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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Don't Alienate Your Advisors, Chief Scientist Tells
Title:UK: Don't Alienate Your Advisors, Chief Scientist Tells
Published On:2009-08-03
Source:Guardian, The (UK)
Fetched On:2009-08-04 06:06:37
DON'T ALIENATE YOUR ADVISERS, CHIEF SCIENTIST TELLS MINISTERS

Ministers risk alienating their science advisers by dragging them
into public rows over politically sensitive policy decisions, the
government's chief scientist has warned. Leading academics will be
discouraged from working with government if they fear being
reprimanded for expressing their views, says Prof John Beddington,
who took over the post from Sir David King last year.

Government relies heavily on independent advice from academics, but
is in danger of eroding the relationship and squandering their
expertise, Beddington told ministers.

The situation is particularly fraught when eminent scientists are
asked to advise on politically sensitive issues, such as the
government's drug policy. A debate over the risks of recreational
drugs erupted into a public row in February when the former home
secretary, Jacqui Smith, vetoed recommendations from her own drug
advisers to downgrade ecstasy from its class A status.

A parliamentary report published last week directed further
criticism at ministers for demonstrating a cavalier attitude to
scientific evidence, which was often viewed as "at best a peripheral
concern, and at worst as a political bargaining chip."

The report by the Commons innovation, universities, science and
skills committee called on chief scientists within government
departments to name and shame ministers who flout scientific advice
when formulating policies.

Phil Willis, the chairman of the committee, said the report did not
demand that every government policy be based on scientific evidence,
but urged ministers not to make false claims for the evidence
underlying their policies.

Beddington's concerns are made clear in a letter to the former home
secretary released to the Guardian under the Freedom of Information
Act. The letter was copied to the Cabinet secretary, Sir Gus
O'Donnell, the communities secretary, John Denham, and the Home
Office's most senior civil servant, Sir David Normington.

The letter, sent three months before Smith stood down in June,
stressed the "importance of creating and sustaining an environment
in which the best brains of academe are willing and able to work
effectively with government."

Beddington referred to the recent row over drug policy, in which Ms
Smith told ministers she had telephoned Professor David Nutt,
chairman of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD), to
say she was "surprised and profoundly disappointed" in him for
comparing the risks of ecstasy with horseriding in an academic
journal shortly before the council announced its recommendations on the drug.

The admonition of Nutt and the subsequent media coverage "will
discourage scientists from working with government," and emphasised
a need to "find a better way forward to ensure scientific evidence
continues to contribute to debates even when such debates are
politically sensitive," Beddington said.

"We, across government, need to develop some clear expectations. For
example, that scientists who give of their time and expertise to
assist policy-making, often without charge, are appropriately and
publicly supported and valued by government, by universities and by
the research assessment process," the letter continued.

In her reply to Professor Beddington's letter, Smith said: "The
advice that the ACMD gives (both scientific and wider) is work that
I value, demonstrated by the fact that I, and previous home
secretaries, have accepted the vast majority of the council's
recommendations."

The government draws on leading scientists to advise on policies
that cross the breadth of Whitehall departments, including food
safety and nutrition, environmental pollution, infectious
disease preparedness and national security.

Sir David King, the former chief scientist, said it was crucial for
scientists to give "honest, rigorous and independent advice" to
government, but stressed that scientists must appreciate their
advice might not always be taken.

"We have to accept that ministers and prime ministers make decisions
that don't always go directly with the scientific advice. This is an
advisorial system and we have to be tough-skinned about it," Sir David said.

"It is important that scientists are prepared to be hardnosed.
There's little point of getting into the fray if you're not prepared
to put up with the obvious outcome where a minister or a secretary
of state have the responsibility to make the political decisions," he added.

"During the Bush period in the White House, scientific advice was
not only ignored but sometimes absolutely overturned for no good
reason at all. Documents were altered by the White House, including
Environmental Protection Agency documents on climate change, with
absolutely no scientific input to explain why. There's a situation
where the scientific community have every right to say there's
little point in working with this govenment," Sir David said.

The parliamentary report, Putting Science and Engineering at the
Heart of Government Policy, said press offices within Whitehall
departments could skew the advice scientific advisory panels and
recommended a new press office be established to handle all advisory
committee reports. It also called for the chief scientist to report
directly to the prime minister.
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