In response to the White House memorandum asking all federal agencies to establish a scientific integrity policy, Energy Secretary Steven Chu recently issued the Secretarial Policy Statement on Scientific Integrity. In it, Secretary Chu emphasizes the importance of the "free flow of scientific and technical information, consistent with standards for treatment of classified, sensitive, private, and proprietary information." The policy statement says, "Transparency and accessibility of scientific and technical information support the continued advancement of a sound science and technology base to help guide and inform the nation" critical public policy decisions; advance the national, economic, and energy security of the U.S.; facilitate the accomplishment of mission objectives; and maximize the public value of such efforts. To foster access, the Secretary's statement notes that "consistent with the Administration's Open Government Initiative, the Department will use its website and the resources of its Office of Scientific and Technical Information to help make research findings more widely available to the public."

read more...

Reply

Comments policy

We welcome your comments and you submission of web links to the OSTIblog and look forward to civil discourse on a variety of science and technology information topics. We will review comments before posting and we reserve the right to not post comments.

We prefer comments and links that are specific to the subject of the OSTIblog post.

You are fully responsible for everything that you submit, and all posted comments are in the public domain. This means that your comments could be distributed widely.

You may comment anonymously. Your name, website, and email are not required.

By selecting the preview button, submit button, and/or by submitting anti-spam answers, you accept these terms and conditions.

(If you're a human, don't change the following field)
Your first name.
By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.