>From the Washington Post:
Climate Findings Were Distorted, Probe Finds
Appointees in NASA Press Office Blamed

By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, June 3, 2008; A02

An investigation by the NASA inspector general found that political appointees 
in the space agency's public affairs office worked to control and distort 
public accounts of its researchers' findings about climate change for at least 
two years, the inspector general's office said yesterday.

The probe came at the request of 14 senators after The Washington Post and 
other news outlets reported in 2006 that Bush administration officials had 
monitored and impeded communications between NASA climate scientists and 
reporters.

James E. Hansen, who directs NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and has 
campaigned publicly for more stringent limits on greenhouse gases that 
contribute to global warming, told The Post and the New York Times in September 
2006 that he had been censored by NASA press officers, and several other agency 
climate scientists reported similar experiences. NASA and the National Oceanic 
and Atmospheric Administration are two of the government's lead agencies on 
climate change issues.

>From the fall of 2004 through 2006, the report said, NASA's public affairs 
>office "managed the topic of climate change in a manner that reduced, 
>marginalized, or mischaracterized climate change science made available to the 
>general public." It noted elsewhere that "news releases in the areas of 
>climate change suffered from inaccuracy, factual insufficiency, and scientific 
>dilution."

Officials of the Office of Public Affairs told investigators that they 
regulated communication by NASA scientists for technical rather than political 
reasons, but the report found "by a preponderance of the evidence, that the 
claims of inappropriate political interference made by the climate change 
scientists and career public affairs officers were more persuasive than the 
arguments of the senior public affairs officials that their actions were due to 
the volume and poor quality of the draft news releases."

The political interference did not extend to the research itself or its 
dissemination through scientific journals and conferences, the investigators 
said. "We found no evidence indicating NASA blocked or interfered with the 
actual research activities of its climate scientists," the report said, but as 
a result of the actions of the political appointees, "trust was lost, at least 
temporarily, between the agency and some of its key employees and perhaps the 
public it serves."

Kristin Scuderi, a spokeswoman for the White House Office of Science and 
Technology Policy, said in an e-mail that director John H. Marburger III "would 
not comment until he's reviewed the report, and he has not yet done so yet. 
Therefore, OSTP has no comment at this time."

Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.), one of the senators who pressed for the 
investigation, said in a statement that the report showed that citizens had 
been denied access to critical scientific information that should inform public 
policy.

"Global warming is the most serious environmental threat we face -- but this 
report is more evidence that the Bush Administration's appointees have put 
political ideology ahead of science," Lautenberg said. "Our government's 
response to global warming must be based on science, and the Bush 
Administration's manipulation of that information violates the public trust." 

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