This is about federal agency transparency.

http://www.civilbeat.com/articles/2014/05/14/22012-fisheries-panel-destroys-tape-of-secret-meeting/

Fisheries Panel Destroys Tape of Secret Meeting
By Patricia Tummons and Teresa Dawson 05/14/2014

Isaac Wedin <http://www.flickr.com/photos/izik/> via Flickr

Longline fishing hooks

The meeting held in the conference room of the Western Pacific Fishery
Management Council’s Honolulu office on the afternoon of Jan. 29 must have
been a doozy.

As a result of what he claimed was uncivil behavior of a participant, Robin
Baird, a cetacean scientist with the Cascadia Research Collective and one
of the most published experts on the subject of false killer whales in
Hawaii, resigned his seat on the council’s Protected Species Advisory
Committee.

When approached by Environment Hawaii, several other participants in the
meeting of the council’s Scientific and Statistical Committee’s (SSC)
subcommittee on false killer whales would not discuss what transpired
there. They did, however, note that council staff had made an audio
recording of the proceedings.

On Feb. 24, just a few days after learning of the existence of the
recording, we filed a formal Freedom of Information Act request to obtain a
copy of it.

The response came on April 4. “The Western Pacific Fishery Management
Council staff has advised that an audio recording of the subcommittee
meeting was erased on February 22, 2014,” stated the letter signed by
Samuel D. Rauch III, administrator of the National Marine Fisheries
Service. “We are in the process of reviewing the circumstances of this
action.”
 No Public Notice

The apparent destruction of a government record is not the only
irregularity about the SSC subcommittee meeting. Under the governing law,
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, notice of
meetings of the council, SSC, and all other council committees and advisory
groups are presumed to be public and must be announced in the Federal
Register.

A review of Federal Register notices in the weeks before the meeting turned
up no such notice. This oversight was confirmed in an email from Michael
Tosatto, administrator of NMFS’ Pacific Islands Regional Office in
Honolulu. “As the result of an unintended omission,” Tosatto said, “there
was no Federal Register notice for that sub-committee meeting. We will
provide the council staff with clarifying direction regarding public notice
requirements” in the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
‘Aggressive, Inappropriate’

As we reported in March, Baird found his treatment at the hands of Milani
Chaloupka, an environmental consultant from Queensland, Australia, so
insulting that he resigned his position with the council’s Protected
Species Advisory Committee (PSAC) two days later. In his resignation
letter, he described the behavior of Chaloupka, who sits on both the SSC
and the Protected Species Advisory Committee, as “unprofessional and highly
inappropriate.”

“In normal work environments it is clear to me that his tone and
adversarial questioning would be considered abusive behavior and would not
be tolerated, and I am certainly not willing to tolerate it.”

Baird expanded on his experience of the meeting in a phone interview with
Environment Hawaii. After he had made his presentation on his recent work
in estimating false killer whale abundance through photo identification of
individual animals, Baird said, committee members “started asking
questions. At the outset, they were all very legitimate questions about our
techniques, analytical techniques, et cetera.

“After awhile, it deteriorated into what I could best describe as a very
adversarial situation. It went from me being asked clarifying questions, or
them questioning aspects of the science, to like being on the stand in a
court case. Instead of me being asked a civil question, it turned into
criticism of me for not providing more information to them, or not
providing information in advance. It was bizarre.”

Baird went on to say that he had been asked by council staff to present
information on his analyses – “just that.”

But at the meeting itself, he said, “at the beginning, an agenda was passed
around. It was the first time I had seen this…. If you’re going to have a
draft agenda, if you want things to be discussed, it’s a good idea to give
people a head’s up. And this wasn’t done.

“The meeting then deteriorated into what I would characterize as extremely
unprofessional, inappropriate behavior. Milani repeatedly criticized me,
not my science.”

“The line of questioning became so unpleasant that I packed up my stuff and
walked out of the room. Life is too short for me to put myself in those
kinds of situations. Any normal person who was there as a witness would
consider it abusive behavior as well.”

Chaloupka did not respond to Environment Hawaii’s questions about the
incident by press time.

At Wespac’s March meeting in Guam, no mention was made of Baird’s departure
during discussion of changes to the “council family,” neither was
Environment Hawaii’s FOIA request mentioned in executive director Kitty
Simonds’ review of administrative matters.
Council Staff Limits Public’s Access to Documents

Five years ago this month, the U.S. Government Accountability Office issued
a report containing several recommendations to improve transparency at
Wespac. One of them was to have the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration work with the council chair to publish council records,
including materials provided to council members ahead of each meeting,
on Wespac’s
website <http://www.wpcouncil.org/>.

