Bioweapons Watchdogs Seek Suspension of University of Texas Eligibility for Federal Biodefense Research Funds

Medical Branch Fails to Comply with Biosafety Guidelines

Coaltion Promotes Biological Weapons Safety and Security

(5 August 2003) - Biological weapons watchdogs have asked the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to suspend biodefense funding for the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB). At issue is the Medical Branch's secrecy about its research on biological weapons agents and its refusal to comply with federal biosafety guidelines. The short-term cost to UTMB could be as high as $250 million and bruised ambitions; but the long-term public benefits of establishing higher standards of accountability at institutions conducting biodefense research, says the watchdog coalition, will be enhanced peace, security, and safety in the US and around the world.

The latest moves in an eleven month old dispute with UTMB came yesterday, when a member of the coalition, the Sunshine Project, petitioned Anthony Fauci of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID) to suspend NIAID's consideration of UTMB's applications for a federally-funded BSL-4 "hot zone" lab and a regional biodefense research collaboration. Also yesterday, the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas filed a legal brief with the Texas Attorney General supporting the coalition's demand that UTMB stop resisting public disclosure of information about its biosafety committee.

The watchdogs do not oppose biodefense research, nor do they accuse UTMB of developing biological weapons, rather, they insist that secrecy is the greatest enemy of biological weapons security. They seek maximum transparency at all biodefense labs because openness will better protect the communities that surround "hot zones" and will reinforce the United States' compliance with the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, the critical international treaty that prohibits development of biological weapons. This debate over transparency comes at a critical time because the US biodefense program is rapidly expanding, coming to touch communities across the country while the "War on Terrorism" erodes standards of governmental accountability and, practically every month, new studies reveal more disturbing potential applications of biotechnology to bioweapons.

(These and other reasons behind the non-profit coalition's efforts are discussed in more detail in the press release "Non-Profit Coalition Calls for a National Reassessment of the Biodefense Building Boom", October 14th, http://www.sunshine-project.org/publications/pr/pr141002.html) and in its Open Letters to biodefense laboratories, http://www.sunshine-project.org/biodefense/openletters.html.)

The coalition is active across the country. UTMB has been singled out for this action because its transparency and biosafety policies are particularly egregious. Since September 2002, it has refused to substantively answer at least nine requests for information about its biosafety policies. In the course of seeking a 100% exemption from public disclosure of information about its biosafety committee, UTMB has even misled the Texas Attorney General with respect to federal laboratory safety regulations. The watchdog coalition hopes that by holding up UTMB as an example, other laboratories will better understand their public responsibilities.

The watchdogs are following other biodefense projects across the country, including the US Army's Dugway Proving Ground (Dugway, UT), and proposed Biosafety Level 4 labs in Boston, MA, Davis, CA, and Hamilton, MT. They are also engaged with the Department of Energy over its plans to build Biosafety Level 3 labs at Lawrence Livermore National Lab (Livermore, CA) and Los Alamos National Lab (Los Alamos, NM).

Detailed information about the action against UTMB (including legal briefs), can be found here.