Dayton Daily News

Two scientist leave Interior Department

Secretary asked for confidenti­al energy informatio­n.

- By Juliet Eilperin Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Two senior U.S. Geological Survey offi- cials have stepped down after Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke demanded that they provide his office with confidenti­al data on the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska before it was released to the general public.

Murray Hitzman and Larry Meinert, who had served as the agency’s associate director for energy and minerals and acting deputy associate director for energy and minerals mission area, respec- tively, charge that the request violated the USGS’s scientific integrity policy because such commercial­ly valuable data should not be shared in advance. Section 3c of the policy states, “Particular­ly sensitive results, however, such as energy and mineral resource assessment­s and mineral commodity reports that typically have significan­t economic implicatio­ns are not disclosed or shared in advance of public release because pre-release in these cases could result in unfair advantage or the perception of unfair advantage.”

Interior spokeswoma­n Heather Swift, however, said last week that the solicitor’s department had determined that Zinke and his deputy, David Bernhardt, have to right to “review data, draft reports, or other informatio­n as it deems necessary” under the department’s 1950 reorganiza­tion plan.

The dispute, which was first reported by Mother Jones magazine, represents the latest clash between career federal scientists and the Trump administra- tion. Scientists at Interior, as well as at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and elsewhere in the government, have raised objections over issues ranging from the scrubbing of data from government websites to limits imposed on what federal scientists can say in public about their work.

Hitzman offered his resig- nation letter Dec. 17, saying that he objected to the idea of providing the results of an assessment of the energy reserve’s potential “several days in advance of the infor- mation’s public release, in contradict­ion of my interpreta­tion of U.S.G.S. fundamenta­l science policy.”

Meinert, who retired Jan. 31, said in a phone inter- view that he had planned to retire anyway, but the incident “certainly increased my desire to step out the door.” He emphasized that there was no indication that either Zinke or any of his deputies intended to use the informa- tion for personal gain.

But he cited a long-stand- ing practice of withhold- ing the informatio­n until it is made widely available because when it is released, “that directly affects mar- kets and who’s interested in investing in a geograph- ical area.”

“This is the first time we’ve had anyone insist, ‘We want that number,’” said Meinert, who joined USGS in 2012. “This is simply a matter of them wanting to control informatio­n.”

USGS Deputy Director William Werkheiser, who serves as Interior’s scientific integrity officer, said in a statement that this principle is violated “when there is a significan­t departure from the accepted standards, profession­al values, and practices of the relevant scientific community,” which he said did not happen in this case. “I do not believe that current or proposed practices for the notificati­on of DOI leadership constitute a loss of scientific integrity,” Werkheiser said. “In fact, at no time was USGS asked to change or alter any of the findings for the assessment.” The Obama administra­tion put half of the 22.8 million-acre National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, known by the abbreviati­on NPR-A, off limits to drilling in 2012 but allowed energy exploratio­n in the rest of the area. Zinke, who signed orders in March 2017 aimed at jump-starting energy exploratio­n on federal and tribal lands, hailed the USGS assessment when it was released on Dec. 22 as proof that more leasing could take place there. Recalling an earlier visit that year to Alaska’s North Slope, Zinke said that when he asked Alaskans what they were seeking in terms of energy policy, “The response was overwhelmi­ngly positive and the message was clear: the path to American Energy in Alaska,” Dominance according starts to an Interior press release. “Today’s updated assessment is a big step toward that goal,” Zinke added.

 ??  ?? Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has signed orders aimed at jump-starting energy exploratio­n on federal and tribal lands.
Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has signed orders aimed at jump-starting energy exploratio­n on federal and tribal lands.

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