Yesterday a dozen liberal and academic (but I repeat myself)
groups
rose in defense of Penn State Climategate scientist
Michael Mann, making up reasons such as “academic freedom” to
deny American Tradition
Institute’s
request for
Mann’s emails and records from the University of Virginia, his
previous employer. ATI, where I am executive director, is asking
for similar records that Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli
has asked for under the state’s Fraud Against Taxpayers Act,
but has been denied so far by the university and lower courts. We
request the documents under Virginia’s Freedom of Information Act.
Both of us are curious about Mann’s activities at UVA when
he came up with that “Hockey Stick” temperature chart that
ignored the Medieval Warm Period, but helped fuel the AlGorean
chants of global warming alarmism a few years ago. He got
government grants for his work.
The defenders of Mann include the ACLU of Virginia, People
for the American Way, American Association of University
Professors, Council of Environmental Deans and
Directors, Union
of Scientists Concerned About Their Grant Funding, and that
heavyweight of heavyweights, The Ornithological Council. From their
collective authorship:
The undersigned organizations, dedicated both to academic
freedom and the exchange of scholarly and scientific ideas and to
the critically important ideals of government transparency that are
embodied by FOIA, urge the University of Virginia to…balanc(e)
the interests in public disclosure against the public interest in
academic freedom, which the University of Virginia has recognized
in its faculty handbook as “an essential ingredient of an
environment of academic excellence.”
Unfortunately university faculty handbooks don’t trump state
laws, as ATI explained in our
response to the groups’ letter:
ATI’s FOIA request is not on behalf of government, but of
taxpayers, who have the right to know how and where their dollars
are spent - or misspent. “Academic freedom” is not a legitimate
exemption, any more than “bureaucratic freedom” is an acceptable
exemption for state government employees. The coverage of state
universities is very clear in Virginia’s Freedom of Information
laws.
ATI’s Chris Horner also notes in our response how these groups
were missing in action on the “academic freedom” front when
Greenpeace demanded the records of Mann’s former UVA colleague,
Patrick Michaels, a climate alarmism skeptic. Same goes for several
other skeptical scientists at other institutions where Greenpeace
inquired.
In other Penn State news, I see that “The
Amazing Revkin,” who also goes by Andy,
will be
featured at the university’s 2011 Colloquium on the
Environment. PSU describes in part the New York Times
blogger with this laugh line: “While the media largely ignored the
climate story until the last several years, Revkin spent more than
20 years immersed in this subject….”
The story of Andy as pioneer — ought to be fun.