CUI//PRIIG/PRVCY

Report of Investigation:
Whistleblower Reprisal
Investigation

September 17, 2024 | Report No. 24-N-0063


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Abbreviations

C.F.R.

EPA

FY

Code of Federal Regulations

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Fiscal Year

OIG
OPPT
RAD
U.S.C.

Office of Inspector General

Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics

Risk Assessment Division

United States Code

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the Freedom of Information Act.


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Table of Contents

Introduction and Summary	1

Findings of Fact	2

Analytic and Legal Framework	15

Analysis	17

Conclusions	24

Recommendations	25

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.


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Report of Investigation

Introduction and Summary

On June 28, 2021, and August 3, 2021, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of Inspector
General received OIG Hotline complaints filed by the nonprofit organization Public Employees for
Environmental Responsibility on behalf of four scientists who worked in the former Risk Assessment
Division, or RAD, of the Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics, or OPPT, in the EPA Office of Chemical
Safety and Pollution Prevention. The complaints and subsequent interviews of the scientists raised
multiple allegations of misconduct, including that the Agency took six retaliatory personnel actions
against^^^^^^^^^^f: five in 2019 and 2020, after^J expressed differing scientific opinions and
one in 2022, after^J filed a union grievance in November 2020, and after the June and August 2021
hotline complaints by PEER. We opened an investigation to determine whether the alleged actions were
in retaliation for^^^^^^^J differing scientific opinions, in violation of the EPA Scientific Integrity
Policy (2012). We also investigated whether the actions were in retaliation for^^^^^^^J union
grievance and complaints made to the OIG, in violation of the Whistleblower Protection Act.

expressed differing scientific opinions or

Our investigation first sought to determine whetherl	

made disclosures or engaged in other activities protected under the Whistleblower Protection Act and
whether any of these were a contributing factor in any personnel actions taken against^|. We
determined thatl

expressed differing scientific opinions, engaged in protected activities, and
made a protected disclosure, which Agency management knew of when it took three personnel actions
against^|: (1) issueda performance evaluation for fiscal year 2020 that was lower than the

previous year, (2) withheld a cash or time-off award i

in FY 2020, and (3) failed to select J

| for a







position. Our investigation identified



as thel



who issued |
to select!

for the

performance evaluation, withheld cash or time-off award in 2020, and failed
position. We determined that these three personnel actions

differing

occurred within a period of time such that a reasonable person could conclude that
scientific opinions, protected activities, or protected disclosure were contributing factors. We
determined that the three remaining alleged retaliatory actions did not constitute personnel actions.

Next, we assessed whether the EPA could establish that it would have taken the same three personnel
actions even if^^^^J had not expressed differing scientific opinions, engaged in protected activities,
or made a protected disclosure. After reviewing the evidentiary support for the three personnel actions,
any evidence of retaliatory motive on the part of officials involved in the decision, and any evidence that
the Agency took similar actions against similarly situated employees who were not whistleblowers, we
substantiatedretaliation allegations with respect to^f FY 2020 performance evaluation and
withheld award, in violation of the EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy. We did not substantiate
retaliation allegations with respect to^J nonselection for
position. We recommend that the EPA administrator consider appropriate corrective action considering
these findings.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

1


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On August 27, 2024, we provided I
our preliminary report of investigation and gave|
finalized our report. We requested
not receive a response by the requested date.

Findings of Fact

in the Agency's
began EPA career in

with a tentative conclusions letter containing
an opportunity to review and comment before we
response by September 6, 2024, but we did

within the

OPPT

Prevention, where|
began a detail in RAD, where
became permanent in |
moved to the^^l

working at the EPA as part ofl

| joined the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution
human	assessments^^^^^^J.

worked on human health assessments of new chemicals.1 The position
In October 2020, during the reorganization of the OPPT, was

Background

Prior to the OPPT reorganization in October 2020, RAD was responsible for assessing the hazards of new
chemicals before they entered U.S. commerce to determine whether they posed an unreasonable risk to
human health and the environment. RAD's hazard assessments were sent to the Chemical Control Division
in the OPPT, which conducted risk management assessments. These assessments were made under the
Toxic Substances Control Act, which requires a final regulatory determination within 90 days of
submission.2 After the two divisions completed their assessments, the OPPT deputy director would review
their work and approve a final regulatory determination regarding the risks posed by each new chemical.
As a result of the OPPT reorganization in October 2020, the risk assessments and regulatory determinations
were assigned to the New Chemicals Division and were subject to the same statutory 90-day deadline.

