Orlando Sentinel

The EPA has instructed

- By Juliet Eilperin and Brady Dennis

two of its scientists and one contractor not to speak at a scientific conference during which climate change was to have been a primary topic of discussion.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency has instructed two of its scientists and one contractor not to speak as planned at a scientific conference today in Providence, Rhode Island, sparking criticism from some academics and congressio­nal Democrats.

EPA officials confirmed Sunday that its researcher­s would not present at the State of Narraganse­tt Bay and Its Watershed program but did not offer an explanatio­n for the decision.

"EPA scientists are attending, they simply are not presenting, it is not an EPA conference," EPA spokesman John Konkus said in an email.

The conference marks the culminatio­n of a threeyear report on the status of Narraganse­tt Bay, New England's largest estuary, and the challenges it faces. Climate change features as a significan­t factor in the 500-page report, which evaluates 24 aspects of the bay and its larger watershed. The organizers intend to present a 28-page summary report of their findings in a news conference Monday.

For roughly six years, the EPA has provided about $600,000 annually for each of more than two dozen national estuaries, including the Narraganse­tt Bay Estuary Program, the conference's host.

The program's director, Tom Borden, said the head of the EPA's National Health and Environmen­tal Effects Research Laboratory Atlantic Ecology Division in Narraganse­tt informed him Friday that the keynote speaker, division research ecologist Autumn Oczkowski, and another colleague in the lab, Rose Martin, would not be able to make presentati­ons at the event.

“I was not given a clear reason why,” Borden said in an interview, adding that his team had worked closely with several of the agency's scientists on protecting and restoring the bay. “It's a terrific partnershi­p to have EPA working with us.”

An EPA contractor who had contribute­d to two chapters of the report, Emily Shumchenia, also was told not to speak at the event. She and Martin were slated to take part in a panel titled “The Present and Future Biological Implicatio­ns of Climate Change.”

Borden said the organizers invited Oczkowski and Martin because they were “independen­t scientists” who could offer valuable perspectiv­es.

At least one senior regional EPA official is expected to attend the conference along with the researcher­s.

The estuary report, which was subject to extensive peer review and public comment, charts how Narraganse­tt Bay is becoming cleaner but also faces challenges such as nutrient runoff and climate change.

The issue of the EPA's approach to climatecha­nge science has become even more fraught since Donald Trump became president, as Administra­tor Scott Pruitt has questioned whether human activity ranks as a main driver of the warming the globe has experience­d in recent decades. Political appointees have removed pages from the agency's website that address the issue and have canceled some grants supporting climate-change initiative­s.

Robinson Fulweiler, a Boston University ecosystems ecologist who has studied the effects of climate change on marine life, called the situation an “abuse of power” by the Trump administra­tion.

“The silencing of government scientists is a scary step toward silencing anyone who disagrees,” she said in an email.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States