How University Foundations Circumvent Conflict of Interest Disclosure Rules and Hide Corporate Ties to Faculty by Dr. Mercola
How University Foundations Circumvent Conflict of Interest Disclosure Rules and Hide Corporate Ties to Faculty
September 19, 2017 • 83,435views
Story at-a-glance
Kevin
Folta, a plant scientist and professor at the University of Florida, is
suing The New York Times for defamation for its 2015 article exposing
his ties to Monsanto
Folta
instructed Monsanto to issue funds to the University of Florida
Foundation earmarked for his work but would circumvent disclosure
rules. This appears to be a commonly used loophole that allows industry
ties to remain hidden from public scrutiny
US Right to Know is suing the University of Florida for failure to provide all the emails required by freedom-of-information law
By Dr. Mercola
In the last few years, freedom of information act (FOIA) requests
have revealed a loophole that allows corporations to hide funds given
to university-based researchers and academics, thereby also hiding
their behind-the-scenes collaborations to promote corporate viewpoints
while maintaining an air of independence. A recent defamation suit
offers an intriguing opportunity to shed even more light on this, what
appears to be, common practice.
FOIA Documents Revealed Professor's Big Ag Links
Kevin Folta — a plant scientist and professor at the University of Florida and an outspoken advocate of genetic engineering
— became a posterchild for this kind of disclosure avoidance when, two
years ago, a FOIA request by the California-based activist group US
Right to Know (USRTK) produced correspondence revealing Folta had
instructed Monsanto on how to avoid disclosing funding his work by
depositing the money into the university's SHARE (Special Help for
Agricultural Research and Education) contribution account.
As noted by Folta in his proposal to Monsanto,1
"a SHARE contribution … is not subject to IDC and is not in a
conflict-of-interest account. In other words, SHARE contributions are
not publicly noted. This eliminates the potential concern of the
funding organization influencing the message." Put another way, by
making a SHARE contribution, the link between Folta and Monsanto would
remain hidden, and his public promotion of biotech would not be tainted
by obvious suspicions of conflicts of interest.
This is one of the biggest scams going. Universities have very
strict conflict of interest rules in place, all of which are effectively
circumvented by giving the funds as a grant to the University of
Florida Foundation, which operates as a separate, non-public entity.
The foundation then issues the money to individual researchers'
programs. Yet, even though the money can be easily earmarked for a
specific individual or program, financial contributions to the
foundation do not need to be publicly disclosed.
While this loophole is news for many, evidence suggests researchers
and academics have routinely used it to avoid conflicts of interest
disclosure rules. Bruce Chassy
was caught doing the same thing. An investigation by Chicago WBEZ
news discovered Monsanto paid the now retired University of Illinois'
professor more than $57,000 over two years for travel, writing and
speaking expenses, yet Chassy never disclosed his financial ties to the
company on state and university conflict of interest disclosure forms.2
This is a Flash-based audio and may not be playable on mobile devices.
How Universities Incentivize Nondisclosure of Conflicts of Interest
Nondisclosure of conflicts of interest are in some ways actually
incentivized at universities. Most donations to university foundations
are granted a waiver for indirect costs (IDCs).
As explained by the National Science Foundation, IDCs are "costs
which are not readily identifiable with a particular cost objective
(e.g., direct organizational activity or project), but nevertheless are
necessary for the general operation of an organization."3 Examples
of such overhead costs include salaries for accountants and
miscellaneous personnel, rent, utilities, computers and software, just
to name a few.
This was the case for both Chassy and Folta. By being granted a
waiver for IDCs, the burden of these costs is shifted to the students
of the university and taxpayers by way of tuition and government
funding. So, corporations are essentially piggybacking on students and
taxpayers by getting waivers of IDC while simultaneously keeping their
funding hidden. Papers have been written about how this system impacts
taxpayer funded research (research funded by government grants).
As noted by the Sponsored Research Administration4
at Florida State University, "It is important to remember that the
inclusion of these charges results in the support of research efforts
across the campus. To request waivers of negotiated and allowable
charges means a decreased SRAD [Sponsored Research and Development
Trust Fund] pool and a corresponding reduction in the research and
creative activities that the university stimulates and supports."
In their paper, "The Economics of University Indirect Cost
Reimbursement in Federal Research Grants," Roger Noll and William
Rogerson write:5
"The federal government has been the most important source of
funds for academic research since the 1950s. Nearly a third of this
support takes the form of indirect cost recovery (overhead). Long a
source of conflict between universities and the government, in recent
years the indirect cost controversy has escalated, with most research
universities intensively investigated for alleged abuses …
[B]oth universities and the federal government would be better
off if the existing indirect cost reimbursement system were replaced by
a system of fixed reimbursement rates that were not related to a
university's actual indirect costs."
