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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday September 07 2017, @04:56PM   Printer-friendly
from the twitter-administration dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1937

While the EPA is often portrayed as a massive bureaucracy, about half of its budget goes directly to other organizations through grants. While many of these are focused on cleanups and reducing environmental risks, the agency also funds scientific research into various health and environmental risks. The money for these research grants has historically been allocated based on a combination of scientific merit and environmental concerns.

All that started to change in August. That's when the EPA issued a new policy dictating that all grant programs must be run past a political appointee from the EPA's public affairs office. Now, a new report indicates that this PR specialist is cancelling individual grants.

The appointee is named John Konkus. He occupies the position of Deputy Associate Administrator for Public Affairs, which is a public relations position. Konkus has a bachelor's degree in government and politics, and he appears to have no scientific background—the closest is having worked for former Congressman Sherwood Boehlert (R-N.Y.) back when Boehlert chaired the House Science Committee. Since then, Konkus worked for then-Lieutenant Governor Rick Scott in Florida, spent time at a political consulting firm, and then got involved with the Trump campaign.

Despite the complete lack of scientific qualifications, however, the EPA decided to put him in charge of grants. In August, E&E News obtained a policy document stating that any proposals for grant programs need to be run through the Office of Public Affairs, specifically John Konkus. No funding program is allowed to go forward if Konkus does not approve it. This can include scientific funding, as well as grants for educational or environmental programs.

Now, The Washington Post is reporting that Konkus isn't only reviewing future grant programs; he has cancelled millions of dollars in grants that had already been through the review process and deemed worthy of funding. Some of these grants went to universities and so were likely involved in funding basic research. In addition, the report notes that the EPA briefly suspended funding for grants to Alaska at a time when the Trump administration was feuding with one of its senators.

According to the Post, "Konkus has told staff that he is on the lookout for 'the double C-word'—climate change—and repeatedly has instructed grant officers to eliminate references to the subject in solicitations."

Source: https://arstechnica.com/science/2017/09/epa-runs-all-grants-past-a-political-appointee-in-its-pr-office/


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 12 2017, @04:07AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 12 2017, @04:07AM (#566535)

    Google Images just turned into mostly-shit.
    I asked it to limit the search to 2 domains and it farted in my general direction.

    I gave the same information to ixquick and that gave me what I asked for. Huzzah!
    https://www.ixquick.com/do/search?cat=pics&cmd=process_search&query=cardioid+two.circles+site:quora.com+OR+site:matheminutes.blogspot.com+intitle:heart.maths+OR+intitle:astroid [ixquick.com]

    In your URL, multiple instances of %2C (an ASCII comma) are unnecessary.

    &ff= is a null parameter and, as such, is just noise.

    I'm not sure that &pl=opensearch is useful, so I left it out and my search turned out OK.
    Same deal for &dgf=1
    Leaving out &language=english made the URL shorter (heh) and didn't hurt anything this time.
    Turns out, even &cmd=process_search is noise.

    Note that I positioned cat= just after the question mark and changed that from =web to =pics
    That positioning makes the URL more useful as a (boilerplate) bookmark for me (easily reusable; easier to edit).

    Now, the "URLs" for the images/pages on the results page are still a long-winded obfuscated proprietary mess, but this does give me 1 more tool to use on appropriate occasions.
    ...especially if Google's goofballs never correct their recent screwup.

    Thanks for the push-start.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]