Bad Science and the Bush Record: Hard Job of Blowing the Whistle Gets
Harder
By Mark Clayton. First published in the January 20, 2005 issue of The
Christian Science Monitor.
Federal employees who blow the whistle on government corruption and
political malfeasance should be praised, not punished. This is
especially true with conscientious bureaucrats who put the public's
interest above concerns about their own careers. Unfortunately,
environmental whistle-blowers face a more difficult uphill battle than
most -- and their numbers have begun to dwindle alarmingly under the
Bush administration.
It was never easy to be a whistle-blower -- and some say it may be
getting tougher. Just ask George Zeliger. Nearly four years ago the
quality-control expert warned his employer, the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental Protection, that the state's new auto
emissions test was grossly inaccurate.
He was ignored. When he objected that the test was harming air quality
and public health, he was cut from the program. After he went public,
sharing key documents with the state inspector general and news media,
the atmosphere at his workplace changed. His schedule was micromanaged;
colleagues began sending him sarcastic e-mails and job ads, he recalls.
Finally, this past September, the Russian-trained mathematician and
statistics whiz was ordered to spend much of his day photocopying,
stapling reports, and stuffing envelopes.
"My life here is hardly bearable," says Dr. Zeliger, who came to the
U.S. in 1990. "How would you like it if they sent you to the mail room
to do copying and stapling? My experience with the Soviet bureaucracy
tells me it is a baby compared to this one."
Lionized by Hollywood and protected by federal law, the lone employee
who stands up to a large bureaucracy has become a well-established part
of American culture. In 2002, Time magazine put three whistle-blowers
on its cover, lauding them as "persons of the year."
But the hard truth is that blowing the whistle is a long, tough slog in
which people sacrifice careers, friends, and job security to do what
they believe is right. And in a small corner of that world --
environmental whistle-blowing -- such sacrifices appear particularly
extreme. Ironically, where complaint dismissals and court rulings have
eroded whistle- blower protection, their numbers have increased. Yet
where legal protections have grown, the number of whistle-blowers has
stayed flat or even fallen.
John Fitzgerald, an analyst with the U.S. Agency for International
Development (USAID), never expected to find skulduggery. His job was to
evaluate proposed international aid projects to ensure that they met
environmental requirements. Under a statute called the "Pelosi
amendment,"
U.S. delegations to the World Bank and regional development banks
cannot support any aid project without an environmental review, if that
project will have significant environmental effects.
But what Mr. Fitzgerald found shocked him. In some years, nearly half
of funds loaned by multilateral development banks, which use U.S.
funds, are for loans that receive no U.S. environmental review. Of
those that are reviewed, many are incomplete or do not meet legal
standards.
Fitzgerald drew attention to the Chad-Cameroon oil pipeline -- one of
the largest such projects in the region -- which lacked detailed plans
for dealing with oil spills and invasive species from tanker ballast.
He reported major environmental problems with a dam project in Uganda
and a nuclear reactor project in the Ukraine. For this, his position
was eliminated in 2002, he says.
So he filed a whistle-blower complaint, charging that U.S. Treasury
officials had pressured USAID to approve energy projects in South
America, Eastern Europe, and Africa without the requisite reviews.
Jobless, Fitzgerald worked whenever he could find work and helped his
lawyers prepare his case. Eventually, he opened his own law practice.
Last September, more than two years after his original complaint, the
federal civil-service court, the Merit Systems Protection Board, ruled
that he had been wrongfully terminated. Rather than go to trial, the
government reached a settlement, which Fitzgerald and environmental
groups consider a major victory.
But it has a Pyrrhic quality, too.
"It was longer and more difficult than I thought it would be -- and it
hurts when you can't contribute much to your son's college tuition," he
says. "You question whether it's worth it all the time. But you just
say, 'I've got to do it because I've got to do the right thing.' "
Fitzgerald is one of the fortunate ones. Despite the passage of the
Whistle-blower Protection Act for federal employees in 1989, those who
have filed complaints under the act face a backlog of unsettled cases
and a minuscule success rate. Only 1 percent of such cases since 2001
was referred to agency heads for investigation. Of the last 95 such
cases that reached the federal circuit court of appeals, only one
whistle-blower won.
"When people come to us, we have to be candid," says Greg Watchman,
executive director of the Government Accountability Project, a
Washington advocacy group that counsels would-be whistle-blowers in the
federal government. "Under current laws protecting federal
whistle-blowers, they don't stand a chance."
Yet they keep on trying -- and not just on environmental issues. During
the first four years of the Bush administration, the backlog at the
Office of Special Counsel, set up by Congress to handle whistle-blower
disclosures by federal workers, saw its backlog grow from 287 to 690.
