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Government United States Science

Senate Advances "Secret Science" Bill, Sets Up Possible Showdown With President 355

sciencehabit writes: Republicans in Congress appear to be headed for a showdown with the White House over controversial "secret science" legislation aimed at changing how the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) uses scientific studies. A deeply divided Senate panel yesterday advanced a bill that would require EPA to craft its policies based only on public data available to outside experts. The House of Representatives has already passed a similar measure. But Democrats and science groups have harshly criticized the approach, and the White House has threatened a veto.
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Senate Advances "Secret Science" Bill, Sets Up Possible Showdown With President

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  • Toad (Score:4, Insightful)

    by For a Free Internet ( 1594621 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @06:48PM (#49581299)

    Secret toad controls Congreff. Secret toad has poison webs in its eyes. Secret toad is behind all NATO exercises and World Bank. Secret toad controls air with secret toad poison rays and mind controff.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @06:52PM (#49581329)

    Making decisions based on research that can't be independently validated or audited is the very definition of junk science. I mean, I know that the pay journals would love to see open access go away, but that's just their flawed business model talking.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by hey! ( 33014 )

      One of the effects of the bill will be to make it impossible to use data from large scale public health studies. The raw data is secret for privacy reasons and for practical purposes impossible to replicate. For example the highly respected Framingham Heart Study has been running since 1948; under the terms of the bill its results couldn't be used in setting policy because the data are simply impossible to replicate.

      • by BradMajors ( 995624 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @08:56PM (#49582057)

        The terms of the bill covers this situation and the results from that study would be allowed.

      • by silentcoder ( 1241496 ) on Thursday April 30, 2015 @06:15AM (#49584027)

        >One of the effects of the bill will be to make it impossible to use data from large scale public health studie

        That's not an effect, that's the GOAL. The Republicans have a problem preventing sensible regulations around things like air pollution and climate change backed up by solid scientific research - so they are trying to make the science that backs it up illegal.
        Science that is not "secret" by any definition that applies to the scientific method at all - which is why scientists around the US has denounced the bill. There is no problem with reproducability at all.

        What does put SOME access restriction on these large public health studies is that, because of when they were done, they were not anonymous. The only "secret" bit about them is confidential patient information. What the republicans want to do is exclude from scientific research all data that is covered by patient privilege.

        Which is insane.

    • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @08:39PM (#49581967)

      EPA is not necessarily a science creating organization, it's a policy creation and enforcement organization. It doesn't necessarily have to have solid science established and well accepted before it is allowed to make regulation. It gets input from many sources, some of which are lies, and then forms a policy. Under some administrations it errs on the side of caution, and with other administrations it errs on the side of profit.

      As in, there is evidence that chemical A may cause cancer or is killing off some fisheries. One side wishes that to be enough to limit use of chemical A or to require safety measures against spills. The other side wishes to continue using chemical A until there is absolutely undeniable proof (which will never occur). But the EPA is not creating the science here, instead it is acting in the public's interest based upon existing scientific studies and evidence.

    • by pepty ( 1976012 )

      Making decisions based on research that can't be independently validated or audited is the very definition of junk science.

      You do reallze you just included all medical research that respects the confidentiality of human subjects?

      • by Cytotoxic ( 245301 ) on Thursday April 30, 2015 @07:19AM (#49584161)

        I know that is the talking point they've decided to go with, but it simply isn't true. I ran the lab for an 8 center trial covering nearly 9,000 cancer patients. We didn't get any personally identifying data - just a number. (unless the nurse of phlebotomist made a mistake and wrote the patient name on the vial). Our couple-million data points were all tied to a number. The number tied back to a list of data about the patient - not including anything personally identifying.

        I can't speak for every research situation, but claiming that medical research requires violations of patient confidentiality is specious. It clearly does not in most cases. I suppose if you were studying something rare like breast cancer among post-operative transgendered males you might run into some difficulties with identities being discoverable, but I don't think that's enough to claim the whole thing to be null and void.

