History Shows That Stacking Federal Science Advisory Committees Doesn't Work

authordefault
on

Byย Donald Boesch, University ofย Maryland

Scientists are busy people, but every year thousands donate many hours of their time without payment to advise Congress and federal government agencies. They provide input on all kinds of issues, from antibiotic resistance to mapping the worldโ€™s oceans in three dimensions.

The Trump administration has raised alarms by signaling that it is determined to replace scientific advisers who are not in line with its political philosophy. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt is replacing most of the members of EPAโ€™s Board of Scientific Counselors and, very likely, its Science Advisory Board. Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has suspended the activities of numerous advisory panels, including many scientific committees, pending review of their purpose andย composition.

Will Trump Cabinet members really be able to shift the scientific advice on which their agencies rely? And how should scientistsย respond?

Over the past 35 years I have served on numerous federal scientific advisory panels, including EPAโ€™s Science Advisory Board, and many committees and boards of the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine. In my view, the history of past purges shows that stacking the deck with like-minded advocates is self-defeating. Thatโ€™s true whether those advocates come from industry or nongovernmental organizations โ€“ and especially if they represent only one politicalย party.

Recommendations from these โ€œfriendlyโ€ panels will not win broad support from the scientific community, and I predict the committees will quickly lose their credibility, legitimacy and influence. Consequently, policies and regulations based on the panelsโ€™ recommendations will be less likely to withstand public or political scrutiny and be more open to legal challenges than if they were based on more balancedย input.

Deborah Swackhamer, chair of the EPAโ€™s Board of Scientific Counselors, talks with Rachel Maddow about the pressure she received from an EPA official to change her congressional testimony and how the EPAโ€™s outside scientific review board has been โ€˜decimated.โ€™

Rules for Federal Advisoryย Committees

It is important to have processes for watching the watchers who provide scientific advice. Federal advisory panels operate under laws and rules that are designed to assure theirย objectivity.

Under the Federal Advisory Committee Act, committees that advise the president and executive branch agencies must be โ€œfairly balanced in terms of the points of view represented.โ€ Agencies also are supposed to take steps to ensure that committeesโ€™ advice will not be โ€œinappropriately influenced by the appointing authority or by any specialย interest.โ€

The National Academies, which produce studies for Congress and federal agencies, recognize that scientists are human, so some bias will always exist. Therefore, they seek a balance of perspectives within study committees, and invite scientists from industry and former government service as well as from academia to serve on theseย panels.

Typically, members must describe their employment and financial interests and reveal any potential biases to the other members at the start of the committeeโ€™s work. In my experience, scientists from the private sector brought helpful perspectives when they engaged in objective technicalย deliberations.

Drafting of National Academy reports is a group process that allows committee members to correct unsubstantiated conclusions and recommendations that are based on subjective opinions or self-interest. The reports are reviewed by external peers, as are reports from many federal advisoryย committees.

During my service on federal advisory committees, I can scarcely remember a time when the party affiliation of scientists serving came up, even in social conversations. Of course, participants are generally aware of the political implications of their work. However, in my experience they typically participate in objective discussions and report writing in a manner that is not shaped by partisan or politicalย goals.

For example, I participated in a National Academies committee that issued carefully verified and worded conclusions in 2008 about risks that climate change posed to restoration of the Everglades. Last year the report of this committee provided more specific recommendations for addressing the effects of future water shortages and sea levelย rise.

The responsible Florida state agency has now threatened to stop cooperating with the independent scientific review, accusing the committee of โ€œunscientific meddling.โ€ But members agreed that, despite the political sensitivities regarding climate change, their recommendations were highly pertinent to sustainableย restoration.

When Politicsย Interferes

Sometimes, however, administrations try to stack the deck. In March of 1983 I was one of seven scientists rejected by Interior Secretary James Watt for reappointment to a committee that advised the agency on studies related to offshore oil and gas development. I learned that the Republican National Committee had checked our voter registration, and my status as an independent apparently disqualifiedย me.

After Wattโ€™s committee purge became public, the appointment process was stalled and the committee ceased to function. Six months later, Watt was forced to resign after his notorious statement mocking affirmative action by describing the members of another committee as โ€œa black, a woman, two Jews and aย cripple.โ€

When Wattโ€™s successor at Interior, William P. Clark Jr., discovered the appointments impasse and recognized the credibility problem, he appointed some of the scientists who had been โ€œblacklistedโ€ to a revitalized committee, including me. However, he excluded candidates who had been approved by the Republican National Committee. I was elected chair and served on the committee untilย 1987.

In 1990 I moved from Louisiana to Maryland, and had little involvement with offshore oil and gas issues until 2010, when I was appointed by President Obama as one of seven members of the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling. This was a high-level commission charged with investigating the root causes of the disastrous 2010 oil spill and recommending ways to make offshore drillingย safer.

Before receiving the appointment, I was subjected to โ€œextreme vettingโ€ that probed my publications, statements to the media, financial interests and even my driving record. My political party registration never came up. To chair the commission, Obama selected former U.S. Senator Bob Graham of Florida, a Democrat, and former EPA Administrator William Reilly, aย Republican.

Fred Bartlit Jr., chief investigator of the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling, makes a presentation to the panel. Panel members, from left to right: Co-chair William Reilly, Co-chair Bob Graham, Christopher Smith of the Energy Department, Frances Ulmer, and Donald Boesch.ย Credit:ย AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Why Scientists Should Stayย Engaged

These past efforts show that filling committees with โ€œfriendlyโ€ advisers doesnโ€™t really work. Biased conclusions and unsupported recommendations are sure to be called out by the scientific community and thus will have little power in the democraticย debate.

Of course, purging scientific advisory committees is just part of what many observers see as a broader war on science. This attack also includes advocating policies that reject solid scientific consensus, proposing โ€œred teamโ€ assaults in place of rigorous peer review, proposing drastic reductions in federal funding for science and medical programs, and the resulting loss of scientific talent in the nation and capacity in federal agencies. These threats have much more serious consequences for American science and theย nation.

The ConversationFacing these threats, scientists should not disengage from providing the nation with objective analysis and recommendations. Rather, we should take the long view and be prepared to seize opportunities to advise, as well as to challenge and dissent when needed. Now more than ever, scientists should take these responsibilities seriously rather thanย cynically.

Donald Boeschย is Professor of Marine Science at theย University of Maryland.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Main image: Scientists provide key input to government agencies on issues such as improving oil spill prevention and response after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster. Credit:ย U.S. Coast Guard, publicย domain

authordefault

Related Posts

on

Policymakers and industry say the Midwest Hydrogen Hub will create green jobs and slash emissions, but environmentalists see a ploy to keep fossil fuels in use.

Policymakers and industry say the Midwest Hydrogen Hub will create green jobs and slash emissions, but environmentalists see a ploy to keep fossil fuels in use.
on

Is the Gulf of Mexico the "single best opportunity" to store climate-warming gas โ€” or an existential threat to wildlife and people?

Is the Gulf of Mexico the "single best opportunity" to store climate-warming gas โ€” or an existential threat to wildlife and people?
on

DeSmog reflects on some of the major moments in U.S. LNG policy, the courts, and protest in a turbulent year for this fossil fuel.

DeSmog reflects on some of the major moments in U.S. LNG policy, the courts, and protest in a turbulent year for this fossil fuel.
Analysis
on

Our editors and reporters weigh in on a year of seismic political events, and what theyโ€™re paying close attention to in 2025.

Our editors and reporters weigh in on a year of seismic political events, and what theyโ€™re paying close attention to in 2025.