs.

"The pressure to alter scientific reports for political reasons has become pervasive at Fish and Wildlife offices around the country," said Lexi Shultz of the Union of Concerned Scientists.

Mitch Snow, a spokesman for the Fish and Wildlife Service, said the agency had no comment on the survey, except to say "some of the basic premises just aren't so."

The two groups that circulated the survey also made available memos from Fish and Wildlife officials that instructed employees not to respond to the survey, even if they did so on their own time. Snow said that agency employees could not use work time to respond to outside surveys.

Fish and Wildlife scientists in 90 national offices were asked 42 questions and given space to respond in essay form in the mail-in survey sent in November.

One scientist working in the Pacific region, which includes California, wrote: "I have been through the reversal of two listing decisions due to political pressure. Science was ignored — and worse, manipulated, to build a bogus rationale for reversal of these listing decisions."

More than 20% of survey responders reported they had been "directed to inappropriately exclude or alter technical information."

However, 69% said they had never been given such a directive. And, although more than half of the respondents said they had been ordered to alter findings to lessen protection of species, nearly 40% said they had never been required to do so.

Sally Stefferud, a biologist who retired in 2002 after 20 years with the agency, said Wednesday she was not surprised by the survey results, saying she had been ordered to change a finding on a biological opinion.

"Political pressures influence the outcome of almost all the cases," she said. "As a scientist, I would probably say you really can't trust the science coming out of the agency."

A biologist in Alaska wrote in response to the survey: "It is one thing for the department to dismiss our recommendations, it is quite another to be forced (under veiled threat of removal) to say something that is counter to our best professional judgment."

Don Lindburg, head of the office of giant panda conservation at the Zoological Society of San Diego, said it was unrealistic to expect federal scientists to be exempt from politics or pressure.

"I've not stood in the shoes of any of those scientists," he said. "But it is not difficult for me to believe that there are pressures from those who are not happy with conservation objectives, and here I am referring to development interest and others.

"But when it comes to altering data, that is a serious matter. I am really sorry to hear that scientists working for the service feel they have to do that. Changing facts to fit the politics — that is a very unhealthy thing. If I were a scientist in that position I would just refuse to do it."

The Union of Concerned Scientists and the public employee group provided copies of the survey and excerpts from essay-style responses.

One biologist based in California, who responded to the survey, said in an interview with The Times that the Fish and Wildlife Service was not interested in adding any species to the endangered species list.

"For biologists who do endangered species analysis, my experience is that the majority of them are ordered to reverse their conclusions [if they favor listing]. There are other biologists who will do it if you won't," said the biologist, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
 
I'm seriously beginning to think George W. Bush is Antichrist. Almost every stupid, insane and dangerous initiative I can think of is coming or has already come from his office. I wonder when his administration will run out of ways to fuck up USA and rest of the world.
 
Just to be fair, they never specified how long this goes back.

Not to take some of the blame off of Bush himself, but this is probably much larger than just his raping of enviromental regulations and policies.
 
Ratty said:
I'm seriously beginning to think George W. Bush is Antichrist.

No joking.
antibush.jpg


And I am not surprised by the mesage, it is no secret that the USA does care more for economics than nature, and quite often the researches are just ignored (heard of it in TV, European propaganda)
I am surprised they did not make shure to hide it though.
 
You guys are not thinking about this carefully enough.

Bush gets most of his financial support from big business.

Big business has to pay more for environmental protection- clean water, clean air, hazardous waste, permits of wetlands, refusals to build for protection of endangered species, etc.

"Hey Republican Congressman/President, I hope you are appreciating the thousands of bucks I put into your campaign. Yeah sure lets go hunting next week... Yeah, we can come over on Tuesday.... Hey, could you do me a favor? This EPA guy is telling I can't build my condos on this beach because he says it's endangered wetland. Looks like a fucking swamp to me. Can you check on this for me..."

Again, you see this a lot in the developing world- where government and business are hand-in-hand, one sees politics swaying to please business with harmful social circumstances.

Do you really think it's that different in the US? Or Europe for that matter?
 
I...am...so...pissed...

Its not the advancement of business at any cost that bothers me...thats typical, but the changing of scientific findings? Thats lying in any way and considering that science is factual it makes it inherently unscientific and a lie in itself. What if certain biomes start to collapse with the loss of a few staple species? The government will blame the Biologists who were coerced into lies...

:evil: ,
The Vault Dweller
 
Do you really think it's that different in the US? Or Europe for that matter?

Of course it is. The Europeans Industrialized away their environment decades ago.
 
Those poor Reindeer.

One can get a bit carried away and say the Europeans don't really have an environment. They do, but it did take a beating. I mean, really Woos, the Finns? What about the Germans?

In comparison a lot of folks that come to the US for the first time are kind of suprised at how green the country is, how much environment we have.

The thing is this- states generally have an obligation to promote economic development- either for the interests of society or ruling elites, that's a matter of institutional form and process.

Economic development comes at a cost. You can't build a new factory in some places unless you plow over a field. Thus states have a rational interest to promote economics over environment.

Preserving the environment thus becomes difficult. Worse, in an international system of competing economies, accepting Marx's view of structural induced imparatives, states must utilize their environment to compete.

Back in the days of the Cold War, the russians made some really bad environmental mistakes. The dumping of mercury that fed into the Baltic was thus one of the first reasons for international cooperation to prevetn pollution at the Stockholm Convention in 1972 (I think).

Developing countries look at demands from developed states to protect their environment and think "what the fuck? We're less developed!" Business lobbies petition developed states to ease or not pass environmental regulations allow pollutions costs to get passed on to society or neighbors. Example- Germany's Black Forrest gets acid rain because of sulfur emmissions from French factories (got to stick it to the French).

Rational action to support economic growth comes at collective costs. States that try to regulate their environments suffer individual costs in being less competitive. A company will move shop to a place where environmental standards are less stringent. The way around it is to get countries to cooperate, collectively to prevent pollution. This occassionally works. But this is where the cooperative game, the stag hunt, comes in.

The trick is to create incentives and punishments so that all continue to cooperate and none defect from the game to pursue rational self-interest. That's difficult.

Environmental protection has been a luxury that the rich can afford. The problem in a competitive global economy is creating cooperation.
 
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