In the past, during the course of a meeting, staff would print out copies
of most of the documents that were distributed to council members in their
briefing books. These copies would be stacked in long rows on a table at
the back of the room where members of the public could pick them up. A
binder containing the copies would also be available for the public’s
perusal.

More recently, although the council still prints out some documents for the
public, it has begun to post some of them to its website.

Before the council’s 159th meeting held in March Guam and Saipan, several
documents had been posted to the website. During the meeting, however, it
became clear from discussions that much more material had been provided to
council members via their online dropboxes. Only a handful of documents
were available to the public.

While at the meeting in Guam, Environment Hawaii staff began looking
through what appeared to be the public binder. Wespac public information
officer Sylvia Spalding then abruptly closed the binder and removed it,
saying it was not intended for the public, but for council staff. She then
put out the binder with documents for public review; it was a fraction of
the size of the binder she snatched away.

Both the public binder and Wespac’s website included none of the council’s
documents for the Protected Resources portion of the agenda and only two
documents in the Pelagic and International Fisheries section. When asked at
the meeting when documents on protected species and pelagic fisheries would
be made available on the council’s website, Spalding said she was too busy
with writing press releases.

Environment Hawaii was able to obtain the documents provided to council
members, though without the help of council staff. They included 13
documents on protected species and 14 on pelagic and international
fisheries. In fact, the council was provided with many more documents on
nearly all agenda items than were posted to Wespac’s website, distributed
on the public handout table, or available in the public briefing book.

Spalding did not respond to questions about the lack of public access to
council documents by press time.

The council’s ongoing refusal to post documents online has drawn the
attention of members of Congress. Rep. Henry Waxman and Rep. Gregorio
Kilili Camacho Sablan, members of Congress representing voters in
California and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands,
respectively, wrote Kathryn Sullivan, administrator of the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, and NMFS administrator Rauch last December,
inquiring about Wespac’s slow action to implement the recommendations in
the 2009 GAO report.

“[P]ublic documents such as briefing materials used by Council members to
make decisions are still not available on the Council website,” they stated
in a recent letter. “This is a notable deficiency, as all seven of the
other regional fishery management councils have extensive documentation
online. The lack of documentation is of particular concern in the case of
the western Pacific, where currently a concerned citizen of the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands or Guam would have to spend
over $2,000 and travel 4,000 miles to Hawaii to review the documents in
person. The Western Pacific Council could follow the example of every other
fishery management council and make its documents accessible on its
website.”

A response was requested by Jan. 7. It finally arrived on March 19, in the
form of a letter from Sullivan.

“I am pleased to report that additional transparency improvements have been
initiated,” she wrote, “including archiving past meeting minutes and
documents, as well as streaming live regular meetings. In fact, the Council
… posted briefing materials online for the most recent meeting, which took
place this March….”

Despite those assurances, the full range of documents given to council
members at the 159th meeting, which was ongoing as Sullivan’s letter was
written, still do not appear on the council’s website. As for posting past
briefing materials, files posted for the 158th meeting, held last October,
include a parking map, two press releases, and minutes. None of the reports
or other materials distributed at the meeting have been put on the
council’s website. (However, in response to a Freedom of Information Act
request submitted by Environment Hawaii, most documents are available at
the FOIA Online website: query DOC-NOAA-2014-000073.)

*About the authors:* *Patricia Tummons is editor of Environment Hawaii, a
publication she helped to found in 1990. Before that, she wrote editorials
for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Teresa Dawson is a staff writer for
Environment Hawaii and has freelanced for Environmental Health News and the
Honolulu Weekly. She was born and raised in Hawaii.*

*Reprinted with permission from the current issue of Environment Hawaii
<http://www.environment-hawaii.org/>, a non-profit news publication. The
entire issue, as well as more than 20 years of past issues, is available
free to Environment Hawaii subscribers at www.environment-hawaii.org
<http://www.environment-hawaii.org>. Non-subscribers must pay $10 for a
two-day pass.*
------------------------------

*DISCUSSION:* *What do you think about Wespac's practices when it comes to
pub*

-- 
David Duffy
戴大偉 (Dài Dàwěi)
Pacific Cooperative Studies Unit
Botany
University of Hawaii
3190 Maile Way
Honolulu Hawaii 96822 USA
1-808-956-8218



-- 
David Duffy
戴大偉 (Dài Dàwěi)
Pacific Cooperative Studies Unit
Botany
University of Hawaii
3190 Maile Way
Honolulu Hawaii 96822 USA
1-808-956-8218

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