Yesterday, Shukla and GMU got notice that they have piqued the interest of a congressional committee, and via a written notice are required to preserve documents for an impending Congressional investigation and to provide proof that all employees of IGES/COLA have been notified that they are aware they can’t destroy documents. As we follow the unraveling behind the scenes and new FOIA documentation, rumors of some aberrant behavior in the past have begun to surface from former colleagues that suggest we might be dealing with the same sort of ego induced blindness that led to the downfall of IPCC chairman Rajenda Pachauri. The combination of information WUWT is being given behind the scenes suggests to me that this episode is going to get far worse for Shukla and GMU before it gets better.
At issue is at least 63.5 million dollars from the National Science Foundation, and where it went, whether it was used for the purpose intended, and who benefited from that money. The problem at hand seems to be that there may have been more than a little “double dipping” going on with that grant money as Steve McIntyre pointed out in Shukla’s Gold:
NSF policies purportedly regulate research compensation for members of university faculties by limiting their compensation in the academic year to their university salary, while permitting them to top up their university salary in summer months, but set their compensation at the monthly rate of their university salary (the “two-ninths rule”, as follows:
611.1 Salaries and Wages
- All Grantees. All remuneration paid currently or accrued by the organization for employees working on the NSF-supported project during the grant period is allowable to the extent that:
- total compensation to individual employees is reasonable for the work performed and conforms to the established policy of the organization consistently applied to both government and non-government activities; and
- the charges for work performed directly under NSF grants and for other work allocable as indirect costs are determined and documented as provided in the applicable Federal cost principles.
- Colleges and Universities. Section J.10 of OMB Circular A-21 establishes criteria for compensation work performed on government projects by faculty members during and outside the academic year.
NSF’s policy is:
- Academic Year Salaries. To be based on the individual faculty member’s regular compensation for the continuous period which, under the policy of the institution concerned, constitutes the basis of his/her salary. Except as provided in GPM 616.2, “Intra-University Consulting,” charges to Federal grants, irrespective of the basis of computation, will not exceed the proportionate share of the base salary for that period.
- Periods Outside the Academic Year. During the summer months or other periods not included in the period for which the base salary is paid, salary is to be paid at a monthly rate not in excess of the base salary divided by the number of months in the period for which the base salary is paid. NSF policy on funding of summer salaries (known as NSF’s two-ninths rule) remains unchanged: proposal budgets submitted should not request, and NSF-approved budgets will not include, funding for an individual investigator which exceeds two-ninths of the academic year salary. This limit includes summer salary received from all NSF-funded grants.
Andrew Dessler, who, like most climate academics, has consistently denied that research funding has any impact on alarmism, summarized the above policy as follows:
Texas A&M pays 10 months of my salary to teach. The other two months of my salary are paid out of grants for doing research, but the University sets the amount I receive during those two months equal to the m$158.06onthly rate that the University pays me the other 10 months. Thus, the vast majority of my salary is completely disconnected with research.
There are many other obligations on recipients of federal research grants, many of which are summarized in the NSF Grants Manual.
George Mason University Policy
Shukla has been on the faculty of George Mason University since 1993 (1984-1992 University of Maryland) and, during that time, has obtained federal grants both in the name of George Mason University and the Institute for Global Environment and Security Inc. discussed below).
George Mason, like most universities, has a policy on conflict of interest, including a detailed policy on conflict of interest in federally funded research. Under such policies, “non-profits” are classified as “business”, a protocol that seems very apt when large salaries are withdrawn by insiders from a closely-held “non-profit”:
“Business” means a corporation, partnership, sole proprietorship, firm, enterprise, franchise, association, trust or foundation, or any other individual or entity carrying on a business or profession, whether or not for profit.
The University conflict of interest policies require comprehensive and formal disclosure of personal and family financial interests to the Office of Sponsored Programs.