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      By your standard, banning lead in gasoline was a junk decision. But subsequent studies showed that the level of damage the EPA presumed was below the actual damage. Sometimes it's best to act from our best guess, even if we can't substantiate it properly at that point. It's right more than it's wrong.
  • by confused one ( 671304 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @06:54PM (#49581341)
    If they're going to create such a rule for EPA, then it should also apply to NIH, FDA, DOE, and so on. If they don't make it universal, then they're showing an obvious bias and clearly pushing an agenda which is attempting to influence specific science.
    • by mi ( 197448 )

      If they're going to create such a rule for EPA, then it should also apply to NIH, FDA, DOE

      You have to start somewhere.

      If they don't make it universal, then they're showing an obvious bias

      Even if there is such a bias, what of it? It is not like imposing this rule on the EPA today would prevent imposing it on other departments/agencies later.

      Besides, the opponents of the idea do not oppose it on the grounds, that it is not going far enough. Obama is not saying:"I will veto this bill unless the rule covers th

      • We're saying the same thing. You directly, me via subtle sarcasm. However, This is clearly an indirect attempt to influence the science, which I oppose.
      • by ColdWetDog ( 752185 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @07:35PM (#49581587) Homepage

        Because this is a transparent attempt to rein in the EPA on the grounds of 'science'. Seems OK as a sound bite, doesn't quite work well in the ugly real world. As noted in TFA, there are two major, practical objections:

        - The EPA doesn't get enough funding to do all of the studies by themselves. And there seems to be no mechanism in the proposed legislation to fix that little oversight. So it becomes an issue of perfect rather than practical. Sure, it would be best if everything were publicly funded and every bit of data published on the Internet, but it is arguably better if some 'imperfect' data is used rather than the very limited amount of data that is openly published.
        - Longitudinal data, by definition, isn't 'repeatable'. You don't get to rewind the tape (if you are unfamiliar with this analogy, look up 'VCR' and similar ancient technology).

        The way this bill is crafted makes it perfectly clear that good science is not the goal. Emasculating the EPA is.

        • Sure, it would be best if everything were publicly funded and every bit of data published on the Internet, but it is arguably better if some 'imperfect' data is used rather than the very limited amount of data that is openly published.

          You're assuming nothing else will change. If this bill goes through, there will be an enormous push to make the private data public, and probably most of it will.

          So... you're assuming the worst possible situation based on this change and everything else staying the same.

          One might also argue that this change will encourage other changes, and the end result would be better.

          I'm in favor of having information publicly available (for all departments, not just the EPA) and the argument about policy being made on

          • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @08:42PM (#49581983) Journal

            I'm in favor of having information publicly available (for all departments, not just the EPA) and the argument about policy being made on secret information is compelling.

            The composition of the toxic cocktail that's used in horizontal fracturing is kept away from the public because it's a "trade secret". Do you believe the EPA should not be able to restrict the high-pressure injection of toxic chemicals into the aquifer because the information isn't "public"?

            Or are people going to have to be able to strip paint with their drinking water before they'll be able to find out what's in it? Because freedom?

            I'm in favor of having information publicly available (for all departments, not just the EPA)

            Look, I'm a big fan of Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning too, but when you have corporations with vested interests in keeping information away from the public, forcing the government to only be able to act on information that's public will only let them run further amok.

            Maybe it's because I'm old enough to remember what the Great Lakes were like before the EPA. Gigantic bodies of "fresh" water that are too toxic to support life can really start to sour your opinion on the whole "get the government off corporations' backs" idea.

            • The composition of the toxic cocktail that's used in horizontal fracturing is kept away from the public because it's a "trade secret". Do you believe the EPA should not be able to restrict the high-pressure injection of toxic chemicals into the aquifer because the information isn't "public"?

              I think the studies that show that whatever is being used is harmful to the public should be public before those studies are used to make laws. The information that has to be public isn't "Company XYZ is using chemical Z", it is the study that says that chemical Z causes harm. Then EPA can ban its use.

              Is the problem the use of chemical Z, or that company XYZ is using it? Why isn't is enough to ban Z? Who cares if it is XYZ or QRS, or what the mix they use is?

            • Do you believe the EPA should not be able to restrict the high-pressure injection of toxic chemicals into the aquifer because the information isn't "public"?

              We agree on many things, but this isn't one of them.

              The EPA clearly (at least at present) has jurisdiction over polluted groundwater. That's the kind of thing it was created for.

