Ottawa, March 9, 2016
The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC), which represents over 15,000 federal scientists, and Evidence for Democracy (E4D), which advocates for the transparent use of evidence in democratic decision making by government, have commended the government’s early announcements restoring the mandatory long-form census and lifting the muzzle placed on scientists by the previous Harper government.
Today they are calling on the Prime Minister and science ministers to take the next step by putting in place the policies and infrastructure needed to support science integrity today and to prevent future governments from muzzling scientists.
“The government clearly supports science integrity – now we need them to safeguard it from future attacks. Creating strong science integrity policies in all federal science-based departments will go a long way to ensuring that critically important government research is available to the public and used in policy development,” says E4D Executive Director Katie Gibbs.
The letter, which has also been posted on Evidence for Democracy’s website for other scientists and members of the public to sign, outlines a number of provisions needed to safeguard scientific integrity, including:
● The right for scientists to speak out publicly about science and their research;
● The public release of scientific information in a timely manner;
● The right of last review for scientists to ensure that their work is not being misrepresented in communications documents;
● Safeguards against scientific misconduct; and
● Protection from undue commercial influence.
“Science should never be silenced again,” added PIPSC President Debi Daviau. “By including the right of scientists to speak in collective agreements we can ensure there exists a consistent policy and a binding process to resolve disputes as well as prevent in future the kind of chill imposed by communications policies under the Harper government.”