tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post7658987646368954438..comments2024-03-19T03:14:04.172-04:00Comments on Rabett Run: Polar Bear FolliesEliRabetthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07957002964638398767noreply@blogger.comBlogger52125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-50539449354807947572012-10-25T15:27:51.100-04:002012-10-25T15:27:51.100-04:00"Truth Publishing International" Truth =..."Truth Publishing International" Truth = Pravda?Sheahttp://backofthesiteindex.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-23413456740371217672011-08-24T09:48:03.083-04:002011-08-24T09:48:03.083-04:00Fascismo-capitalism, it 's real. Apparently th...Fascismo-capitalism, it 's real. Apparently the polar bear is in real danger we don't know of yet - why go to so many pains to lambast someone who once upon a time noted a bear drowning?cRR Kampenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07571285063752477448noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-20948237647731268142011-08-22T00:22:52.731-04:002011-08-22T00:22:52.731-04:00Anon,
Where did you get your info from?
barry.<a href="http://rabett.blogspot.com/2011/08/npr-has-copy-of-letter-sent-by.html?showComment=1313920322053#c4059439720830555066" rel="nofollow">Anon,</a><br /><br />Where did you get your info from?<br /><br />barry.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-42591327648286507222011-08-21T13:24:14.744-04:002011-08-21T13:24:14.744-04:00Has Hardycross just presented us with a preview of...Has Hardycross just presented us with a preview of the next "climate sceptic" spin that's going to be put on the Monnett case?Turboblockenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-6804942403534900742011-08-21T13:19:02.545-04:002011-08-21T13:19:02.545-04:00The polar bear note was the result of observations...The polar bear note was the result of observations during a different project. It has nothing to do with the Derocher joint project.Turboblockenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-10865383028455352872011-08-21T12:33:51.304-04:002011-08-21T12:33:51.304-04:00The 4-dead polar bear paper bears no resemblance t...The 4-dead polar bear paper bears no resemblance to the scope of work. Why is that?hardycrosshttp://www.aol.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-42782050858608442482011-08-21T05:53:49.226-04:002011-08-21T05:53:49.226-04:00Part 2
When it became apparent to the contracting ...Part 2<br />When it became apparent to the contracting officer that it would be difficult to procure a study with Canadians as an "agreement" the approach was changed to "sole-source", a poor fit for a study that required negotiation of objectives and details about cost-sharing so that funds could be requested through the study planning system at MMS.<br /><br />A sole-source justification was drafted in late-December, 2003. On December 20, the CO directed Monnett to forward the Statement of Work to Derocher so that he could get started on his proposal as there was a hope to get the study in the field that spring. In a memo dated December 21, the Chief Scientist of MMS also directed Monnett to forward the SOW to Derocher stating that the CO had informed him that the study did not require publishing in Fed Biz Ops, which is the normal protocol for sole-source procurements. At the beginning of the year, the senior CO retired leaving a vacuum until early March when a junior CO was appointed.<br /><br />After sending Derocher the proposal, Monnett and Derocher exchanged emails on January 10, 2005. In this message Monnett tells Derocher that when he is "happy" with his draft proposal to forward it and they (CM and AD) can work together to "work out any rough spots". Monnett was thinking of the usual rough spots he sees in drafts of cooperative proposals, issues with spelling out the cooperation and documentation of co-funding. Below is a copy of the January 10th email from Monnett to Derocher:<br />"Excellent! I was thinking about you this AM. At this end, I am waiting for a HQ reviewer of the SOW to return from holiday so that I can satisfy all the channels. I believe she is back today so things should start to move at our end, shortly. Email the draft to me when you are happy with it and together we can work out any rough spots. You will get the official RFP from the Contracting Officer after everyone is happy with the SOW. Your proposal will respond to that official contact when it occurs. Hope you had a great holiday. cm"<br />-----Original Message-----<br />It turned out that a pretty decent draft was finally submitted by Derocher on April 14th. At that time Derocher was struggling with a new requirement to submit the proposal electronically. Monnett responded with the email message below. <br /> "Sorry to take so long to reply...bit distracting around here. I'm headed to Wash DC area for next two weeks but will monitor my email and try to move your proposal along when I see it. What you have seems on target. The most important thing is that objectives and methodology conform to the statement of work, and that seems to be the case. Put in what details you can and if we have further questions we won't be shy. Hope the bureaucracy doesn't get you down. You or your bean counters should get back to the MMS Contracting Officer if you have questions on that side." <br />This is apparently the evidence the IG has that Monnett helped "draft" the Derocher proposal: <br />When the new CO came onboard in early March, the new regime approached the procurement much more conservatively and a Fed Biz Ops Notice was developed. A new senior CO took over who eventually signed the award, but she was not involved in the details of the procurement. That senior CO was who the IG interviewed. No surprise she had no knowledge of what had actually taken place.