              Industry is not "allowed" to pollute groundwater just because its use of the pollutant is a "trade secret". That's not how it works. This is about the basis of regulations. If the public and "reasonably reproducible" science says (thin air example) isofurans above 20ppb are harmful to health, they can be regulated.

              That mean

        • - The EPA doesn't get enough funding to do all of the studies by themselves.

          The law doesn't require the EPA to do the studies themselves.

          Longitudinal data, by definition, isn't 'repeatable'.

          The studies that produce data are supposed to be repeatable.

          Every time the topic of availability of scientific data comes up, the general cry from slashdot readers is that information ought to be free. Here's that philosophy writ into law. The data that EPA uses to make rules and regulations has to be available online. Why isn't that a good thing, if all data ought to be online anyway?

          The way this bill is crafted makes it perfectly clear that good science is not the goal. Emasculating the EPA is.

          If EPA is using unpublished, unreviewable data to make deci

        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          The whole intent is pretty straight forward. They want all of the data public, so that it can be challenged in court, for years, prior to any changes. They will back this up with straight up junk science, not to defeat the real science but simply to bog it down in court. So one legislative change might be based upon hundreds of reports, they will simply cherry pick one report that can most readily be challenged, produce a counter junk science report and then block the legislative change until it is all res

          • The whole intent is pretty straight forward. They want all of the data public, so that it can be challenged in court, for years, prior to any changes.

            The laws are already challenged in court, for years. It's harder for EPA to win such lawsuits if the data is private, so making it public is a good thing.

            They will back this up with straight up junk science,

            This law is intended to prevent the use of junk science in regulatory activities. Make it public so it can be reviewed in public.

            not to defeat the real science but simply to bog it down in court.

            Real science can stand up to scientific scrutiny, so making the science public prior to making laws means it can be scrutinized. Keeping it secret just BEGS for lawsuits since there is otherwise no justification for the laws.

            So one legislative change might be based upon hundreds of reports, they will simply cherry pick one report that can most readily be challenged, produce a counter junk science report and then block the legislative change until it is all resolved in court.

        • by rs79 ( 71822 )

          "The way this bill is crafted makes it perfectly clear that good science is not the goal. Emasculating the EPA is."

          If making the data the EPA makes policy on available to anybody is emasculig the EPA then the EPA deserves to be emasculated.

          We don't have secret laws in this country, how would you know if you've broken one?

          Secret science is a hideous idea. We can disagree on how we should handle a situation, that's policy but the fundamental facts of the matter do not improve with secrecy.

    • Well, that would completely eliminate a wide variety of potential research avenues. Many scientific studies are only possible because the data is confidential. Medical studies in particular: you really don't want the public to have access to the private medical data which is used in medical studies.

      In this specific case, there's a lot of international temperature data that is simply not available publicly, largely due to a variety of local political concerns.

      • by PaulBu ( 473180 )

        Medical studies in particular: you really don't want the public to have access to the private medical data which is used in medical studies.

        I can not see how this is a valid argument -- of course such data should be anonymized and not traceable to an *individual* patient (this is where privacy kicks in), but it is done in publicly published medical research anyway ("Patient A [not Sam Smith!] was responding to treatment... ").

        As to temperature data -- if there is suspicion that it is tainted by "local political concerns" -- should we even consider it to be valid *scientific* data?

        Paul B.

        • by Chalnoth ( 1334923 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @08:05PM (#49581779)

          Except that it's often surprising how easy it is to de-anonymize data. I would definitely not want my medical data made public, even with anonymization, because I know that some clever person may later come up with a way to link my identity to my medical data using a method that the original researchers never considered.

          As for temperature data, the nice thing there is that we have independent data sets. For temperature records, for example, we have satellite measurements which are fully public.

          In actuality, this restriction would have essentially zero impact on the scientific conclusions: it's just a way to attempt to block action on climate change. People could say, "But hey, some fraction of this data was gleaned from private sources," and use that as an attempt to throw out the whole thing, despite the fact that removing the private data doesn't change the overall conclusion.

          • I would definitely not want my medical data made public, even with anonymization, because I know that some clever person may later come up with a way to link my identity to my medical data using a method that the original researchers never considered.

            Some poorly-anonymized data can be de-anonymized.

            Here's a published result as would be required by law: "Of 1000 individuals with Crohn's Disease, 14% had a 200% increase of HDL levels after a three week exposure to water containing 30ppb As." Please de-anonymize that data. It's sufficient to reproduce the study and verify the results, but you can't determine the names of any of the participants.

            People could say, "But hey, some fraction of this data was gleaned from private sources,"

            "Gleaned from private sources" is irrelevant. "This data" is. It doesn't matter where the data came from, only

          • In actuality, this restriction would have essentially zero impact on the scientific conclusions: it's just a way to attempt to block action on climate change. People could say, "But hey, some fraction of this data was gleaned from private sources," and use that as an attempt to throw out the whole thing, despite the fact that removing the private data doesn't change the overall conclusion.

            Stop politicizing Science. It doesn't matter if some people want to use the phrase "some fraction of this data was gle

      • you really don't want the public to have access to the private medical data which is used in medical studies.

        The law doesn't require public access to private medical data. The law doesn't require publishing the list of people's names and their conditions for a medical study. It requires publishing the process and the results in a way that allows the study to be repeated for verification.

        For example, the study using mice that showed that 10ppb As in drinking water harmed "mothers and their offspring" (mouse mothers and baby mice, not humans) didn't have to list the names of the mice, only aggregate numbers.

        Well, that would completely eliminate a wide variety of potential research avenues.

        No, t

  • I'm sure they're trying to pull a fast one of some kind but I admit to not seeing the problem with this idea in general. Shouldn't we want them to be basing policy on publicly available data?
    • by meerling ( 1487879 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @07:23PM (#49581523)
      "...argue that the secret science legislation would force EPA to ignore numerous studies. They say that not only do many studies contain public health or industry-submitted data that are confidential, but the legislation provides too little funding for EPA to obtain all the necessary raw data. And many studies, such as longitudinal surveys, are not realistically “reproducible,” scientific organizations worry."
      _
      As far as republican backed industry is concerned, anything like health and environmental issues that prevent them from doing whatever the hell they want is bad. The EPA is a big supplier of those things they hate, so if they can cripple the EPA, they get to do more things to make them money, despite it being dangerous to the public health and safety.
      So yes, they are trying to pull a fast one by attempting to eliminate as much as they can.
      It's kind of like a mafia lawyer trying to get the judge to throw out all witness testimony that is not 1st hand police testimony, or all evidence that has been touched or operated by someone other than a cop. So Uncle Johns being in the room and seeing Vinnie the Slasher cut up the victim gets thrown out, along with the fingerprints from the door because Uncle John used it to run out screaming for the cops, of which he is not one of. And forget witness protection also, you can't hide the names and address of Uncle Johns family either, since that kind of confidential information isn't "transparent" enough...

      Again, yes, it's a scam attempting to cloak itself in respectability. (Or more like trying to sneak sarin into the theater by hiding it in an empty first aid kit wrapped in bandages.)
    • I'm sure they're trying to pull a fast one of some kind but I admit to not seeing the problem with this idea in general. Shouldn't we want them to be basing policy on publicly available data?

      Which would work great in a Communist Country.

      In the Capitalist US of A it's not unusual for the best source of data to be somebody's trade secrets. Maybe they're in the business of collecting (and selling) data and they offer scientists a peek for a price, or perhaps they're doing something (say burning different grades of coal in a power plant depending on business needs), and the EPA wants to use a study about it (perhaps the study correlates local air quality to the grade of coal burned). Unless the pow

      • In the Capitalist US of A it's not unusual for the best source of data to be somebody's trade secrets.

        This law has nothing to do with trade secrets. It says that data used to create rules by the EPA has to be publicly available in a way that can be reproduced.

        If the EPA is basing regulations on trade secrets, they are doing it wrong and should be stopped. It would have been amazing to the founding fathers for someone to say "we're making a law against doing something, but we can't tell you why...".

        Unless the power-plant company is willing to release reams and reams of data on precisely which load of coal it burned which day into the public domain, that study is based on non-public data.

        They don't have to be that precise. And if they've given the data to EPA, then it ought to be public domai

    • ..is as usual relying on the ignorance of the public. For example one of the long time complaints about the "hockey stick" from the deniers in the US senate was that a small portion of the raw data could not be published due to (default) copyright terms imposed by the french and a couple of other geographically small nations. The data was available but you had to go to the French government and wait six months to get it. There are lots of other cases where data is collected from industry and individuals whe
      • PS (Score:5, Insightful)

        by TapeCutter ( 624760 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @08:07PM (#49581791) Journal

        Shouldn't we want them to be basing policy on publicly available data?