This policy applies to any person who is responsible for the design, conduct, or reporting of any research funded by a Federal agency. The responsible parties listed in this policy act as institutional officials for purposes of policy implementation, enforcement, and reporting.
Financial Conflict of interest” (FCOI) means a significant financial interest (SFI) directly and significantly affecting the design, conduct, or reporting of the federally funded research.
“Significant financial interest” means a financial interest consisting of one or more of the following interests of the investigator (and/or those of the investigator’s spouse and dependent children) that reasonably appears to be related to the investigator’s institutional responsibilities:
Investigators who apply for any federally funded research must disclose certain financial interests related to that research. Specifically, each investigator must provide a list of his or her known SFIs (and those of his or her spouse and/or dependent children) related to the investigator’s institutional responsibilities.
As a part of the university’s application for federal funds, each investigator must certify (1) that he or she has no such interests or (2) that he or she has such interests and has disclosed them through the institution’s disclosure process. The Office of Sponsored Programs maintains custody of the investigator’s certification.
So, as you can see, there are strict rules on how that money can be used. McIntyre adds commentary that suggests in addition to nepotism, there’s a quantity friends and family all feeding from these NSF grants:
Shukla Compensation
Despite the various changes in grant structure, one constant (or rather steadily increasing amount) has been the several sources of compensation to Shukla and his wife.
In 2001, the earliest year thus far publicly available, in 2001, in addition to his university salary (not yet available, but presumably about $125,000), Shukla and his wife received a further $214,496 in compensation from IGES (Shukla -$128,796; Anne Shukla – $85,700). Their combined compensation from IGES doubled over the next two years to approximately $400,000 (additional to Shukla’s university salary of say $130,000), for combined compensation of about $530,000 by 2004.
Shukla’s university salary increased dramatically over the decade reaching $250,866 by 2013 and $314,000 by 2014. (In this latter year, Shukla was paid much more than Ed Wegman, a George Mason professor of similar seniority). Meanwhile, despite the apparent transition of IGES to George Mason, the income of the Shuklas from IGES continued to increase, reaching $547,000 by 2013. Combined with Shukla’s university salary, the total compensation of Shukla and his wife exceeded $800,000 in both 2013 and 2014. In addition, as noted above, Shukla’s daughter continued to be employed by IGES in 2014; IGES also distributed $100,000 from its climate grant revenue to support an educational charity in India which Shukla had founded.
Discussion
There is a surprising link between the George Mason department and one of my earliest adversaries at NSF, David Verardo, Mann’s handler at NSF, who told him in 2003 that he didn’t have to provide data to me – that Mann was entitled to his view of climate and I was entitled to mine. Verardo’s wife, Stacey Verardo, is a colleague of Shukla, Kinter, Klinger and the others in the AOES department at George Mason, while Verardo himself is a member of the Adjunct Faculty at George Mason.
The most important point about all this?
There’s apparently an $800,000 annual salary and an organization full of Shukla family members that has produced next to no results for the millions received. Even NSF on their own web page acknowledges that only one paper has been produced out of a 4.2 million dollar grant.
Just think of what climate skeptics could do with money like that if we actually got it rather than the purported proverbial “big oil check” we are so often accused of getting?
In addition to the Federal law related to NSF grants, the other real teeth of the matter here is the law governing state employees: state employees may not be compensated by another employer for work that falls under their state employee remit. In this case that would include scientific research by a Professor (a state employee) i.e. Shukla himself.
It seems this went overlooked by GMU for awhile, but there are indications that somebody might have seen the looming problem that threatened to derail the gravy train, and made some changes.
From what can be ascertained at this point, prior to 2013, all the NSF grants flowed through Shukla’s IGES organization to the subsidiary organization COLA. Now, the NSF grants apparently bypass IGES and go directly to GMU and COLA.
WUWT commenter “lokenbr” noted yesterday:
It’s almost as if someone recognized the inappropriate nature of the previous arrangement and shut it down.