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-40594397208305550662011-08-21T05:52:02.053-04:002011-08-21T05:52:02.053-04:00First page of 2 part posting
This has been an inte...First page of 2 part posting<br />This has been an interesting discussion, so if anyone is still monitoring here is some information that you may find interesting:<br /><br />Monnett and Derocher first met on September , 2003 at a polar bear monitoring workshop being hosted by the USFWS in Anchorage, Alaska. At that time, Monnett became aware that U Alberta and the Canadian Wildlife Service were beginning a massive capture effort of polar bears that offered a unprecedented opportunity to select young animals for collaring to study their dispersive movements. The question of interest was whether the existing politically-based stock designations had any basis in reality. If not that would have profound consequences for interpreting prior attempts at modeling the recovery of the Southern Beaufort Sea population from various oil-spill scenarios. <br /><br />A draft study profile was created in October 2003, followed by a budget in November that reflected significant cost sharing by the Canadians. This would contradict IG assertions that the study was created to reward Derocher for his favorable review of the 2006 paper. The dead bears were not seen until September, 2004, nearly a year after the original study profile was written. Of course, Derocher was not a peer reviewer for the Journal, as the IG asserted. That should be clear from a reading of the "Acknowledgements" in the published paper. Below are some excerpts from the original October 13th profile. In the introduction:<br /><br />"The purpose of this study is to create a collaborative study of polar bear dispersal and population structure between University/Government researchers and Native subsistence hunters in villages along the Canadian Beaufort Sea, and adjacent coastlines. It will be complementary with previous and ongoing studies conducted in the Alaskan Beaufort Sea Region, but will add new insights because of the emphasis on population genetical mechanisms, particularly dispersal. Approximately 200 polar bears are expected to be captured in the Canadian Beaufort Region, each year for the next 3 years. This study is timed to take advantage of considerable savings in logistics by partnering with that ongoing study."<br /><br />And the very first method is to: <br />"1. Develop a partnership between University and Canadian Government polar bear biologists, and Canadian Natives to implement a study of juvenile polar bears using long-lived satellite transmitters for monitoring."<br /><br />Essentially the same language is published on page 155-6 of the official 2005 Annual Study Plan posted on the BOEMRE website at:<br /><br />http://alaska.boemre.gov/ess/essp/sp2005.pdf<br /><br />The type of study was shown as an "Intra-agency" Agreement because when the study was conceived it was expected to be an "agreement" rather than a contract since UA and CWS would provide nearly $1M funds toward the objectives. <br /><br />See also the Annual Study Plan for 2010 pages 109-110 where essentially the same language continues to be used in the introduction and methods:<br /><br />http://alaska.boemre.gov/ess/essp/sp2010.pdfAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-59269265724270507682011-08-21T03:53:29.791-04:002011-08-21T03:53:29.791-04:00I would like to post on here but am not sure how t...I would like to post on here but am not sure how this works.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-34692506520419631762011-08-20T18:54:47.880-04:002011-08-20T18:54:47.880-04:00Snow Bunny says:
I was once on the periphery of t...Snow Bunny says:<br /><br />I was once on the periphery of the stupidest IG investigation ever. It concerned a minor act that was of tiny cost and the IGs bizarre theory why it was illegal. We heard Dept. of Justice and the agency's lawyers were laughing at the IG. We never heard who kicked off the investigation.<br /><br />This one is nearly as stupid -- do read the transcripts of the interrogations of Dr. Monnett and Dr. Gleason last February. I can't wait for the sequel, "Dead Polar Bears Trailing Entrails #2". Apparently the PEER lawyers believe nothing significant was uncovered; they're eager to release the transcript.<br /><br />Who kicked this off? For that matter, who is behind AG Cuccinelli's mad pursuit of Dr. Mann, for work he did in Virginia years ago? Is it a coincidence that both did work quoted (or hyped) by Al Gore?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-39865520037780274392011-08-20T06:02:47.777-04:002011-08-20T06:02:47.777-04:00*to do R&D
