Another totally inappropriate Bush appointee. This one
bites the dust! Phyllis
--
February 8,
2006
New York Times
A Young Bush Appointee Resigns His Post at NASA
By ANDREW C. REVKIN <http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=bylL&v1=ANDREW%20C.%20REVKIN&fdq=19960101&td=sysdate&sort=newest&ac=ANDREW%20C.%20REVKIN&inline=nyt-per>
George C. Deutsch, the
young presidential appointee at NASA who told public affairs workers to limit
reporters' access to a top climate scientist and told a Web designer to add
the word "theory" at every mention of the Big Bang, resigned yesterday, agency
officials said.
Mr. Deutsch's
resignation came on the same day that officials at Texas A&M
University confirmed that he did not graduate from there, as his résumé on
file at the agency asserted.
Officials at
NASA headquarters declined to discuss the reason for the resignation.
"Under NASA policy, it is
inappropriate to discuss personnel matters," said Dean Acosta, the deputy
assistant administrator for public affairs and Mr. Deutsch's boss.
The resignation came as the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration was preparing to review its policies for
communicating science to the public. The review was ordered Friday by Michael
D. Griffin, the NASA administrator, after a week in which many agency
scientists and midlevel public affairs officials described to The New York
Times instances in which they said political pressure was applied to limit or
flavor discussions of topics uncomfortable to the Bush administration,
particularly global warming.
"As
we have stated in the past, NASA is in the process of revising our public
affairs policies across the agency to ensure our commitment to open and full
communications," the statement from Mr. Acosta said.
The statement said the resignation of Mr. Deutsch was
"a separate matter."
Mr. Deutsch,
24, was offered a job as a writer and editor in NASA's public affairs office
in Washington last year after working on President Bush's re-election
campaign and inaugural committee, according to his résumé. No one has disputed
those parts of the document.
According to
his résumé, Mr. Deutsch received a "Bachelor of Arts in journalism, Class of
2003."
Yesterday, officials at
Texas A&M said that was not the case.
"George Carlton Deutsch III did attend Texas
A&M University but has not completed the requirements for a degree," said
an e-mail message from Rita Presley, assistant to the registrar at the
university, responding to a query from The Times.
Repeated calls and e-mail messages to Mr. Deutsch on
Tuesday were not answered.
Mr.
Deutsch's educational record was first challenged on Monday by Nick Anthis,
who graduated from Texas A&M last year with a biochemistry degree and has
been writing a Web log on science policy, scientificactivist.blogspot.com
<http://scientificactivist.blogspot.com>
.
After Mr. Anthis read about the
problems at NASA, he said in an interview: "It seemed like political figures
had really overstepped the line. I was just going to write some commentary on
this when somebody tipped me off that George Deutsch might not have
graduated."
He posted a blog entry
asserting this after he checked with the university's association of former
students. He reported that the association said Mr. Deutsch received no
degree.
A copy of Mr. Deutsch's
résumé was provided to The Times by someone working in NASA headquarters who,
along with many other NASA employees, said Mr. Deutsch played a small but
significant role in an intensifying effort at the agency to exert political
control over the flow of information to the public.
Such complaints came to the fore starting in late
January, when James E. Hansen, the climate scientist, and several midlevel
public affairs officers told The Times that political appointees, including
Mr. Deutsch, were pressing to limit Dr. Hansen's speaking and interviews on
the threats posed by global warming.
Yesterday, Dr. Hansen said that the questions about Mr.
Deutsch's credentials were important, but were a distraction from the broader
issue of political control of scientific information.
"He's only a bit player," Dr. Hansen said of Mr.
Deutsch. " The problem is much broader and much deeper and it goes across
agencies. That's what I'm really concerned about."
"On climate, the public has been misinformed and not
informed," he said. "The foundation of a democracy is an informed public,
which obviously means an honestly informed public. That's the big issue
here."
February 4, 2006
New York Times
NASA Chief Backs Agency Openness
By ANDREW C. REVKIN <http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=bylL&v1=ANDREW%20C.%20REVKIN&fdq=19960101&td=sysdate&sort=newest&ac=ANDREW%20C.%20REVKIN&inline=nyt-per>
A week after NASA's top
climate scientist complained that the space agency's public-affairs office was
trying to silence his statements on global warming, the agency's
administrator, Michael D. Griffin, issued a sharply worded statement yesterday
calling for "scientific openness" throughout the agency.
"It is not the job of public-affairs officers," Dr.
Griffin wrote in an e-mail message to the agency's 19,000 employees, "to
alter, filter or adjust engineering or scientific material produced by NASA's
technical staff."
The statement
came six days after The New York Times quoted the scientist, James E. Hansen,
as saying he was threatened with "dire consequences" if he continued to call
for prompt action to limit emissions of heat-trapping gases linked to global
warming. He and intermediaries in the agency's 350-member public-affairs staff
said the warnings came from White House appointees in NASA
headquarters.
Other National
Aeronautics and Space Administration scientists and public-affairs employees
came forward this week to say that beyond Dr. Hansen's case, there were
several other instances in which political appointees had sought to control
the flow of scientific information from the agency.
They called or e-mailed The Times and sent documents
showing that news releases were delayed or altered to mesh with Bush
administration policies.
In
October, for example, George Deutsch, a presidential appointee in NASA
headquarters, told a Web designer working for the agency to add the word
"theory" after every mention of the Big Bang, according to an e-mail message
from Mr. Deutsch that another NASA employee forwarded to The Times.
And in December 2004, a scientist
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory complained to the agency that he had been
pressured to say in a news release that his oceanic research would help
advance the administration's goal of space exploration.
On Thursday night and Friday, The Times sent some of
the documents to Dr. Griffin and senior public-affairs officials requesting a
response.
While Dr. Griffin did
not respond directly, he issued the "statement of scientific openness" to
agency employees, saying, "NASA has always been, is and will continue to be
committed to open scientific and technical inquiry and dialogue with the
public."
Because NASA encompasses
a nationwide network of research centers on everything from cosmology to
climate, Dr. Griffin said, some central coordination was necessary. But he
added that changes in the public-affairs office's procedures "can and will be
made," and that a revised policy would "be disseminated throughout the
agency."
Asked if the statement
came in response to the new documents and the furor over Dr. Hansen's
complaints, Dr. Griffin's press secretary, Dean Acosta, replied by
e-mail:
"From time to time, the
administrator communicates with NASA employees on policy and issues. Today was
one of those days. I hope this helps. Have a good weekend."
Climate science has been a thorny issue
for the administration since 2001, when Mr. Bush abandoned a campaign pledge
to restrict power plant emissions of carbon dioxide, the main heat-trapping
gas linked to global warming, and said the United States would not join
the Kyoto Protocol, the first climate treaty requiring reductions.
But the accusations of political
interference with the language of news releases and other public information
on science go beyond climate change.
In interviews this week, more than a dozen
public-affairs officials, along with half a dozen agency scientists, spoke of
growing efforts by political appointees to control the flow of scientific
information.
In the months before
the 2004 election, according to interviews and some documents, these
appointees sought to review news releases and to approve or deny news media
requests to interview NASA scientists.
Repeatedly that year, public-affairs directors at all
of NASA's science centers were admonished by White House appointees at
headquarters to focus all attention on Mr. Bush's January 2004 "vision" for
returning to the Moon and eventually traveling to Mars.
Starting early in 2004, directives, almost always
transmitted verbally through a chain of midlevel workers, went out from NASA
headquarters to the agency's far-flung research centers and institutes saying
that all news releases on earth science developments had to allude to goals
set out in Mr. Bush's "vision statement" for the agency, according to
interviews with public-affairs officials working in headquarters and at three
research centers.
