Wow! What a powerful ( and scary) piece of jornalistic detective work. I think the Iowa Chapter of the Sierra Club should ask (is demand too strong a word?) state and federal legislators in Iowa, as well as the Governor's office to investigate this issue fully. I will put the issue on the agenda for the Leopold Group Excom Meeting Tue. Dec. 3rd, 7:30PM 606 S.2nd in Fairfield. As usual all Sierra Club members are invited to attend. Jim Fleming Chair, Leopold Group 641-693-9000 --- Bosold <[log in to unmask]> wrote:> Everyone, > > Today's Des Moines Register carried the following front > page story (my thanks to Phil Scott and other local > friends who alerted me to this). The paper itself > carried a number of case studies and sidebar stories > about specific examples of scientists who had been > prevented by government or agribusiness interests from > publishing or publicizing their work. > > Patrick Bosold > > http://www.dmregister.com > > Ag scientists feel the heat > University and government scientists studying health > threats associated with agricultural pollution say they > are harassed by farmers and trade groups and silenced by > superiors afraid to offend the powerful industry. > > http://desmoinesregister.com/business/stories/c4789013/19874144.html > > Ag scientists feel the heat > By PERRY BEEMAN > Register Staff Writer > 12/01/2002 > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Ames, Ia. - University and government scientists studying > health threats associated with agricultural pollution say > they are harassed by farmers and trade groups and > silenced by superiors afraid to offend the powerful > industry. > > The heat comes from individual farmers, commodity groups > and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which finances > and controls much of the research. > > And the pressure is growing, some scientists say. > > "It's rampant," said JoAnn Burkholder, an acclaimed > aquatic botanist trained at Iowa State University who > received death threats after warning North Carolina > parents not to let their children wade in a > manure-polluted stream. > > Scientists in Iowa and other states say that the USDA > kills controversial research by forcing it through an > extended approval process. The agency also keeps > researchers from publicizing sensitive findings in > scientific journals and at public meetings and cooperates > with industry groups to suppress research results that > don't meet the groups' satisfaction, they charge. > > Such pressure tactics have been reported in the tobacco, > pharmaceutical and oil industries. But they are every bit > as intense, if not more so, in the agricultural arena: > > * Bosses told James Zahn, a former federal swine > researcher in Ames, that he couldn't publish his findings > that air emissions from hog confinements contained > potentially health-threatening antibiotic-resistant > bacteria. They wouldn't let him speak to citizens groups > about the study after pork producers questioned the > appearances. The work, they said, didn't fit the lab's > mission. > > * Burkholder, the aquatic botany professor at North > Carolina State University in Raleigh, drew a flood of > demands for her dismissal in 1997 after she publicized > the human-health dangers of a stream polluted so severely > by hog manure that the number of bacteria was 15,000 > times higher than the state limit. Burkholder received > anonymous death threats, including one against her dog, > Peanut. > > * Phillip Baumel, a longtime Iowa State University > economist, said he faced retribution from the Iowa Corn > Growers Association in 2000 after his study questioned > the benefit of expanding the lock-and-dam system along > the upper Mississippi River. Corn farmers said the work > would speed shipments and was worth the money. The corn > growers objected to the study and its tardiness, and they > declined to pay for it. > > "None of it surprises me," said Burkholder, who received > a bachelor's degree in zoology from ISU. Her lab tied > sewage and manure pollution to a toxic organism, > pfiesteria piscicida, that can kill fish and sicken > humans. > > "I have seen some very sad practices in this country," > Burkholder said. "Industry has a stranglehold on > environmental issues to the point that this muzzling goes > on all the time." > > Sandy Miller Hays, spokeswoman for the USDA's > Agricultural Research Service, said the government works > closely with farm groups to do the research they need, > but it doesn't let them skew or suppress results. "We do > the research we feel needs done, we put the findings out > there, and we let the chips fall where they may," she > said. > > Farm organizations, including the Iowa Pork Producers > Association and the National Pork Board, say they have no > intention of squelching researchers' work, even when the > groups have paid part of the tab. Association President > Tim Bierman, a Larrabee hog farmer, said his group wants > to make sure the work is presented fairly and based on > facts, not on an anti-industry bias. > > "As long as the research is done with sound science and > done correctly, we're going to stand by it," Bierman > said. > > Scientists, who typically initiate the studies, say the > pressure is stopping important work meant to protect the > taxpayers, who foot most of the bill. Even when the work > gets done, they worry about efforts to manipulate or > muffle the results. For some, the bigger fear is that > scientists will censor themselves to avoid angering the > boss or losing a grant. > > On one front, the battle is for academic freedom, > researchers say, but the implications reach much further: > Some of the scientists are studying pollution believed to > have the potential to sicken or kill people. > > Some say the close relationship between the U.S. > Department of Agriculture and industry groups is to > blame. > > "The USDA has a long-term relationship with pork > producers," said Zahn, who left his job at the USDA's > Agricultural Research Service lab at ISU in May to join > an out-of-state pharmaceutical firm. The service is one > of the Agriculture Department's largest research > divisions, with about 2,000 scientists, and nearly half > of them are involved in farm pollution issues in one way > or another, said Hays, the ARS spokeswoman. > > Certainly, researchers studying pollution from farms > don't face industry pressure universally. But no one > tracks how often scientists who are paid by taxpayers are > silenced or intimidated. Those brave enough to speak out > usually have secure jobs at universities or, like Zahn, > leave the public arena. > > Zahn said his superiors wouldn't let him submit for > publication perhaps one of his most important findings - > that the air emitted by hog confinements contained > potentially health-threatening antibiotic-resistant > bacteria - and several times refused invitations for him > to speak about his findings. > > Zahn also was uncomfortable that an "advisory panel" of > hog farmers, assembled by the USDA, watched over the > lab's work. In fact, national pork groups have at times > had offices in the same government buildings as the USDA > labs. > > "No other government agency ever had this hand-holding > relationship with a livestock group," Zahn said after he > quit the USDA job. > > Hays said the nature of her agency - researching ways to > improve agriculture - requires cooperation with farm > groups. "Obviously, we pay attention" when the pork > industry lays out an area that needs research, Hays said. > But the work is objective and independent, she added. > > Hays said advisory groups are common at many USDA labs. > The commodity groups help frame research needed to > protect the environment and to make farming more > efficient. Kendall Thu, a former University of Iowa > researcher now at Northern Illinois University, has > co-written a book on the shift to large-scale livestock > confinement operations and has studied the health of farm > neighbors in Iowa and Illinois. He said Zahn's > predicament is common. > > "His story is deeply disturbing and fits a pattern of > industry intimidation, the muzzling of freedom of speech > and erosion of academic freedom," Thu said. > > Economist Neil Harl at ISU said farmers are flexing their > political muscle like never before in the arena of > scientific research. > > "I see more pressure from external sources than I have > seen in my 38 years at this school," he said. > > > "They pulled the rug out" > > Microbiologist James Zahn was eager to get the word out > about his groundbreaking work on antibiotic-resistant > bacteria that grow in hog confinements. The germs can > escape into surrounding water and air. > > His research on air emissions showed that they could > include === message truncated === __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. 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