They sure don't teach this stu...*to do R&D<br /><br />They sure don't teach this stuff in grad school. BTW, to become a COTR, one must complete a 40 hour instruction course and complete 40 hours of continuing education every 2 years; all this besides annual mandatory ethics training, computer security training and whatever else comes down the pike. In our joint this year, it was a course (with exam) in Acquisitions Law. Also, one must learn to speak in acronyms, although it is difficult to stand toe-to-toe with the DoD folks, but if you can say JOFOC with a straight face you're almost there.<br /><br />And salary freeze and across-the-board cuts make this a not fun time for scientific agencies. Not the best time to be a researcher, either.Deech56https://www.blogger.com/profile/01075060714218498521noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-58380338524167517892011-08-20T05:53:13.561-04:002011-08-20T05:53:13.561-04:00WhiteBeard, thanks. A CO will have authority over ...WhiteBeard, thanks. A CO will have authority over a number of contracts, and there are tasks throughout the life, pre and post award, of any given contract. The CO is the one who has authority to spend money that is in the government's hands, and the PO/COTR is basically a technical adviser to the CO and is the one who has the expertise to help the CO in her (in this case) work. Because the CO is the one who has the real authority, the PO/COTR must develop a good working relationship with him or her and must understand the various roles. <br /><br />For this project, a decision was made to do some kind of joint funding. As soon as this was treated as a contract mechanism, certain rules went into effect. What is "standard practice" in the office may very well be out of compliance with the FAR - that happens, and I am sure it will be fixed. "[L]ooking over the scientist's proposal for the contract before its review" is (IMHO) not in compliance with the FAR if this was done after the solicitation hit the street. In fact, this could be a case study in what not to do and may show up in some training materials.<br /><br />It's really hard to to R&D under a federal contracting mechanism. The FAR was written to cover widgets and fighter planes, and what makes sense from a scientific standpoint may be non-compliant, but the CO can help the PO stay within the regulations. <br /><br />Guide to acronyms:<br />PO = Project Officer - the program person before award<br />COTR = Contracting Officer's Technical Representative - the program person after award<br />CO = Contracting Officer - has authority to make financial decisions<br />FAR = Federal Acquisition RegulationDeech56https://www.blogger.com/profile/01075060714218498521noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-26529449991036915612011-08-19T22:27:08.726-04:002011-08-19T22:27:08.726-04:00Whitebeard,
Your links to the BOEMRE (think MMS) ...Whitebeard,<br /><br />Your links to the BOEMRE (think MMS) site was instructive. Randomly clicking on interesting study links showed that most of them seemed to be awarded to entities within the US government or to University of Alaska at Fairbanks, so the international nature of the study seems to be novel in terms of the contracts awarded by BOEMRE-AK. <br /><br />Monnett may well have been following SOP in the office for other US Government or State Government agencies. It would have been nice to see the RFP for the study, if you can dig it up, that would be nice. My suspicion is that it was crafted in such a way as to make sure there would only be one bidder, since admittedly, they were attempting to piggyback on work already being done by Derocher. <br /><br />As far as the source of the original compliant I have long suspected, as you do, a political source. Specifically I suspect a powerful representative with a (R) after his name who has some control over the DOI budget, but that's just speculation of course.<br /><br />izen makes some good observations about scientific misconduct -- in this case misconduct required by the MMS because he reached or was reaching conclusions which were inconvenient to their policy mission. Even though MMS has been reorg'ed in the wake of Deepwater Horizon, never doubt that regulatory capture is still the operative norm in the child agencies.Rattus Norvegicushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03449457204330125792noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-5319801814552925192011-08-19T18:38:06.388-04:002011-08-19T18:38:06.388-04:00Hounding.Hounding.David B. Bensonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02917182411282836875noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-68382538628407424442011-08-19T18:31:21.771-04:002011-08-19T18:31:21.771-04:00Marion,