Though given the Schedule A filed in May 2015 along with a statement of financial interests by COLA director James Kinter it seems like they are still one and the same entity:
Source: Kinter, James – SOEI – 2015 (PDF)
Former Virginia State Climatologist Dr. Pat Michaels quipped on WUWT yesterday: (bold mine)
It would appear that there’s about $31.5 million in overhead (1/2 of 63 million) that should have gone to GMU, but the grants were run through the consulting company, in clear violation of the rules for state employees. This is money that the taxpayers of Virginia had to pony up instead.
IGES’ Form 990 shows Shukla worked 28 hours per week for it. That can only happen if the Dean approves an overage beyond the eight hours allowed.
GMU’s faculty Dean had to know about the magnitude of the money flowing through IGES and into the Shukla family.
GMU’s Provost had to know this, because no Dean would permit that all that overhead to not go to the university on his or her own.
Perhaps the President knew.
NSF had to know this.
NOAA had to know this.
NASA had to know this.
Apparently each one of these entities felt they were above the law. You may be looking at the largest science scandal in US history.
Note: initial publication of this post was missing an image and quote from Pat Michaels due to operator error of the Publish/Save button. The missing elements were added within a couple of minutes. Some spelling and formatting corrections and a link to Kinter’s SOEI have also been added.
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Bearing in mind that there has been no advance in the range of Climate Sensitivity since the inception of this ‘science’ it would appear that no progress in relation to the most important factor has been achieved these past 25 or so years, not withstanding the billions (probably trillions) poured into this ‘science’
it is time for a refund..
You’re not kidding. People reading blogs like this have more of an idea of the range of climate sensitivity than this self-annointed morally superior wannabe collection of thieves and incompetents.
“David Verardo, Mann’s handler at NSF, who told him in 2003 that he didn’t have to provide data to me – that Mann was entitled to his view of climate and I was entitled to mine”
Amazing, back in 2003 someone agreed you could have an opposing view on climate.
I guess he missed the orders ” the science is settled”
No, Sir. This is upside down… David Verardo of NSF awarded large funding to Prof Mann of Penn State on the basis that “science is settled” instead of considering opposing views. And, when his puppet was asked for explanations, Mr. Verardo suggested that they are entitled to their view. Well, this is actually strange: Mann and Verrardo backed by the he NSF are entitled to their views on your and everyone else’s dime!!! Read Leo Szilard’s The Mark Gable Foundation…. It’s time to disband NSF and other funding agencies. They are unfixable and damage our science and higher education.
It is time to disband pretty much all federal agencies except the DoD. All the rest can be re-consolidated into a single agency, forever limited to a cap of 10,000 employees and a budget cap of 3% of the previous year’s GDP. With no contract support.
I agree 100% Walt. As long as the major funding agencies remain under government control, Ike’s predictions will be the outcome. The federal government may have to control funding for “strategic” (read military or security) research, all the rest should to be given to independent and diversified granting agencies without political direction as to where the emphasis lies in research. Research funding has to be returned to the strength of the proposal and the record of the researcher, with some reserve for new scientists. This, of course, would be fought by the corrupt universities who skim overhead off of all the “institutes” that have proliferated in the last 30 years. Way too many PhDs have been turned out solely to proliferate the current system. Join the club and perpetuate the system. Want a job? Promote what the government asked for and maybe you can continue the deception that science is actually being done. Politically defined objectives obviate independent research.
As we enter a long cooling cycle (low sunspot activity is one major indicator of this) the frauds will be obvious to everyone.
I perfectly agree with the previous comment, ‘there should be no doubt any a rational mind that the whole AGW “Climate Change” Alarmism is being driven by the Largest Scientific Scandal in Modern History’.
Prof Shukla is only a small fish from a large sample of big big fishes. I think he is a scapegoat of this bigger scandal. The financial benifits of all those scientists who are responsible for propagating the scary AGW agenda need to be thoroughly investigated. It should be done at an urgency basis.
