
Sens. Rob Portman (R-OH), left, and Tom Carper (D-DE) are the lead sponsors of the Safeguarding American Innovation Act.
(Image credit – Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee)
Sens. Rob Portman (R-OH), left, and Tom Carper (D-DE) are the lead sponsors of the Safeguarding American Innovation Act.
(Image credit – Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee)
Visa screening procedures and grant disclosure requirements would be tightened under new research security legislation introduced last month by Sens. Rob Portman (R-OH) and Tom Carper (D-DE). Titled the Safeguarding American Innovation Act
With 10 Republican and six Democratic cosponsors, the bill stands out amid a pack
In view of its bipartisan backing, research community representatives have worked with the subcommittee to shape the legislation even prior to its release. However, some still regard the introduced version as too broad and worry it could send a message that the U.S. has become less welcoming to foreign scientists.
The November subcommittee report asserts that the FBI and federal science agencies have together failed to recognize how talent recruitment programs supported by the Chinese government could incentivize participants to “misappropriate” U.S.-funded research. Although the resulting bill does not single out China, almost all its sponsors called out the country in their statements
“For nearly two decades, as we detailed in the November [report], the federal government has been asleep at the wheel while foreign governments have exploited the lack of transparency in our education system and bought access and influence on our school campuses,” Portman said. “We must hold countries that act in bad faith, like China, accountable.”
To improve disclosure of foreign funding, the bill would make it a crime for grantees to not disclose any sources of “outside compensation.” Although the Justice Department has already prosecuted
The bill would also require universities to report all foreign gifts and contracts valued at $50,000 or more, well below the current threshold of $250,000. The Department of Education is currently investigating
Concerning visas, the bill would offer the State Department new grounds to deny certain applicants. These include an applicant’s “past or likely employment or cooperation” with rival military or security organizations, institutions involved in the theft of U.S. research or export control violations, or a “government that seeks to undermine the integrity and security of the U.S. research community.”
To better share information about security risks and harmonize grant policies across agencies, the bill would create a Federal Research Security Council led by the White House Office of Management and Budget. The council would subsume the current research security efforts
Upon introducing the bill, Portman highlighted endorsements
The Association of American Universities, which represents 63 leading research institutions, wrote in a statement, “While AAU shares Sens. Portman and Carper’s goal of securing research conducted on our campuses, and universities are taking specific steps
Phil Bucksbaum, president of the American Physical Society (an AIP Member Society), told FYI he appreciates that the senators narrowed the bill prior to its introduction based on feedback from the research community, but said he is still worried about its focus on visa applicants’ affiliations.
“We’re not talking about denying visas to people who have themselves undermined security. It’s simply they cooperated with or had an association with an organization that did. I think that could be subject to really bad overinterpretation,” he remarked. Bucksbaum also said the role granted to OMB would likely be perceived by many as the bill adding a new layer of political control over science agencies.
Staff members for Portman on the subcommittee told FYI they view OMB as a natural place to coordinate grant policies given its budgetary leverage. They also said the visa provision is not meant to be broadly construed, noting the bill instructs the State Department to “weigh the proportionality of risk” for each factor it considers.
“We have that in there to make sure we’re not capturing a whole group of people but rather narrowly focusing on the truly bad actors,” one explained. “So that way we don’t capture people who maybe went to undergrad or got their master’s degree at a troubling university but have moved on and are doing something else.”
A university official who spoke to FYI on condition of anonymity said it would be reassuring if the legislation put clear limits on the visa denial authorities. “What I worry about is that, through legislation like this that sends a signal that foreign talent is not welcome, we are destroying the best talent recruitment program in the world, which is our system of higher education,” the official remarked. Another said the bill’s expansion of gift and contract reporting requirements could place a significant burden on universities without offering commensurate security benefits.
Reacting to concerns the bill could have a chilling effect, the subcommittee staff members contrasted it with other proposals
The bill’s proposal to explicitly criminalize the nondisclosure of outside funding would reinforce ongoing efforts to crack down on such behavior by the Justice Department and science agencies, particularly the National Institutes of Health.
NIH recently reported
Peter Zeidenberg, a defense lawyer who specializes in cases involving scientists, told FYI he has no problem with the proposal to criminalize nondisclosure on grant applications. Rather, he criticized prosecutors for treating nondisclosure as a serious crime in the absence of such a statute and argued federal investigations have ensnared innocent scientists who were never properly trained on filling out grant forms.
“It’s absolutely ruinous. It destroys their lives. It destroys their careers,” he said, adding, “I have had many clients relocate after this, and they wanted to stay here in the U.S.” He said most have moved to China.
Valerie Bonham, an attorney and expert in research compliance, told FYI she is sympathetic to the argument that scientists may not have fully understood the grant policies. However, she added, “In many cases when one has access to the full facts, you have examples like what is described in the appendix
APS President Phil Bucksbaum, far right, moderates a panel discussion in January on U.S.–China tensions.
(Image credit – APS)
Against this legal backdrop, APS has impressed on its more than 50,000 members the importance of upholding research integrity principles, such as full disclosure of potential conflicts of interest and time commitment. “Those who choose to ignore these ethical guidelines, rare outliers in our opinion, should be shunned by our research community,” the four members of its presidential line wrote in a statement
At the same time, though, APS has raised alarms about the current climate for international scholars in the U.S. In a separate statement
Bucksbaum said APS hopes to convince Portman and Carper to add language reflecting a recommendation in their subcommittee report that reaffirms the “critical importance” of foreign students and researchers to the U.S.
Advocating for the research community to engage on the bill, he remarked, “One could say, ‘save your breath, it has to pass both houses.’ Well, that’s not the point. The point is that we really do have a responsibility to work closely enough with the congressional committees that are overseeing science so that they understand the needs and the concerns of scientists.”