Howard Frumkin, a professor emeritus of environmental science and occupational health sciences at the University of Washington School of Public Health, was part of a national team working on the National Nature Assessment, a first-of-its-kind survey of the state of the country’s lands, waters, and wildlife and how they are expected to change. He had been leading a team of 15 authors of one of the assessment’s dozen chapters, on nature’s effect on health and well-being. On January 30, he got an email notifying him that the project had been canceled by executive order.
A lot of us had the inkling that the National Nature Assessment might be canceled by the new administration. We moved all of our files onto nongovernment servers so we would be able to continue our work, and we confirmed with each other that we were all committed to carrying on with the work, even if it were no longer an official federal project.
Once it was no longer a federal document, that led to some uncertainty: How are we going to organize the project? To what extent will we have the capacity to coordinate with the other chapters? Where will we publish? What review procedures will we use?
Rebooting the National Nature Assessment with some other name means finding an institutional home, building partnerships, finding funding, developing a new governing structure, setting out the procedures and the timeline for our work going forward, identifying publication plans.
But on top of those uncertainties is the sense of opportunity, because a nonfederal document can be potentially more nimble, more creative, higher impact than a highly formulaic federal document.
I personally had mixed reactions about the cancellation. Partly, I was mystified, because the love of our natural heritage is shared across the country, across the ideological divide, across every demographic and social category you can imagine. Natural heritage isn’t a very political thing.
So it was mystifying and deeply disappointing that it would be killed. Another part of me felt determined to continue, a sense of being resolute. We need to deliver this product to the American public because it will have great utility. And then there was a little bit of anger and defiance. If they want to kill this, we’re going to go ahead anyway.
We’ve received unsolicited offers from a range of publishers to publish it, unsolicited offers from scientists who want to do peer review, from graphic designers, artists, illustrators who are willing to provide pro bono services to help finish it. I’ve gotten dozens of emails from members of the public asking, “Is there a GoFundMe account so I can contribute? I want to see this finished.”
I’m optimistic because I think we can do a really good job completing the assessment. And I’m happy that there is a concrete way to make a contribution in the face of all of the destruction and chaos that’s emanating from Washington right now.
— as told to Megan Zahneis