Paid Academics Become Part of Industry-Controlled PR Arm
Folta publicly stated he had "no formal connection to Monsanto"6 and denied ever accepting payments from Big Ag, including Monsanto.7
The FOIA request and subsequent publication of the correspondence
between Folta and Monsanto created an abrupt end to Folta's status as
an independent expert on genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
The documents clearly show Monsanto paid Folta to travel around the
country to speak about the merits of GMOs. As Folta himself put it:
"I'm glad to sign on to whatever you like, or write whatever you
like.".8
At the time, Gary Ruskin, executive director of USRTK told Nature,9
"I think it's important for professors who take money from industry to
disclose it. And if they're not disclosing it, that's a problem. And
if they say they aren't taking money, and they are, then that's a
problem."
The documents also revealed the biotechnology PR firm Ketchum drafted
answers directed to Folta on the GMO Answers website. While Folta
claimed he typically ignored the prewritten answers, it shows that paid
academics and researchers are part of a tightly controlled PR arm of
the industry.
Once the $25,000 unrestricted grant from Monsanto (funneled through
the University Foundation to avoid disclosure) became publicly known,
the money was reallocated to a local food pantry. Folta claims he
"talked to Monsanto about returning the money," but that the company
was "totally against it" because "it looks like an admission of guilt."10
The ironic part is that by re-donating the money to a food pantry, they
confirm that the money was indeed earmarked for Folta and no one else.
Folta Files Defamation Suit Against New York Times
The New York Times (NYT) was among the first to report Folta's conflicts of interest.11 Now, Folta has filed a defamation suit12
against the paper and journalist Eric Lipton, who wrote the article. In
his suit, Folta claims his "academic reputation was unfairly
tarnished, his health harmed and his personal safety jeopardized" by
Lipton's "scandalous" article. According to the Cornell Alliance for
Science: 13
"Folta … contends that Lipton and the NYT intentionally
'misrepresented him as a covertly paid operative' of Monsanto in order
to further their own 'anti-GMO agenda.' The NYT article had identified
him, for example, as an 'aggressive biotech proponent with financial
ties to Monsanto,' a claim Folta strongly refutes.
Folta … told the Alliance for Science that he filed the lawsuit
both to stop the 'spiral of silence' that such reporting creates among
other academics and also to regain his reputation.
'When you're portrayed as trading lobbying for grant money, that's
the kiss of death … You realize that you're the walking dead in your
career.' Folta said other scientists have told him they are now
reluctant to speak up publicly on the controversy around GMOs because
they feared the harm that could come to them from similar adverse
coverage."
The NYT has vowed to "defend the lawsuit vigorously," adding that, "Our
story was carefully researched and the documents underlying the story
were posted online to give readers the opportunity to see for
themselves the research we developed and relied upon." It is seriously
unlikely that Folta can prevail against the NYT's legal team and deep
pockets, especially considering some of the arguments brought forth in
his suit. Take paragraph 40, for example, which reads:14
"The Defendants deliberately chose the caption "if you spend
enough time with skunks, you start to smell like one" to insinuate that
Dr. Folta is a "skunk." This was offensive, malicious, and reckless."
The lawsuit also addresses Folta's upset at being blocked by Lipton on Twitter. Paragraph 136 of Folta's suit reads:
"In order to cause even more mental harm to Dr. Folta, Defendant
Lipton then blocked Dr. Folta from viewing Lipton's malicious tweets,
so that Dr. Folta was not even able to see what defamatory and harmful
words Lipton was publishing next, even though it was, in fact, Lipton
who was targeting Dr. Folta, and never vice versa."
The Real Story — University Foundations Serve to Hide Conflicts of Interest
I think it's important to realize that the real story here is the
fact that money laundering is occurring through universities, and how
it's occurring. In order to clamp down on undisclosed conflicts of
interest, this loophole really needs to be fully exposed — and closed.
NYT lawyers have a unique opportunity to do just that here, were they
to insist on calling in the administrators, internal managers and
accountants of the SHARE program for deposition.
I don't think Folta realizes that by suing the NYT, he opens the
door for them to blow this whole nondisclosure sham wide-open. All they
have to do is ask the administrators if it's routine to accept
corporate grants and earmark them for specific individuals or projects —
in other words, is the program being routinely used to hide corporate
conflict of interest connections? Remember, professors are in fact
incentivized to hide corporate conflicts of interest and to bypass IDC
recovery, shifting those costs onto students and taxpayers instead.
Were the NYT to do so, it could turn into a truly huge story with
massive ramifications. It could go a very long way toward forcing
greater transparency. When corporate funding of university professors
remains undisclosed, it not only deceives the public, it also
undermines education.
The fact that the University of Florida Foundation deleted a number of its "honor roll donors" for 2013/201415
— right around the same time that the NYT revealed Folta's industry
connections — only adds to suspicions that corporate funding is in fact
being hidden through its SHARE program.
The following are screenshots of deleted donors, captured when the
initial FOIA responses were received, in anticipation that they might
be removed (a hunch over at USRTK that turned out to be correct).
Deleted donors include BASF, Bayer, Syngenta, Pioneer, Monsanto and Dow
Chemical. "Gold" donors, such as Monsanto and BASF, have donated more
than $1 million. "Diamond" donors such as Syngenta have donated in
excess of $10 million.
