Good news! The Associated Press reports that the U.S. Merit Systems Proteciton Board ruled in favor of extending whistleblower protection to ALL government doctors, including those hired under Title 42.
This rulling overturns a 2004 decision by an administrative judge who essentially sanctioned a discriminatory double standard for federal employees--civil service employees and those hired under Title 42, specially qualified experts who were brought in from the private sector at higher saleries than civil employees.
The whistleblower protection law was passed more than decade ago to strengthen federal workers' protections when they raise allegations of federal wrongdoing, giving them outlets such as the board and the U.S. Office of Special Counsel to seek legal protection. "The board will construe its (the law's) provisions liberally to embrace all cases fairly with its scope," the ruling said.
The lack of fairness was brought to public attention by Dr. Jonathan Fishbein, a research safety expert who had been hired by the National Institute of AIDS. After blowing the whistle on safety multiple violations in clinical trials in Africa, and for blowing the whistle on the hostile work environment at NIAIDS, where senior officials abused their authority, intimidated staff, including sexually harrassing female NIH safety experts. Dr. Fishbein was reinstated when the government settled his lawsuit.
Dr. Fishbein's lawyer said the new decision closed a "dangerous loophole" that could have kept researchers with knowledge of wrongdoing from coming forward. "Dr. Fishbein took a courageous stand in demanding full whistleblower protection in the face of a hostile federal bureaucracy," Attorney Stephen Kohn said. "Other Title 42 employees with information about wrongdoing can now blow the whistle and obtain protection."
If not for whistleblowers the public would be even less informed about unsafe drugs and conflicts of interest that undermine the public interest. issues anand armed with the facts Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav
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> http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/05/01/govt_doctor s_get_whistleblower_protection?mode=PF Associated Press Gov't doctors get whistleblower protection By John Solomon May 1, 2006
WASHINGTON --Reversing course, the government has concluded that thousands of federal doctors and medical researchers who receive higher-than-normal salaries deserve the same protection to blow the whistle on wrongdoing as other civil servants.
The decision by the U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board supersedes an earlier ruling that had denied National Institutes of Health safety expert Jonathan Fishbein protection from firing under the Whistleblower Protection Act.
The ruling is too late to affect Fishbein, who was reinstated by the government recently and settled a lawsuit alleging he was fired for blowing the whistle on safety problems with federal AIDS research.
But the board's conclusion has implications for thousands of other federal researchers and doctors brought in from the private sector to conduct important government research, medical work and safety reviews.
These so-called Title 42 workers were hired under a special provision of law that paid them salaries higher than the normal civil service to compensate them for what they could make in the private sector.
An administrative law judge in late 2004 concluded that the higher paid workers weren't entitled to whistleblower protection.
The board, however, disagreed and last month concluded that nothing in the Title 42 law precluded those workers from enjoying the same protections as other civil servants.
"The board will construe its (the law's) provisions liberally to embrace all cases fairly with its scope," the ruling said.
Allegations by Fishbein and NIH colleagues of a hostile work environment and shoddy, unsafe research among vulnerable AIDS patients were highlighted in a series of Associated Press stories that led to several investigations and changes inside NIH.
The stories documented how a government funded AIDS research project in Africa violated federal patient safety rules, how foster children were used to test powerful AIDS drugs without promised protections and how female NIH safety experts reported being intimidated by sexual harassment from reporting safety problems.
Fishbein's lawyer on Monday said the new decision closed a "dangerous loophole" that could have kept researchers with knowledge of wrongdoing from coming forward.
"Dr. Fishbein took a courageous stand in demanding full whistleblower protection in the face of a hostile federal bureaucracy," Attorney Stephen Kohn said. "Other Title 42 employees with information about wrongdoing can now blow the whistle and obtain protection."
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who championed Fishbein's case, hailed the decision. "Any step that improves the environment for whistleblowers to come forward is a step in the right direction. Whistleblowers are patriotic Americans who stick their necks out and risk it all to commit truth. They deserve rewards, not reprisals," he said.
Fishbein was hired in 2003 under Section 42 by NIH, the nation's premier medical research agency, to help improve AIDS research practices at a salary of $178,000, slightly more than Cabinet secretaries at the time.
He alleged he was fired for uncovering concerns about sloppy research practices that might endanger patient safety, including a project in Africa that violated federal patient safety rules.
NIH said he was fired for poor performance but settled the case late last year after evidence emerged that Fishbein had been recommended for a performance award and may have been retaliated against.
The Department of Health and Human Services employs thousands of Title 42 workers in such key research agencies as NIH, the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Its lawyers originally opposed granting whistleblower protection to Fishbein, leading to the administrative judge's initial ruling. But the agency later reversed course amid a public outcry and sided with Fishbein's lawyers that Title 42 workers deserved the same protection as other civil servants.
A spokesman for the department did not immediately return a call Monday seeking comment.
The whistleblower protection law was passed more than decade ago to strengthen federal workers' protections when they raise allegations of federal wrongdoing, giving them outlets such as the board and the U.S. Office of Special Counsel to seek legal protection.
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