BYU and University of Utah professors wanted Legislature to listen to them on climate change
It's not that they lost.
What really bothers a group of Utah scientists and professors was that no one on Capitol Hill seemed interested in what they had to say about a joint resolution of the Utah Legislature that questions the science of climate change.
"What really concerned me was the lack of opportunities for folks like me," said Andrew Jorgenson, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Utah and a critic of the resolution. "(People) were strongly concerned about this joint resolution and not given an opportunity to speak."
But legislators said their goal was, and always is, to give as many people as possible a chance to comment in a variety of ways.
The debate
The resolution, HJR12, called on the Environmental Protection Agency to halt plans to reduce carbon dioxide until a "full and independent investigation of climate data and global warming science can be substantiated."
The resolution was full of errors, said Jorgenson, who studies the human dimensions of global environmental change. He wanted to correct them for the Legislature, but said he wasn't given enough time.
BYU assistant geology professor Barry Bickmore wrote a letter to the Legislature that was signed by nearly a dozen of his colleagues, asking that the resolution be tabled.
He said he never got a chance to expand on his concerns, either, and the resolution passed through both the House and Senate with only a few dissenting votes.
The legislative process has been frustrating, Bickmore said, because it sends the wrong message to those who want to participate.
"They don't care whether they're making good arguments or not," Bickmore said. "When you have someone who doesn't care about the quality of their arguments, it usually means they don't care about the quality of anyone else's arguments."
HJR12 was sponsored by Rep. Kerry Gibson, R-Ogden, and Sen. Scott Jenkins, R-Plain City. Jenkins said there are just too many climate change arguments right now, adding that he and Gibson drafted the resolution because as a legislator, he can't justify spending millions, potentially billions, without proven data.
"For people like me who are intelligent, I hope, but not scientists, we have a hard time buying into this," he said. "The whole idea was to say, 'Gee, let's take a deep breath, slow down and let's look at this for a while.' "
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