Trump Administration Takes Aim at Federal Research Efforts
For the past two budget cycles, the Trump Administration has proposed steep cuts in federal research budgets — in the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Congress has for the most part declined to go along with these cuts, pointing out that they would imperil U.S. ability to compete with expanding efforts by China and Europe in areas critical to both national security and economic competitiveness. Some observers have charged that the proposed cuts were motivated by the Trump Administration’s dislike of scientific data — inconvenient facts about climate change, for example — that undercuts his policies.
Now the Trump Administration is testing a new strategy, focused for the moment on research at the Department of Agriculture. They abruptly announced that two key parts of the agency — the Economic Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, both of which provide important support to farmers — will move from the Washington D.C. area to Kansas City. Moreover, they gave the key scientific staff of those agencies a 30-day ultimatum to move to Kansas City or lose their jobs. Predictably, most of these professionals declined to uproot their families, with the result that the scientific capability of these agencies is being gutted and the research budget diminished — which many of the scientists believe was the real objective.
The impact on farmers, including those on the Eastern Shore, will be substantial — less information and advice, fewer grants and other support services. That is bad enough, but the larger concern is that the Trump Administration may seek to replicate this indirect method of cutting research budgets in other agencies. The result would be to devastate the country’s basic research capacity, which in turn would dry up the well-spring of next generation medical breakthroughs and new technologies.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore





