Mike Curtiss (21
Aug 2012)
"How the White House
Delivered a Crushing Economic Blow to the Gulf"
Sen. David Vitter Louisiana's GOP senator on how the cover-up to
trump sound science in favor of political ideology keeps growing
with each chapter. Here’s the book-jacket teaser: A major
U.S. environmental disaster strikes. As Coast Guard and other
heroes struggle to contain the unprecedented damage, a different
scene unfolds in a dimly lit conference room in Washington. A
small group of high-ranking political hacks and overzealous
ideologues see an opportunity to manipulate the situation to
advance their agenda. They doctor a key report on the disaster
by experts in order to justify shutting down all exploration and
new production. They explain the sweeping decision as something
sound science requires. Several weeks later, members of
Congress and a few in the media dig deeper into the alleged
science behind bringing an entire industry to a screeching halt.
That’s when the cover-up begins. A catchy political
thriller? If only it were fiction. Instead, it’s what seems to
have happened in the Obama administration following the BP
disaster. Advertisement And as a U.S. senator from
Louisiana, I suffered through seeing it firsthand. Some
aspects of the 30-day experts’ report seemed suspect to me from
the beginning. So I called for an inspector general to
investigate the Obama administration’s claim that science
supported the decision to shut down the Gulf. That investigation
revealed that high-ranking officials in the Department of the
Interior and the White House inappropriately manipulated the
30-day experts’ report to justify the offshore drilling
moratorium — all in violation of the Information Quality Act and
contrary to sound science. On June 21, 2010, new reports
revealed that the scientists in question in fact opposed the
moratorium. They were shocked that their report was doctored to
justify it. They even actively lobbied Interior Secretary Ken
Salazar to soften the ban. However, on Nov. 10, 2010, Mary
Kendall, the inspector general for the Interior Department
investigation, concluded that Interior officials were really
only guilty of sloppy editing. She determined that Interior’s
moving some words around in the experts’ report was more akin to
a clerical error, and that Interior Secretary Salazar had
already apologized for that.