Surely could be, but I’m more inclined to...Marion,<br /><br />Surely could be, but I’m more inclined to an electoral politics origin. Be interesting to see what PEER’s FIO request turns-up.<br /><br />Deech56,<br /><br />Thanks for your answer, and an echo of Grypo over at the Texican’s from me. That was my supposition.<br /><br />I was thinking about the statement in behalf of Monnett by Dinerstein of PEER as reported by Greenfieldboyse at NPR: “Monnett's actions with regard to looking over the scientist's proposal for the contract before its review was the ‘standard practice’ at his office”. The point I was getting at is - how common were jointly funded programs involving different US Federal Agencies, where the specific charge against Monnett doesn’t seem to be applicable, verses those with other entities where “fair bidding” concerns come in? What was standard or common practice?<br /><br />I can get to BOEMRE’s Biological Studies list again, and it appears there’s quite a few of the later at the Agency. Since Monnett is no longer the listed contact I can’t partition his former management oversight between in house and co-operative projects with entities outside Dept of the Interior. But, it looks like your observation that Monnett has a problem if the Contracting Officer’s statement holds-up is true, and the PEER claim of that’s how things were done is weakened. I can’t really fathom that the Contracting Officer just spent her days clipping her nails.<br /><br />That’s not to buy an argument that there’s some skullduggery afoot. What’s most plausible to me is Monnett said he’d review Derocher’s paperwork for a funding source that was new to him.<br /><br />WhiteBeardAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-60394093218573094852011-08-19T17:18:56.931-04:002011-08-19T17:18:56.931-04:00I wonder if the source of the allegation made agai...I wonder if the source of the allegation made against Monnett of scientific misconduct is known ?<br />It is just about possible to re-construct the allegation that the investigator ERIC MAY was trying to put to CM.<br /><br />It resolves the apparent nonsense of the <br />"what is 7 of 11% percent?" remark.<br /><br />The allegation they received most likely said something like :-<br />-"CM is guilty of promoting climate alarmism by presenting inaccurate figures for the death rate of polar bears from drowning. This is scientific misconduct.<br />CM reports 7 bears while surveying 11% of the area which is 63 bears. 3 were drowned, equivalent to 27 or less than half of the total.<br />CM has claimed that the survival rate is 25% when it is over 50%."-<br /><br />The indications that this is the allegation come from investigator EM's questions about the polar bear figures, which he admits after 1hour and 40min -<br />JEFF RUCH: Um, but, uh, Agent May indicated to, um, Paul that he was going to lay out what the allegations are, and we haven‟t heard them yet, or perhaps we don‟t understand them from this line of questioning.<br />"ERIC MAY: Well, the scientif- – well, scientific misconduct, basically, uh, wrong numbers, uh, miscalculations, uh –<br />JEFF RUCH: Wrong numbers and calculations?<br />ERIC MAY: Well, what we‟ve been discussing for the last hour.<br /><br />What they had been discussing for the last hour was how CM had calculated the 25% survival rate. AS a good investigator EM first established what reasons CM had for making the claim under dispute.<br />It was in the context of how 4 bears swimming and 3 bears drowned was interpreted as part of the total population because they were numbers of 11% of the total area. That is when EM asks- <br />"seven of what number is 11 percent? Shouldn‟t that be – that‟s 63, correct?" <br />when challenged by an incredulous CM after further explanation for the origin of 63 EM gives what may be closest to the allegation -<br />“If seven total bears, four swimming, uh, and three drowned represents 11 percent of the population” – <br />CHARLES MONNETT: It doesn‟t. 15<br />ERIC MAY: Okay, and we‟ll – let me, let – “of bears before the storm, then the total number of bears after the storm is 63,” and that‟s where I came up with the sixty –<br />CHARLES MONNETT: That‟s just stupid. I – did you do that? <br />ERIC MAY: No. <br />CHARLES MONNETT: That is stupid. <br />ERIC MAY: I‟m a, I‟m just – I interview –<br /><br />Then there is this revealing exchange....<br /><br />CHARLES MONNETT: It‟s just goofy. And I – and, uh, the 63 number, what‟s the point of that? You know? <br />ERIC MAY: Wonder what, what they did is seven of what number is, uh, represents 11 percent, and that would – that‟s where the 63 came up. <br />CHARLES MONNETT: Somebody is deficient in fifth grade math. <br />ERIC MAY: (Laughing) <br />CHARLES MONNETT: Seriously. I mean, give me a break. <br />ERIC MAY: Right, do you have any other questions on –? <br />LYNN GIBSON: No, no.<br /><br />It must be a relief for those that want Dr Charles Monnett out that they can negate him with the accusation of inappropriate behavior when involved administrating funding, with the implied smear that some of the $50million he was in charge of may have ....