Their career upsurge and funding benifits for last 10 years should be made public. In turn, another similar record should be published for those who are not supporting scary AGW agenda and questioning that.
It is the time now to raise voices and remove such disparity within scientific communities and reward true scientists. At the same time the propaganda provocing, unethical scientists should be punished and penalised. Their interest and benifits should be disclosed openly.
Well, there are hidden scandals in just about every realm of modern science: nonlinear optics with their nonlinear Schrodinger equation, astrophysics with their dark energy and dark matter, quantum mechanics with their string theory…. Heavy domination, grabbing all the money, expelling opposing views… Nothing new of this dirty academics politics. Same since Newton times, except for public funding – we pay for all this dirt!!! We, the people, must defund the agencies that fund science by giving money to Shuklas.
The problem is that no human can actually judge who is a true scientist or which theory is correct. History proves this again and again. By the what all these theories are incorrect…. The “settled science” doesn’t exist!
No human can directly prove which theory is correct. But every human can demonstrate a theory as false. That is the beauty of the way in which science is supposed to progress. 🙂
No human can directly prove which theory is correct. But every human can demonstrate a theory as false.
==================
doesn’t this argue that we should never fund science that seeks to prove a theory true and only fund science that seeks to prove a theory false? Otherwise we are funding things that are impossible at the expense of things that are possible.
How on earth is Shukla a “scapegoat”. Do you mean that someone called him in the dead of night and ordered him to write that petition? I’m sorry, but this is paranoid nonsense (default reasoning of a sort).
Ok, so what will this one be called?
Perhaps… “Shuklagate”?
Perhaps… “RICOGATE”?
How about Climategate 2
Correct – the ClimateGates are the biggest sources of scientific scandal on AGW, until a high level insider comes clean with proof. This ShuklaGate is a good addition.
Ignoredbymsmgate
How about we give the “Gate” thing a rest?
RICOchet?
Matthew, I share your sentiment but I’d like to see at least some consideration:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-b7F3woI05UA/T25Bs7YE5dI/AAAAAAAADKk/w1_i6TG4UaA/s1600/oregon-state-pen-1200.jpg
> Leo Smith
> October 2, 2015 at 8:49 am
RICOchet?
I like it. Pity there’s no Chet involved though.
Heh, RICOchet is good, but I like StevieMac’s ‘Shukla’s shillings’.
===============
An earlier reference to RICOchet:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/09/29/climate-activists-want-us-prosecuted-under-rico/#comment-2037512
kim
September 29, 2015 at 9:32 am Edit
RICOchet.
========
I think RICOchet is much more descriptive than “Shukla’s shillings.”
Heh, Ric; the good ones are all susceptible to independent invention. See ‘Piltdown Mann’.
==================
Haha…PrisonGate!
“I like it. Pity there’s no Chet involved though.”
well ric, that would depend upon how you pronounce “chet”
I am partial to “Shulkanado”
Shulka’s Goldenballs
Shukla Con
I suggest RICO2. (Notice the embedded “CO2”?)
And yet, they go after Dr. Willie Soon?
@Joe Kirklin matais
It’s called ‘projection’ in psychology.
The whole RICO20 BS is projection. The speed at which Congress got on it makes me wonder if there’s a back story here, and they were already onto him, causing him to “project” everyone else being the bad guys. All he did was put his head above the parapet some more, along with those of some other doofuses.
… and why, if a RICO action is valid, why didn’t they just file one? It’s chump change out of $63.5 Million.
Actually, this is quite important in the debate over CAGW. The “sky is falling” crowd have consistently said skeptics are paid shills for Big Oil and we are holier than thou. And some of the public believe them. If this turns out to be a case of financial corruption of science, the holier than thou aura will be deflated.
When asked why scientists would lie about climate change, the answer will “for the money.”
It will only be deflated if the public actually hears about it.