In addition, the OSC reports 572 new disclosures last year, the highest
in four years. The number of would-be environmental whistle-blowers
contacting the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility has
also grown. PEER, which helps environmental whistle-blowers at all
levels of government, has seen a two-thirds increase in the past four
years.
One key factor in the boom is Bush administration environmental
policies that have driven not only lower-level scientists but also more
senior government managers to step forward in protest, says Jeff Ruch,
executive director of PEER.
The graying of the civil service also may cause more people to blow the
whistle and then retire, other experts say. Media attention may also
play a role, they add.
Under growing pressure following a scathing General Accounting Office
report last year, the OSC this month announced that its backlog had
been largely eliminated with just 100 whistle-blower complaints now
pending. "We set up a special projects unit, a team of attorneys
devoted to eliminating the backlog," says Cathy Deeds, an OSC
spokesperson. "We put them in a kind of war room for a couple of weeks
to work through it. We wanted to get through it. So we did."
Whistle-blower defense groups criticized OSC's elimination of so many
cases so quickly. But Special Counsel Scott Bloch defended it, saying
in a statement earlier this month: "The mission and goals of OSC remain
the same -- to secure justice for all Federal employees who come to
this Office expecting results. We will do so in a more timely fashion."
While whistle-blower protections for federal employees have proven
weak, they've improved somewhat for those in the private sector. The
newly passed corporate-accountability law -- known as Sarbanes-Oxley --
has stronger whistle-blower provisions. But it was the new law's
requirement for employees to come forward that prompted Bill Wilson, an
air quality engineer in Texas for AEP, the nation's largest power
company, to speak out. For months he argued with managers that the
company would be required under Sarbanes to "self-report" excess
emissions of carbon monoxide and particulate matter at one plant and
the illicit burning of chemical waste at another of the seven plants he
oversaw.
"They ordered me to prepare a false certificate [for pollution
emissions] and I refused," Mr. Wilson says in a telephone interview. "I
had the forms up on my machine ready to fill them in. The boss came in
and said this is the way we're going to fill them in. I said, 'No,' and
I left."
After that, Wilson took his box of e-mails and other documents, which
he says shows management knew of ongoing massive violations of the
Clean Air Act, to state and federal environmental regulators. Although
the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency has yet to act, the Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality last summer issued notices of enforcement for the
alleged violations.
AEP has fought the state's claims. It also steadfastly maintains the
company has done nothing wrong and denies Wilson's allegations. Wilson
was fired for other reasons, not his pollution allegations, the company
said in a statement last year.
"We take our environmental compliance very seriously," Michael Morris,
AEP chairman, said at the time. "We conducted an internal
investigation, reviewed the facts related to issues raised by Mr.
Wilson, and determined that the appropriate corrective action had been
taken or that no violations had taken place."
Wilson, meanwhile, is looking for a job. "But I'm afraid that after
going public, there are not too many companies that would want to hire
me," he says. "This carried a higher price than I thought. I didn't
think AEP would fight this to this degree. The issues I've raised are
documented. I don't know how you can argue against a document." Under
the stronger protections of Sarbanes-Oxley -- a whistle-blower like
Wilson, for example, can move directly to a federal jury trial if the
complaint is not acted on within 180 days -- it's not yet clear whether
more corporate employees are stepping forward.
The number of whistle-blower complaints filed with the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration has not risen dramatically since 2002,
when Sarbanes-Oxley was passed. OSHA, which administers whistle-blower
provisions under Sarbanes-Oxley and numerous other federal statutes,
saw its total cases peak at 2,060 in fiscal 2003. But that total
declined to 1,922 last fiscal year -- lower than the annual totals in
two years of the Clinton administration. Its environmental caseload has
actually fallen 14 percent during the first four years of the Bush
administration compared with the last four years under Clinton.
Because of the small numbers involved in the environmental arena -- the
annual peak was 85 cases in fiscal 2000 -- such comparisons are not
statistically significant, an OSHA official says. Still, some see a
problem.
The decline "could reflect a skepticism on the part of workers that the
current administration will give them a fair hearing," Mr. Watchman
says.
Back at the Massachusetts DEP, the agency is still reviewing Zeliger's
complaint. "We have fixed the problems found with the inspections and
maintenance program, and the EPA regional office has approved that
particular fix," says Edmund Coletta, a DEP spokesman. "I'm just
hanging in there," Zeliger says. Since his formal complaint, he's been
taken off stapling and envelope addressing duty. "There's still hope,"
he adds.