These screenshots are the only public evidence remaining that these
donations were made; these webpages are not even available using
Wayback Machine. So, just how much of these millions of dollars were in
fact earmarked and funneled to specific faculty members to avoid
public scrutiny?
It's also worth noting the following quote on the very last screen
shot: "The Foundation … also serves as fiduciary, taking care of the
gift assets to ensure they are used in accordance with our donors'
wishes" — yet another glaring piece of evidence suggesting that
donations are earmarked for certain individuals and can thus be
"laundered" through the Foundation without having to be publicly
disclosed.
USRTK Sues University of Florida
In a separate twist, USRTK is suing the University of Florida for failure to provide all the emails required by freedom-of-information law.16,17 In a July 11 press release, USRTK explains its lawsuit is aimed to:18
" … [C]ompel the University of Florida to comply with
public records requests about the university's relationship with
agrichemical companies that produce genetically engineered seeds and
pesticides. 'We are conducting an investigation of the food and
agrichemical industries, their front groups and public relations
operatives, their ties to universities, and the health risks of their
products, said Gary Ruskin, co-director of U.S. Right to Know.
'The public has a right to know if and when taxpayer-funded
universities and academics are collaborating with corporations to
promote their products and viewpoints.'"
The NYT article that gave rise to Folta's defamation suit was in large
part based on the records obtained by USRTK from the University of
Florida. But Folta was only one of dozens of individuals for whom the
USRTK sought correspondence, to assess hidden ties between the
university and the agrichemical industry.
One of them is Jack M. Payne, senior vice president for agriculture
and natural resources at the University of Florida. USRTK specifically
requested correspondence sent between Payne and employees of the
University of Florida Foundation.
In mid-December 2015, the university handed over 42 pages, but refused
to release any remaining documents. Considering the University
Foundation deleted stellar donors from their site only makes obtaining
correspondence with Foundation employees all the more pertinent.
Yet, even though emails were sent to and from a university email
address, the University of Florida claims the emails did not involve
official university business and therefore shouldn't be made public.
Apparently, the University of Florida is none too fond of transparency
in general.
According to USRTK, "Professor Payne is not an employee of the
Foundation, and email communications sent or received by him in the
course of official business are public records," adding that even if
the court were to find some of the emails could be exempt, "the proper
procedure would be to require Defendant to furnish the documents to the
Court for an in camera inspection."
College Foundation Caught Misspending Funds
There are more reasons than one for wanting to avoid public scrutiny of Foundation funds. A 2015 article19
by Columbia Journalism Review revealed the case of Robert Breuder,
president of DuPage College. Breuder was found to have expensed hunting
excursions, expensive wines, dinners and other frivolous, personal
expenses to the College of DuPage Foundation, the mission of which is
to raise funds for student scholarships.
The Chicago Tribune requested documents related to Breuder's spending
under the state public-records law, but was told such records were
unavailable. It wasn't until the Tribune filed a lawsuit to compel
disclosure that Breuder's misspending came to light. A refrain common
to many college and university foundations is noted in this article:
"In its answer to the Tribune's complaint, the college …
denies that the foundation is a public body or a subsidiary of one. It
denies that the foundation is contracted with a public body to perform
public functions on the college's behalf. And, thus, it denies that the
foundation is subject to the public-records law."
The Tribune, meanwhile, argued "the college is using its
foundation, housed on campus and staffed by college employees, 'as an
artifice to circumvent' the law: 'The foundation is mostly or entirely
under the control of [the college, which] has been using the existence
of the foundation as an excuse or a subterfuge to shield its financial
records and expenditures from public view.'"
Watchdog Journalism Is a Vital Public Service
Jake Griffin, assistant managing editor for watchdog reporting at
the Daily Herald said: "What good does it serve to keep the activities
of the foundation free of public scrutiny and oversight, especially
considering [that it's] using the auspices of the college as the means
for generating funding?"
As suggested by Columbia Journalism Review, journalists play a
vital role when it comes to keeping public organizations honest and the
public informed. Folta may blame the NYT for the unraveling of his
career and health, but the evidence shows he was collaborating with
industry and denied it.
It if weren't for Lipton and other journalists, he'd still be
pulling the wool over everyone's eyes. Even though Folta still
maintains he had no financial ties to Monsanto, the evidence shows he
did, so it would appear he's suing the NYT to intimidate journalists
from exposing these undisclosed conflicts of interest.
Last year, David Cuillier, director of the University of Arizona School of Journalism said,20
"I think there are a ton of flags that need to be raised when it comes
to university foundations. I think it's one of the most underreported
scams in America. It's total slush fund … What a great way to hide
money for a university."
Indeed. It appears it has been a marvelous way to throw a veil over
potential funding bias, educational bias and all sorts of conflicts of
interest. The fact that this is now coming to light is good news for
everyone except those trying to hide their wrongdoings. And, if we're
lucky, NYT attorneys will depose the University of Florida Foundation's
administrators and accountants, to give us all a clearer picture of
the full extent of this scam.
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