It
seems that under Stephen Harper's government scientists are the
enemy
Canada
bans researchers from discussing snowflakes, findings. Scientists
protest
16
September, 2013
The
Canadian government in recent years has banned government scientists
from talking about a growing list of research topics including
snowflakes, the ozone layer, salmon, and previously published work
about a 13,000-year-old flood.
Now it seems the scientists are talking back.
Researchers
in 16 Canadian cities have called protests on Monday against science
policies introduced under the government of Stephen Harper, which
include rules barring government researchers from talking about their
own work with journalists and, in some cases, even fellow
researchers.
“There
a lot of concern in Canada right now about government
scientists not being allowed to speak about their research to the
public because of the new communications policies being put into
place,” said Katie Gibbs, director of a new group, Evidence
for Democracy,
which is organizing the protests.
The
rallies, on university campuses and central locations in Toronto,
Ottawa, and Vancouver as well as other cities, will be the second set
of protests in a year by government scientists against the Harper
government’s science policies.
Like
last year, protesters have been asked to wear white lab coats on
Monday.
The
clashes with the government have been building for some time, as
basic science budgets are cut back to divert more funds toward
industry-focused research.
Last
May, the government announced it was refocusing the mission of the
country’s premier scientific agency, the National Research Council,
into a series of “industry-themed entry points.”
Other
government research centers, such as the High Arctic Research
Station, or the Experimental Lakes, were completely defunded, but had
some funds restored after public protests.
Meanwhile,
the country’s sole Green Party MP last week accused the Harper
government of allocating $100 million in Environment Canada research
funds for a project advantageous to a pipeline project that has yet
to win approval.
But
it is arguably the government’s new information policies that seem
to have produced
the greatest sense of outrage.
Critics
say the policies run counter to the open access policies in place for
government scientists in America and Europe.
“It
isn’t the way science is supposed to be. It’s not the way science
used to be, the way I remember it in the federal government,” said
John Stone, a retired Environment Canada scientist now working as a
vice chair of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
This
year, Canada’s department of fisheries and oceans released a new
set of rules barring scientists from discussing their findings with
the public or publishing in academic journals.
The
new guidelines required all scientists to submit papers to a
departmental manager for review — even after they had been accepted
for publication by an academic journal.
The
proposed rules became public earlier this year after American
scientists on a joint U.S.-Canadian project in the eastern Arctic
took exception at the new conditions.
In
2012, National Research Council scientists were barred from
discussing their work with NASA on snowflakes with journalists. Other
government scientists have been barred from giving interviews on work
published in leading academic journals.
In
other instances, the federal government has been accused of burying
or delaying publication of government science reports thought to
contain politically damaging data.
The
government was accused this month of delaying its annual report on
greenhouse gas emissions — usually released in midsummer —
because it was universally expected to show a double-digit rise in
carbon pollution.
The
finding could hurt Canada’s efforts to persuade Barack Obama to
approve the Keystone XL pipeline from the Alberta tar sands.
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