
Two
Sides to Every Story
Former
Deputy Assistant Interior Secretary Julie MacDonald Responds to
Allegations
By
DAN KEPPEN
Family
Farm Alliance Executive Director
September 20, 2007
There
are many interests in Washington and the national media that are
dedicated to laying blame on the Bush Administration and, by
association, Western farmers and water users, no matter what the facts say. The mainstream media’s
apparent ready acceptance of arguments generated by environmental
activists is a growing concern tofamily farmers and ranchers, especially
when one-sided media coverage is seen as influencing environmental
policy that has very real ramifications for agriculture.
THE
RECENT EXAMPLE of
“trial by media” concerns the tragic and unfair public pillorying of
Julie MacDonald, the former deputy assistant secretary for fish and
wildlife and parks at the U.S. Department of the Interior. All year
long, environmental groups and their allies in Congress have kept the
pressure on senior officials at the U.S. Department of the Interior over
alleged heavy-handed management of Endangered Species Act (ESA)
administrative issues. Ms. MacDonald was subjected to particularly
withering fire for allegedly altering scientific field reports to
minimize protections for imperiled species and disclosing confidential
information to private groups seeking to affect policy decisions.
SHE
RESIGNED from
the Department in May after an Inspector General’s (IG) report
appeared to support allegations made by environmental activists. Those
allegations included charges that she had unreasonably interfered with
scientific findings relative to ESA issues; that she had conducted
herself outside the chain of command by interacting directly with field
personnel; and, in doing so, she had been heavy-handed with staff.
Having reviewed the ESA decisions in which MacDonald involved herself,
Interior has determined that eight additional decisions – most in
states along the
Pacific
Coast
– must
now be reviewed, and perhaps, reversed or modified.
URBAN
NEWSPAPERS from
around the country essentially broadcast the claims made by
environmental groups like the Center for Biological Diversity, painting
an unflattering portrait of MacDonald. Politicians – critics of the
Bush Administration – joined the fray, and on July 31, the House
Natural Resources Committee (“Committee”) conducted an oversight
hearing entitled "Crisis of Confidence: The Political Influence of
the Bush Administration on Agency Science and Decision-Making." The
IG’s report on MacDonald was a key topic of discussion at the hearing,
which also provided a forum to debate allegations that Vice President
Dick Cheney somehow exerted political influence to help farmers at the
expense of fish in the
Klamath
River
watershed.
THROUGH
ALL OF THIS,
Julie MacDonald has remained silent, which has allowed the charges
levied by her critics to go unchallenged. As a result, those charges are
now routinely repeated in media coverage (which the report was
“leaked” to, without a response from Ms. MacDonald), and now are
routinely reported as facts. But recently, we are beginning to see
others tell the other side of Julie MacDonald’s story. At the July 31
congressional oversight hearing, government witnesses involved with the
IG investigations were grilled on the MacDonald matter. Mary Kendall,
Deputy Inspector General for Interior, testified that the Interior
investigation determined that MacDonald did inject herself personally in
a number of ESA issues, particularly those that had the potential to
impact her home state,
California
, such as
the splittail minnow.
“Overall,
the impact of Ms. MacDonald’s conduct on the Department of the
Interior has been considerable,” said
Kendall
. “It has
cast a vast cloud over the Department’s scientific integrity.”
HOWEVER,
REP. CATHY McMORRIS Rodgers
(R-WASHINGTON) and Rep. Chris Cannon (RUTAH)
provided initial suggestions that, perhaps, the entire MacDonald story
had not yet been heard on this matter.
“The
American people deserve to know more about this situation,” said Mrs.
McMorris Rodgers. “I’m sure the public doesn’t know that this
grandmother never had a chance to refute the allegations levied against
her and that there could be many sides of the story. She has been
unfairly called a future “convict” by a senior member of this
Committee already, but there’s no basis for such irresponsible talk,
especially when the Inspector General found that she did nothing
illegal.”
FOR
THE FIRST TIME,
the public discovered that Ms. MacDonald had submitted a written
response to the Interior Department allegations. After the hearing, it
became apparent that questions lingered in the minds of some regarding
Ms. MacDonald’s ability to address the charges made against her, and
how her input was factored into the IG report. And finally, five weeks
later, at least one newspaper stepped forward to tell the rest of the
story. The
Colorado Springs
Gazette
on September 6 presented an editorial that summarizes her response
to the IG and even includes a link to the IG report and her very
thorough response: http://www.gazette.com/opinion/macdonald_26957___article.html/report_esa.html.
The
Gazette piece is balanced and complete. It is relevant to the
paper’s readers because many of them could be impacted by the proposed
de-listing of the Preble’s meadow jumping mouse, protected under the
ESA, which falls under Interior Department purview.
IN
A NUTSHELL,
the Gazette concludes “she’s been railroaded”.
The
Gazette editorial is an eye-opener, and introduces some key facts
that previous reporters apparently missed:
·
Ms. Macdonald says was never solicited by the IG for an
opportunity to rebut its report. IG’s
report insinuated that MacDonald altered range estimates for a protected
bird, the southwest willow flycatcher, because a critical habitat
designation might impact her “ranch” in
California
. But Ms.
MacDonald’s property — which is not a sprawling “ranch,” but 80
acres of row crops — is nearly 300 miles from flycatcher habitat.
·
Ms. MacDonald said the law requires that the best available
science be used, but she found the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service “did
not always consider all the data and often ‘cherry picked’ for
sources and reviewers which supported their position.”
Sadly,
the Gazette observes that the record may be impossible to set
straight. And it asks a question that everyone who jumped on the “bash
Julie MacDonald” bandwagon should be pondering: Where does Julie
MacDonald go to get her reputation back?
(Permission
to post from the author.)
|