        This is an excellent example of how well-crafted political propaganda works. The act of introducing the bill implies the EPA are not already basing policy on publicly available data, opposing the bill implies you want to hide something from the public. Even if the bill fails to pass, it has already succeeded as a propaganda piece.

        Make no mistake, this is a far-right attempt to put Science on a short leash.

        • Re:PS (Score:4, Insightful)

          by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @09:04PM (#49582125)

          the year is 2015. this is being pushed by republicans. it has the word 'science' in it.

          therefore, I already know all I need to know about this.

          for some things, you have to think deeply. but not for all things.

          does anyone truly and honestly believe the republicans are (these days, at least) pro-science???

          (what is that saying about ducks walking and quacking, again?)

        • So then the easy way to solve the issue is to make the data publicly available.

          But your far-left attempt to ram through big policy initiatives based on secret data is an attempt to put ALL of us on a short leash. I hope you get bitten, to be honest.

        • Re:PS (Score:4, Insightful)

          by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @09:46PM (#49582329) Journal

          Make no mistake, this is a far-right attempt to put Science on a short leash.

          It's not an attempt to put Science on a short leash, it's an attempt to limit the EPA. In the USA, Republicans generally don't even pretend to like the EPA, mainly for reasons listed in this article [forbes.com]:

          One of the most startling was a rule issued under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act that shut down 150 companies and imposed $100 million in costs to reduce a hypothetical cancer risk that was the equivalent of spending $9 trillion (yes, with a “t”) to avert a single case of cancer. Congress often has helped the EPA squander the taxpayers’ money. It has passed more than 20 environmental laws directing the government to pay the legal fees of green groups that sue the government, even when the government-subsidized plaintiffs would lose. Guaranteed money for suing the government—what a deal!

          I have no idea if the claims in the article are accurate or not, I'm just pointed out that those are the reasons Republicans don't like the EPA.

    • I'm sure they're trying to pull a fast one of some kind but I admit to not seeing the problem with this idea in general. Shouldn't we want them to be basing policy on publicly available data?

      Theoretically, but I'd sure feel better if it wasn't being pushed by the same party that forbids government scientists from uttering the words, "climate change".

      Because whatever you think of the notion of basing public policy on public data, you know this bill was written by lobbyists for the corporations most responsib

  • Regulatory Capture (Score:2, Interesting)

    by JBMcB ( 73720 )

    If you're wondering why using "secret" science to regulate various environmental issues is a bad idea:

    Researcher A: I've just discovered a substrate that makes solar cells 50% more efficient. This pushes their cost effectiveness to the point of making widespread adoption a no-brainer.

    Researcher B, funded by the coal lobby: Hey EPA - this new solar substrate causes birth defects in robins! You can't show the proof to anyone though as it involves a secret process...

    EPA: OK, effective immediately this substrat

    • by Nemyst ( 1383049 )
      Except that's not quite how it works. The EPA would instead ask for the study showing this link, call it utter bullshit, and carry on.
      • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

        EPA: We need to see that study.

        Researcher B: Sure, it uses a novel Beysian quantitative analysis based on 3 dimensional heat maps of multivariate data. I'm sure you have a team of domain-specific PhDs to go over the statistical methodology.

        EPA: No, we're going to need more evidence...

        Researcher B: What's that? I can't hear you over the screaming Greenpeace and Audubon Society protesters. Seriously, you need to do something about this industrial toxin poisoning our biosphere!

    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      Note that either Researcher A or Researcher B, or even both, could be shoveling manure. If the research is allowed to be kept secret, and the EPA allowed to use it while keeping it secret, either can be either:

      1) Suppressing valuable new inventions to protect dying industries, or

      2) Promoting stock scams for political allies of the administration.

      Or, of course, both at the same time.

    • Us Americans are really great at promoting logical theories of how government policy works, but not very good at integrating real world data into that.

