By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI News staff
The
two Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) scientists and one contractor
recently prevented from presenting their research on the health of Narragansett
Bay will be speaking at an upcoming science conference at the Rhode Island
Convention Center.
Autumn
Oczkowski, who was the scheduled keynote speaker at the Oct. 23 event at
Save The Bay, is the co-chair of the Coastal & Estuarine and Research Foundation
Conference scheduled for Nov. 5-9. Rose Martin, a postdoctoral
fellow, and Emily Shumchenia, an EPA consultant, are also presenting.
The
three coastal experts work at the EPA Atlantic Ecology Division in
Narragansett, where the effects of climate change are a major area of study.
It’s also a topic top EPA officials in Washington, D.C., are discrediting and
suppressing, as revealed in numerous media reports.
Most recently, the EPA
is replacing scientists on
its most influential advisory boards with researchers from the businesses they
regulate.
Lectures and meetings will address sea-level rise, ocean
acidification, stormwater runoff, and the long-term threat of climate change on
coastal habitats such as Narragansett Bay and Chesapeake Bay.
The
EPA didn't link the recent silencing of its scientists to their research on
climate change. In an e-mail, an EPA spokesman wrote that the three scientists
were excluded from the Oct. 23 workshop because “it is not an EPA
conference."
Members
of Congress, however, aren't letting last month's incident at Save The Bay
headquarters slide. In a letter to EPA
administrator Scott Pruitt, Rhode Island’s congressional delegation and five
U.S. representatives from Massachusetts want to find out why the scientists
were excluded from the presentation of the report, which was partially funded
by the EPA.
“We
are also alarmed by what EPA’s decision to muzzle its scientists means for the
future of the National Estuaries Program,” according to the letter.
The
letter also asks the EPA to state if climate change or other EPA policies
influenced the decision to silence the scientists; for all communications
related to the incident between the scientists and the EPA offices in Rhode
Island and D.C.; and for information about John Konkus, the deputy associate
administrator in the EPA’s Office of Public Affairs.
The
letter cites a Washington Post story that
accuses Konkus of scientific censorship by reviewing all EPA awards and grant
solicitations, and instructing staff to delete references to climate change.
Data
manipulation, however, isn't just happening in D.C.
Curt
Spalding, who resigned as head of EPA’s New England office when President Trump
took office, said EPA leadership is shrouding research on both climate change
and toxic chemicals.
“This
is just an all-out assault on the science EPA generates,” Spalding told ecoRI
News at last month's press event to unveil the report on the Narragansett Bay watershed.
He
said he hears from former colleagues still working at the EPA.
“They’re not doing well," Spalding said. "(Pruitt’s political appointees) are censoring everything. People are not free to speak about issues. It’s always a delicate matter in agencies, what scientists say and do, but we’ve established policies to ensure they had the freedom to speak."
The
problem, he said, goes beyond the Oct. 23 incident. “If (EPA leadership is) not
willing to hear the science on things, then the future for our children is
really in doubt. I see this as much bigger than this.”
Steve
Schimmel worked at the EPA research laboratory in Narragansett for 20 years,
before retiring in 2016. After years of working on a project, researchers take
satisfaction in presenting their reports to their peers and the public, he
said. Employees work at EPA because they believe in its mission, Schimmel said.
“These
individuals are not just working for a paycheck," he said. "They want
to work for science and help the environment.”
Schimmel
said the level of scientific censorship is unmatched, even compared to the
Reagan administration, when Anne Gorsuch ran the EPA.
“The
situation with the Trump administration goes well beyond that,” he said. “It’s
absolutely appalling, I’ve never seen anything like this.”
It’s
difficult to refute research that concludes that manmade climate change is
altering the environment in significant ways. One of the main findings of the
500-page report on the state of Narragansett Bay watershed was the impact of
climate change on coastal habitats.
John
King, professor of oceanography at the University of Rhode Island Graduate
School of Oceanography and chairman of the science advisory committee for the
Narragansett Bay Estuary Program, said many of the gains made in cleaning up
the watershed from pollutants such as PCBs and sewage are being undone by
sea-level rise, warming waters, and increased precipitation — all of which are
caused by climate change.
“These
days you have to view everything through the lens of climate change,” King
said.