<br /><br />And yet the depressing thing is that CM does admit a degree of scientific misconduct. The unauthored poster presentation he describes having to prepare against his advice for his managers. Believing the statistical analysis used was hiding possible changes and significant trends in whale migration behavior he did eventually produce the required presentation and remove his name from it. I suspect remove his name was the most he could do and still work, but I wonder if there are any hints in the work of the reservations of the un-named author. Perhaps like the film world scientists could insert a reference to 'Alan Smithee' just to confirm this is a 'required' piece of work with no endorsement by its creator.<br />-izen-Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-40257593456839933092011-08-19T09:31:02.617-04:002011-08-19T09:31:02.617-04:00Marion delgado:
"This is not rocket science....Marion delgado:<br /><br />"This is not rocket science. Someone at an oil company called BOEM, said, get rid of this guy, and they're working on it. It's not complex."<br /><br />Same shit happened in the USFS during the Old Growth Wars to Forest and District rangers who paid attention to their biologists when setting management priorities, except of course it was timber industry execs and lobbyists making the calls.dhogazanoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-83126147789783068732011-08-19T09:08:57.052-04:002011-08-19T09:08:57.052-04:00"Truth Publishing International" Truth =..."Truth Publishing International" Truth = Pravda?Deech56noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-79092819276026246552011-08-19T09:08:56.109-04:002011-08-19T09:08:56.109-04:00I think the fox is in the henhouse. After all, an ...I think the fox is in the henhouse. After all, an FBI white paper published this spring is smearing Paul Crutzen as a dupe of the Soviets and claiming that nuclear winter is a KGB hoax.<br /><br />This white paper was published right when Crutzen was leading a pontifical Academy of Sciences conference on melting glaciers. That's probably not an accident.<br /><br />http://legendofpineridge.blogspot.com/2011/06/higher-education-and-national-security.html<br /><br />I think they may have had a contractor write this FBI white paper. I know that the contractor CACI does work for the FBI and claims that it can counter disinformation. I know that Cuccinelli's little brother Kris is an "intelligence analyst for CACI, and their father is a lobbyist for the gas industry.<br /><br />You read what I found out and the other links. The FBI is usually not this dumb. They did great work on the Anthrax Investigation, but this white paper is really shameful disinformation.<br /><br />The FBI source for their theory on the "KGB hoax" of nuclear winter was a biography about a KGB defector who lived openly in Florida and had expensive cars in his driveway. This guy got mad if you asked him where he got his money. <br /><br />The FBI seems as dumb as the KGB in this case. They should investigate how this white paper got written.<br /><br />It is shameful that our FBI should be smearing a Nobel-winner just like the KGB do in Russia.<br /><br />Just because some KGB defector claims that nuclear winter is a KGB hoax doesn't make it so. And anyway, one of the big sources in the book the FBI based its stupid white paper on is Russell Seitz. See how he is quoted on page 176 of the book. (Search Seitz in the book at Amazon.)<br /><br />http://www.amazon.com/Comrade-J-Pete-Earley/dp/0399154396#reader_0399154396<br /><br />I think it is possible that the ideas of Seitz are put in the mouth of the KGB defector to give Seitz's ideas credibility.<br /><br />None of this is the least bit funny to me. <br /><br />I am sure if some scientists would look at my post they could explain it all better than I can. I have a background in Russian Studies, but I am not a scientist. <br /><br />The spy supposedly died after choking on a piece of meat. Or maybe he choked on all those lies he told that are now in an FBI white paper.Snapplehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13353200774193331056noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-74907397525488625422011-08-19T09:07:22.798-04:002011-08-19T09:07:22.798-04:00Steve Bloom, the chapter and verse is in the FAR, ...Steve Bloom, the chapter and verse is in the FAR, Subpart 15.2, <a href="https://www.acquisition.gov/far/current/html/Subpart%2015_2.html" rel="nofollow">15.201</a>. The beginning describes presolicitation market research, where contact with potential offerors is allowed and encouraged. There are many ways to do this, but the CO does need to be involved. Once a solicitation has hit the street, contact with potential offerors is limited, and must be through the CO: "After release of the solicitation, the contracting officer must be the focal point of any exchange with potential offerors."Deech56noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-38772679368015348882011-08-19T06:55:46.236-04:002011-08-19T06:55:46.236-04:00Everyone on scienceblogs, etc. is overthinking thi...Everyone on scienceblogs, etc. is overthinking this. When you look at BOEM (BOEMRE), think MMS and BP and Deepwater Horizon. Think complete and utter regulatory capture. Like MMS, BOEM sees its only function as assisting resource extractors in getting rich, and in killing off environmental complaints. <br /><br />This is not rocket science. Someone at an oil company called BOEM, said, get rid of this guy, and they're working on it. It's not complex.Marion delgadohttp://fascistoar.blogspot.