      Researcher B would have to provide his data to the EPA for that to work, and then when the EPA gets sued by researcher A's company the EPA would be required to show his study to the Court and the plaintiff on strict condition that they reveal no confidential data. If the EPA's BS argument based on a aBS study stands up in Court then all structural protections

  • Basing policy decisions on data that can be peer reviewed -- why would this even be an issue? Isn't this better than "you can't do that, and we won't tell you why" or the nebulous "studies say". What studies? Secret studies. Ok...

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @07:08PM (#49581425) Homepage Journal

    If Congress is for it, it probably isn't science.

    "Secret Science" must be their code words for real science.

    • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @07:27PM (#49581553)

      An earlier version of this general effort used language that would forbid reference to models in policymaking.

      Presumably written by some clown club that doesn't know that models are what science produces. They were transparently trying to outlaw use of the computer models that climate science relies so heavily on. (And other branches of science, but climate science is the branch that's driving corruption^w campaign donations right now.)

  • "and the White House has threatened a veto"

    Yes! Our transparency president to the rescue....

    • Transparency... what does this have to do with Transparency?

      It is called strait forwardness.
      Nothing hard to understand about "If this comes to my desk, I will veto it!"
      That is as plain spoken as things can get.

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @07:15PM (#49581475)
    I RTFA and don't get the controversy. Of course the data used to form regulations should be easily available to everybody. The only reason to use secret data is you want to hide something.

    Not trying to troll here, just not seeing the other side.
    • by Layzej ( 1976930 )

      I RTFA and don't get the controversy.

      Are these same republicans also providing additional funds for the EPA to purchase privately held data sets or are they defunding the EPA? Or do the republicans want to use the coercive power of the state to force other people to provide the EPA, gratis, the fruits of their labor?

      for instance, as a scientist I may want to purchase a data set for my study. I am not entitled to provide that data set to others. I can document my methods and others can purchase that data set or an equivalent one and run th

  • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @07:32PM (#49581577) Journal

    Every single study which involves health records would be forbidden to be used, because the RAW data is not available to the public. It's the perfect knot - previous law prevents the release of personally identifiable medical data, and this law makes it illegal to base any regulation on any study for which the raw data (in this case, personally identifiable - as it must be able to be 100% independently verified) is not released to the public.

    This is about neutering the EPA's ability to "prove" that any particular pollutant causes harm to humans. If you can't provide the raw data that asbestos has led to lung cancer - patient records going back decades - you aren't allow to regulate it. Black lung? Chromium compounds in drinking water? Sorry, unless you publically release the medical records of every single person in every study you cite, it's "secret data" and junk science.

    • by Goldsmith ( 561202 ) on Thursday April 30, 2015 @01:51AM (#49583429)

      This is knee jerk fear mongering.

      The bill states that the law wouldn't supersede any statutory requirement (such as protection of PII).

      The bill also specifies that the data should be presented so that "substantial reproduction" of the study is possible. It doesn't specify that reproduction needs to be done. It doesn't specify "100% independently verified."

      These guys are asking the EPA to follow similar guidelines the FDA imposes on companies in evaluating a new drug or device. The FDA maintains a public database of filings, it's really interesting to go through. The bill is even closer to NIH publication guidelines. This is not just an anti-EPA thing here (granted, I'm sure there's some of that going on), this is getting the EPA in line with other health oriented agencies.

      As for de-identification of the government owned part of the data, the Republicans are right. That should take an expert a couple of days, but it does cost money (there are many businesses who specialize in this kind of thing). The CDC doesn't leave money sitting around (I'm kind of shocked they leave PII medical records sitting around though, my company can't do that). They probably just can't pay to de-identify the data, and don't know if they can legally trust a Congressional committee to handle the data properly (probably they can't). So they're stuck without funding. The bill specifies $1M to do this, but given all the government offices involved, that's probably not enough.

      Here's the real issue: The government doesn't actually own all the data the EPA is referencing, so the EPA can't publish it or share it. This is all to put pressure on the EPA to ask Harvard and ACS to share the data.

      The data the government makes decisions on should be public. It shouldn't be acceptable for a scientist to say "trust me, I did the analysis correctly." We're not perfect, we make mistakes. Peer review is broken, we can't rely on that to catch errors. Open things up a bit more, and we'll get better conclusions.

  • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Wednesday April 29, 2015 @07:41PM (#49581621)
    "Outside experts" of course being another name for "lobbyists".

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