Many people
working at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., said that at the same time, there
was a slowdown in these centers' ability to publish anything related to
climate.
Most of these career government
employees said they could speak only on condition of anonymity, saying they
feared reprisals. But their accounts tightly meshed with one another.
One NASA scientist, William Patzert, at
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, confirmed the general tone of the agency that
year.
"That was the time when NASA
was reorganizing and all of a sudden earth science disappeared," Mr. Patzert
said. "Earth kind of got relegated to just being one of the 9 or 10
planets. It was ludicrous."
In another
incident, on Dec. 2, 2004, the propulsion lab and NASA headquarters
issued a news release describing research on links between wind patterns and
the recent warming of the Indian Ocean.
It included a statement in quotation marks from Tong
Lee, a scientist at the laboratory, saying some of the analytical tools used
in the study could "advance space exploration" and "may someday prove useful
in studying climate systems on other planets."
But after other scientists at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory queried Dr. Lee on the statement, he e-mailed public-affairs
officers saying he disavowed the quotation and demanded that the release be
taken off the Web site. His message was part of a sequence of e-mail messages
exchanged between scientists and public-affairs officers. That string of
messages was provided to The Times on Friday by a NASA official.
In his e-mail message, Dr. Lee explained
that he had cobbled together part of the statement on space exploration under
"the pressure of the new HQ requirement for relevance to space exploration"
and under a timeline requiring that NASA "needed something instantly."
The press office dropped the quotation
from its version of the release, but in Washington, the NASA
headquarters public affairs office did not.
Dr. Lee declined to be interviewed for this
article.
According to other e-mail
messages, the flare-up did not stop senior officials in headquarters from
insisting that Mr. Bush's space-oriented vision continue to be reflected in
all earth-science releases.
In the
end, the news release with Dr. Lee's disavowed remark remained up on the NASA
headquarters public affairs Web site until The Times asked about it yesterday.
It was removed from the Web at midday.
The Big Bang memo came from Mr. Deutsch, a 24-year-old
presidential appointee in the press office at NASA headquarters whose résumé
says he was an intern in the "war room" of the 2004 Bush-Cheney re-election
campaign. A 2003 journalism graduate of Texas A&M, he was also the
public-affairs officer who sought more control over Dr. Hansen's public
statements.
In October 2005, Mr.
Deutsch sent an e-mail message to Flint Wild, a NASA contractor working on a
set of Web presentations about Einstein for middle-school students. The
message said the word "theory" needed to be added after every mention of the
Big Bang.
The Big Bang is "not
proven fact; it is opinion," Mr. Deutsch wrote, adding, "It is not NASA's
place, nor should it be to make a declaration such as this about the existence
of the universe that discounts intelligent design by a creator."
It continued: "This is more than a
science issue, it is a religious issue. And I would hate to think that young
people would only be getting one-half of this debate from NASA. That would
mean we had failed to properly educate the very people who rely on us for
factual information the most."
The
memo also noted that The Associated Press Stylebook and Libel Manual specified
the phrasing "Big Bang theory." Mr. Acosta, Mr. Deutsch's boss, said in an
interview yesterday that for that reason, it should be used in all NASA
documents.
The Deutsch memo was
provided by an official at NASA headquarters who said he was upset with the
effort to justify changes to descriptions of science by referring to
politically charged issues like intelligent design. Senior NASA officials did
not dispute the message's authenticity.
Mr. Wild declined to be interviewed; Mr. Deutsch did
not respond to e-mail or phone messages. On Friday evening, repeated queries
were made to the White House about how a young presidential appointee with no
science background came to be supervising Web presentations on cosmology and
interview requests to senior NASA scientists.
The only response came from Donald Tighe of the White
House Office of Science and Technology Policy. "Science is respected and
protected and highly valued by the administration," he said.
Dennis Overbye contributed reporting
for this article.