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Gene Whitney

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Put yourself in their shoes; what else are they worried about? SUMMARY ... Reliable, timely information is the currency of DC. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gene Whitney


1
COMMUNICATING GEOSCIENCES TO POLICYMAKERS PERSPEC
TIVE FROM OSTP
Gene Whitney Assistant Director for Environment
Office of Science and Technology
Policy Executive Office of the President
2
OFFICE OF SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY POLICY EXECUTIVE
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Dr. John H. Marburger
III, Director and Presidents Science
Advisor 50 staff 20 Ph.D. scientists
  • OSTP dual roles
  • Reactive Ensure that President and
    Administration officials are fully informed about
    current scientific and technical issues (many!)
  • 2. Pro-active Develop interagency strategies
    to implement Presidents science and technology
    priorities.

3
NATIONAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
COUNCIL Committees, Subcommittees and Working
Groups
Science
Env. Nat. Res.
Technology
Nat. Home Sec.
Research Business Models
Global Change Research
National Security RD
Technology Dev.
Education Workforce Dev.
Radiological/Nuclear Countermeasures
Air Quality Research
Networking Information Technology
Large Scale Science
Disaster Reduction
International
Nanoscale Science, Eng. Technology
Aquaculture
Ecosystems
WMD Medical Countermeasures
Human Subjects Research
Toxics Risks
Aerospace
Water Availability Quality
IWG Physics of the Universe
Standards
US Group on Earth Observations
Biotechnology
IWG Plant Genome
Infrastructure
IWG Dom. Animal Genomics
Future of Land Imaging
Oceans
Key Earth science components
4
  • Some Earth Science Issues of National and Global
    Concern
  • Climate change
  • mechanisms (e.g., paleoclimate)
  • impacts (e.g., disasters)
  • mitigation (e.g., carbon sequestration)
  • Water availability and quality
  • Energy supply / materials supply
  • Nuclear waste disposal - Yucca Mountain
  • Earth observations monitoring
  • Natural hazards and disasters
  • Coastal and ocean processes and management
  • Earth science from space and planetary science
  • Etc.

5
HOW BRAINS WORK
Scientist brain Data ? Interpretation ?
Hypothesis ? Test . ? Position Politicia
n brain Position ? Search for support ?
Data
6
How decisions are made
Laws Regulations
Economics
Morals Ethics
DECISION or POLICY
International Politics
Domestic Politics
Science Technology
7
How do policy makers become informed about
scientific issues? 1. Individual study 2.
Staff work 3. Expert briefings or
testimony 4. Dialog with or tutorials from
scientists
Involvement of scientists or societies
8
Why are you communicating with policy makers or
decision makers? To inform a policy or
decision To persuade? Who should do it?
9
  • FIVE SKILLS A SCIENTIST NEEDS TO INFORM POLICY
  • Ability to communicate technical issues in
    layman's terms.
  • Ability to communicate the uncertainty inherent
    in scientific information without sending the
    message that there is no right answer.
  • Ability to effectively communicate possible
    consequences or outcomes of decisions using
    scenarios.
  • Ability to understand how scientific information
    might be used (or misused) by proponents of
    either side of an issue.
  • Ability to actively participate in a highly
    confrontational or contentious policy debate
    without losing sight of the objective scientific
    evidence.

10
  • TEN STEPS FOR SCIENTISTS TO AFFECT POLICY
  • Identify the real decision makers not always
    obvious.
  • Identify other scientific participants know
    what they are thinking.
  • Anticipate dont wait for panic mode early
    information is the best information, but provide
    it when they need it.
  • Face-to-face is better than paper or e-mail (
    more difficult).
  • Establish technical credibility stay in your
    lane.
  • Establish political credibility know the
    context of the issue.
  • Offer to help be a resource. Follow up.
  • Understand the calendar for budgets and
    legislation.
  • Learn the rules of institutions yours and
    theirs.

11
  • Some intangibles in the process
  • (just suggestions, not rules)
  • Try to get to know decision makers and their
    staff before you make a request.
  • Have a specific goal or specific request
    policymakers are busy and dont want to chat or
    deal with long laundry lists.
  • Make short presentations (30 minutes) and leave
    concise materials (1-pagers).
  • Understand the authority and limitations of a
    policymakers role in addressing your science
    issues.
  • Put yourself in their shoes what else are they
    worried about?

12
  • SUMMARY
  • Key federal policymakers include Congress and
    staff, Administration officials and staff, agency
    officials and staff.
  • Policymakers need scientists to inform rational
    policy development.
  • Scientists need policymakers to implement a
    scientific vision or to support institutions.
  • Reliable, timely information is the currency of
    DC.
  • We must work together to achieve goals that are
    in the best interest of the Nation.
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