So far none of the major media have covered this story, and I’ll be surprised if they ever do. Even if the guy ends up going to jail. The most they might do is mention that he’s been convicted of misusing public funds, without ever mentioning what funds and why.
Whenever there is free money without oversight and accountability you have the potential for the trouble. I wonder who is monitoring the other $22 Billion spent on global warming related expenditures a year. One can see now why there is such an urgent attempt ( via the RICO letter) by the alarmists to shut down all information and debate on global warming .
I thought Sherriff Joe, otherwise known as the Vice President had been put in charge of that?
Actually, they need to stop true scientists like Dr. Willie Soon by hook or by crook. Attacking and demoralising them they try to serve their own purpose. This is the only way they can maintain their scary propaganda longer.
There should be an open list of publications of these two groups for last 10 years. Baised on bias among referees their publications are subjected to rejection, delay etc. In terms of citations also they are the sufferer as everything is linked up. The overall system needs to be investigated thoroughly.
What about the other side that hasn’t been heard from? NSF, NOAA, and NASA gave grants to the same GMU organization for work that was essentially redundant. Could the grantors be involved in the scheme? Were kick-backs involved? I suspect that the process of AGW grant awards is incestuous at best.
This may be the real meat. However, it will take a congressional investigation to get to the bottom of this. Will anyone in Congress have the necessary cahones?
The short answer is “NO” and the long answer is “NO.”
Ok when am I going to see this in the main stream media? No evidence that they’ve mentioned it at all; please correct me if I’m wrong.
With the GOP hearings, it will make the news eventually. The NYT will be very defensive about it, of course.
According to the report below
‘The National Science Foundation (NSF) provides funding for academic basic research across the entire spectrum of the sciences, engineering, and the social sciences. NSF USGCRP support totals $326 million in the 2014 Budget. “
https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/legislative_reports/fcce-report-to-congress.pdf
Possible legal avenues that should be investigated:
1. Conspiracy to defraud the United States:
http://www.justice.gov/usam/criminal-resource-manual-923-18-usc-371-conspiracy-defraud-us
2.” Federal and state false claims acts, whistleblower laws and qui tam statutes allow private citizens with knowledge of fraud against the government to bring what is known as a qui tam or false claims act action against the person or company engaged in the fraud.”
http://classactionconnect.com/whistleblower-lawsuits/federal-whistleblowers-report-fraud-against-the-federal-government/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qui_tam
Great idea! But he’s tied up with Benghazi.
Skidance October 2, 2015 at 9:42 am
Great idea! But he’s tied up with Benghazi.
=======================================
Yeah, and how’s that going?
The FBI is now retrieving email from the server that Hillary wiped with a cloth.
They are being forwarded to the committee.
Yes and so?
Until the MSM and media matters tells their people to get outraged, nothing will become of it.
It’s one of the reasons Clinton wanted her own server and claimed to have wiped it clean. Too bad she didn’t know any more about computers than “What….wipe it with a cloth or something?”
WOW.
The Shukla $63.5 million dollar Pyramid scheme! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyramid_scheme
Righteous Baby.
Ha ha
IGES has some really tough questions to answer. I don’t have any interest in defending their actions but there’s no reason to pile on.
Anthony writes, “There’s apparently an $800,000 annual salary and an organization full of Shukla family members that has produced next to no results for the millions received.” His link suggests that only one paper resulted from grant 1338427. Although his point is well made – the Center is not a model of financial efficiency – a search of the IGES website suggests that it produced more than one paper for that grant.
They do produce regular progress reports that show many papers emerged each year. The following link, which also supports the claim that there was a split from IGES, provides information about the 2014-15 results from COLA.
ftp://iges.org/pub/kinter/Projects/omnibus/COLA_2014_2019_Progress/Kinter_COLA_MAPP_briefing_May2015_handout.pdf
And the following presentation claims that the Center produced >500 papers between 1993 and 2011.
ftp://iges.org/pub/kinter/COLA_SAC/2011/Kinter_future_plans_SAC2011.pptx
Steve Mcintyre has this to say at Climate Audit, “Steve: the center did legitimate work.”