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-87895238114926181192011-08-19T05:38:05.622-04:002011-08-19T05:38:05.622-04:00Scrooge is on the right track, I think. Steve Bloo...Scrooge is on the right track, I think. Steve Bloom, I would have to look up the exact reference. Your instincts regarding how this came about make sense, IMHO (again, I have no specific knowledge).<br /><br />Whitebeard, money obligated to another US Government agency is covered by Inter-agency Agreements. The FAR does not apply, and the parties are free to develop studies and negotiate terms at any stage. <br /><br />What's crazy is that the best thing for the government is for it to receive an excellent proposal, so helping a potential Offeror would appear to be the best course of action. The best way to do this, though, is after the initial review. At that time, the reviewers can send comments and instructions through the CO to turn an OK proposal into exactly what the agency wanted. Monnett should have consulted the Contracting Office to help guide him through the minefield. <br /><br />The truth is that conflict of interest (COI) situations or more likely the appearance of COI happens in a field where people know each other. So you acknowledge that COI may exist, but then find ways to manage the COI - handing major responsibility to someone else, recusing oneself from the review, etc.<br /><br />So here's what burns up your average bureaucrat - sweating through a working lunch at a site visit (who do I pay, how much, and can someone type out a receipt?) while reading about all the perks that elected officials get - the free trips, recreation, meals paid by companies or lobbyists.Deech56https://www.blogger.com/profile/01075060714218498521noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-77228018662626629842011-08-19T02:35:16.381-04:002011-08-19T02:35:16.381-04:00Stephen,
Not even spin. Mostly unadulterated fab...Stephen,<br /><br />Not even spin. Mostly unadulterated fabrication. Notice the stuffed bear photo with the caption “Grizzly-Polar Bear”.<br /><br />WhiteBeardAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-22344683258809383332011-08-19T02:17:42.967-04:002011-08-19T02:17:42.967-04:00Curious, but the Alaska Region BOEMRE server seems...Curious, but the Alaska Region BOEMRE server seems to be down. I was just trying to get the Canadian agency title (IIR this study was the only one in BOEMRE’s project list that had a Canadian affiliation).<br /><br />Some caution would be advised, on my Canadian money supposition. I don’t know that for a fact, but that seems to be how things work – funding comes through several agencies, and Monnett’s statement in his February questioning transcript, that he shipped stuff to US Fish and Wildlife because they would do better science, seems to confirm this.<br /><br />I have a question on the contracting procedural issue that perhaps Deech56 could help with. From memory, almost all BOERME projects that are not done "in house" using agency people seem to be in conjunction with other US Federal agencies, often combing funding. Does that change anything? <br /><br />Brian, agree. The IG’s May said they had a complaint, and that does have to be investigated. From May’s questioning it’s hard to miss the political angle though. And the timing is a bit weird. Gleason is grilled in January, and Monnett in February with nothing about the study run by Derocher. That project is halted in mid July, the same week as Monnett’s sent home with a gag order. Then, PEER issues a press release charging that BOEMRE’s failed to follow its own procedures for conducting an investigation and suspending Monnett and the media and blogs are involved. BOEMRE restarts the study and is issuing press releases, as is PEER, once or twice a week, and details dribble out.<br /><br />WhiteBaerdAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-16612221.post-23968647624294574762011-08-19T02:15:57.662-04:002011-08-19T02:15:57.662-04:00The spin being put on this story by certain "...The spin being put on this story by certain "media sources" is unbelievable:<br />"According to investigators, Monnett's calculations concerning polar bears' rate of survival, however, are flawed because he not only failed to verify that the four dead polar bears he witnessed were the same ones that he saw a week prior, but he also allegedly used faulty percentages in the process. "<br />http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/200371/20110819/global-warming-fraud-iconic-polar-bear-on-melting-ice-cap-a-hoax.htmStephenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06763511375953757332noreply@blogger.com