THAT may be the case. (legitimate work, etc.) The link provided seems to show a powerpoint demonstrating that they have produced more results than what has been claimed here. Most of the information in that powerpoint ought to be easily verifiable by someone with access to an academic library. So we’ll probably get a report on the veracity of that document.
HOWEVER; double dipping and self dealing using government grant money is the real topic at hand. If half of what has been alleged is true, he could have a huge problem on his hands.
Of course, given the current (highly corrupt) state of our federal government, he, like Hillary Clinton, may have clearly demonstrated wanton violation of federal law, and yet go un-prosecuted for it.
Or there could be a whitewash. Even that might be difficult, given the nature of what he is alleged to have done.
(i.e. if he was receiving more than his salary, he was double dipping, kinda hard to whitewash that, further, if his organization hired his relatives and paid exorbitant salaries for little or no actual work, very difficult to make that okay. )
Interesting that the first pdf shows that they are in to Climate Modelling, in particular training for it.
Bob K
I think the real issue is whether or not they were motivated to call for a criminal investigation of something that is the figment of their own imaginations, with a view to securing themselves as the bell ringer for climate alarm, and then to reap benefits from what look like some pretty soft grants.
The magic of endless public money seems to have been in part driven by a ham-fisted attempt at misdirection.
The idea of a RICO investigation into the unholy alliances that permeate the tiny climate science community is very attractive. Bandwagoning is to be expected, but there is a cabal at the centre of this nonsense and they have definitely conspired to enrich themselves both with grant monies and honoured positions.
The big mafia investigation was called “clean hands”. Let’s call this one “clear air”. Assign a special prosecutor, start asking questions.
I haven’t come across ANY significant reporting of this in the MSM. Certainly doesn’t seem to have penetrated Joe public’s attention yet. If it isn’t reported widely, it will be swept from view, like climategate. All conscious Americans should be writing their representatives demanding answers.
Donald Trump needs to use this corruption and practice as a spear point. GK
The MSM haven’t mentioned a Republican was president during the Civil War, either.
Please make sure this story keeps dripping all the way through the Paris climate talks. But, please also be aware that it is veering dangerously close to too-complex-for-the-public-to-understand. The facts, to date, need to be sorted out — graphically, if possible, from most significant to least — with ramifications for public taxpayer money spelled out. Why should the common taxpayer care about this? The message should be something that readers can successfully repeat to others, from memory.
Whatever needs to be done, please make it easy for the public to understand the issue, before the clean-up crew comes in and starts distracting the public. They’re trying their best to ignore the controversy right now; this is the best time to define the issue for the public.
Rampant nepotism as an entire clan raided the cupboards of taxpayer money is easy to understand. This is why the media is NOT covering it.
Hope this is brought to the attention of NSF’s Inspector General too:
http://www.nsf.gov/oig/
Wow, I may run out of popcorn on this storyline!
Your Global Warming Alarmism and Fraud dollars at work!
Apparently, I’m in the wrong business!
Me too. Let’s present the US gov with an innovative solar panel that is ball shaped.
O.K. so cylinders didn’t work.
But, I’m sure that with some fancy sounding pseudo tech speak and some claimed of over-unity efficiency and negative cost, we could bamboozle the US taxpayer out of a few billion $.
one thing that I have learned in my travels, NO IDEA IS TOO DUMB TO OBTAIN A GOVT. GRANT.
From what I could gather, Solyndra’s cylindrical solar modules were workable and fairly efficient energy producers, especially on a white roof (since their circular tubes could face the reflective roof surface at the same time they faced outward toward the sun. According to more than a few people (investors, I suppose), Solyndra’s problem was that it was made in America and could not compete with an explosion of Chinese solar panels suddenly being manufactured at a fraction of the cost, and likely without environmental restrictions. The Chinese presumably won that battle based on cost. Whether gigantic government subsidies are fair for the Chinese and not for us is a logistical, economic and ethical problem for bigger hat sizes than mine. Here’s a comment from a reader reviewing the article “Solyndra: Its Technology and Why it Failed”, posted online here in 2011:
http://www.edn.com/design/power-management/4368710/Solyndra-Its-technology-and-why-it-failed
When this ultimately hits the headlines the warmistas will be very quick to proclaim that the Shuklas really weren’t faithful AGW followers after all and that as far as they are concerned nothing has changed.
And what did the taxpayers get for 4.2 million dollars? One single make-believe paper filled with unverifiable speculation about “what would happen if…”
Read this tragic waste of money paper here:
http://www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci-discuss.net/12/879/2015/hessd-12-879-2015-print.pdf
Return on investment is zero. Waste waste and more waste. The NSF should not be allowed to disperse millions of other people’s dollars with no oversight and no due diligence. The NSF needs to have its powers frozen until auditors can examine what the people’s money is getting in return value.
Enough is enough.
But how many other AGW “scientists” are there slurping at the trough?
Shukla wasn’t the first, last or only one to work the system in this manner.
This examination of his modus operandi may help us to identify a few more.
Several years ago I exchanged e-mails with, and eventually met and interviewed, a dendrochronologist who was researching forest fire history at a local University. I was doing some research of my own and he was generous with his time and quite helpful. As I became aware of the magnitude of the funding for CAGW, curiosity got the better of me and I took a look at his CV, which was posted on his personal website.
Over a dozen years he had received perhaps 3-4 million dollars to head various programs, most in 100,000-sized increments. A couple of his grants topped a million.
I don’t know how many profs post such information about themselves, but I came away with the impression that grant recipients view their grant history as a sort of badge of honor, or an advertisement, stating, in effect, “Look what I can bring in for the good of the old Alma Mater!” Universities, in turn, rank themselves on how much they can bring in annually for research. Under such a system, it would seems likely that professors develop a reputation for success at bringing in funds. Success once means higher likelihood of success in future applications – like the “hot hand” in basketball. Ultimately, in answer to your questions, there’s a less intrusive way to see these figures, since all NSF and NOAA grants, recipients, and recipients’ research subjects are listed in the agencies’ budgets somewhere – we’ve seen the numbers on this and other web sites.
The particular teaching scientist I spoke to was receiving (earning, if you like) several million. The funding was ongoing to provide for programs of multi-year research. I believe his grants were typical for those targeting programs across the U.S. which insinuate (or blatantly state) a belief in anthropogenic global warming. I know that some unbiased scientists are receiving funding by NSF, NOAA or NASA, but it also seems painfully obvious that young scientists today must toe the line if they expect governmental help. My nephew, a geology graduate, has received tens of thousands in scholarship help at University of Arizona, multiple paid-for trips to South America and Nepal, and has just received his first 100,000 grant to be paid out over the new few years for his endorsement of the alarmist talking points, as he researches warming. When you are young, how hard it must be to resist this siren song. Older researcher should know better, in my opinion.
I came upon the term Omnibus twice today. It sparked vivid memories of my first introduction to the word and my own paradoxical mental images of a bus that was actually a train.
Researching “Ocean Acidification” (A term and field of study that drives me crazy!), I came across the US Omnibus Public Land Management Act of 2009:
The second occasion was in an IGES publication (Science Review 2002-2006) where President J. Shukla described its funding arrangement as an Omnibus Grant:
*I stand corrected, the term Omnibus (Which was occasioned by the mental image of gravy trains) appeared more than twice 😉
I remember a 1950s TV program “Omnibus.”
Not to be confused with the 80’s TV show, “Supertrain.”
I don’t remember “Supertrain.”
It was supposed to a “Love Boat” on rails, didn’t even last one season.