Pre-Reorganization

OCSPP





~

~

n



n









OPPT





i

| RAD |

I

Post-Reorganization

OCSPP

i





OPPT

1



r

it

i

Notes: NCD = New Chemicals Division; OCSPP = Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention.
Source: OIG analysis of OPPT reorganization. (EPAOIG image)

1	As a human health assessor,worked on assessments of how new chemicals would impact the human health of
consumers, workers, and the general population. In addition to human health assessors, RAD had assessors from four other
disciplines: engineering, exposure science, fate, and ecological toxicity.

2	Toxic Substances Control Act § 5(a)(3)(A)-(C), 15 U.S.C. § 2604(a)(3)(A)-(C).

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

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The EPA's assessments of new chemicals constitute scientific products. The hazards in new-chemicals
assessments are identified by assessing and interpreting scientific data, such as testing on new-chemical
substances or on analogue chemicals. These hazards, as well as data from the other disciplines, such as
exposure and engineering data, are used to inform the EPA's final regulatory determinations.

In 2016, the Toxic Substances Control Act was amended by the Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the
21st Century Act.3 RAD staff testified that prior to the 2016 amendment, the divison conducted a full hazard
assessment of about 20 percent of the new chemical submissions. As a result of the 2016 amendment, the
EPA was required to conduct a full assessment for every chemical within the same statutory 90-day deadline.
Despite the increased workload, the division did not receive an increase in staff or contractor resources.

Agency staff testified that the division was not prepared or equipped to satisfy the new requirements.
Management consistently testified that 90 days was not enough time to complete the new-chemicals
assessment process and that the division lacked the resources to meet this deadline.

described the statutory deadline as "ridiculous" and stated that everyone knew it could not be met.
A human health assessor described completing the new requirements within 90 days as "somewhat
impossible." If new-chemicals assessments are not completed within the statutory 90-day deadline, they
become a part of the "backlog." The backlog existed before the 2016 amendments, but it grew as a result of
the increased workload created by the new requirements. While management testified that there had
always been pressure to clear the backlog, as the backlog grew, so did the political pressure to eliminate it.

Management called the pressure from OCSPP leadership to eliminate the backlog "intense."
who were

testified that OCSPP leadership was constantly contacting them.4 One of^^^^^J
described the pressure as "pushing us like animals in a farm."^^^^^

testified that^| was afraid
that if it was not reduced, there would be repercussions in^f performance evaluation. Witnesses from
RAD and the New Chemicals Division explained that because the human health assessment took the
most time and had the most potential for disagreement, pressure to reduce the backlog was
disproportionally applied to the human health assessors.called the
human health assessment "the hardest part of the risk assessment."	testified that a

political appointee complained about specific human health assessors as being "slow" and asked their
management to be more involved in their work. OCSPP leadership also characterized these assessors as
too "conservative" in their approach.

However, witness testimony indicated that the assessment completion timeline and the backlog size
were not entirely in the assessors' control. Companies that submit new chemicals for assessment play a

submissions team.I

3	Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act, Pub. L. No. 114-182, § 5,130 Stat. 448 (2016).

4	In March 2020, the assessors who worked on new chemicals were split into two groups: a backlog team and an incoming-
was	served as the
manager. Although manager oversaw^^^^^J day-to-day work,

| was not^J supervisor of record.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.


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large role in the new-chemicals assessment process. RAD and New Chemicals Division management
testified that since 2016, the EPA regulates new chemicals via consent orders. Before a final regulatory
determination is made, chemical submitters are told the EPA's tentative conclusion and have an
opportunity to dispute the EPA's assessment or provide additional information. According to^^^^J

the division is required to consider anything the chemical submitter
supplies, no matter when it is received. As a result, assessors often must review and respond to new
information submitted in rebuttal to the initial assessment, a process referred to as "rework." If
chemical submitters do not agree with the initial assessment, then they can continue to submit more
information for the EPA to consider until an agreement between the submitter and the EPA is reached.
This process often extends the timeline beyond the statutory 90-day deadline.

testified that chemical submitters' desire for a regulatory determination that their
chemicals are not likely to present risks to human health or the environment causes "heavy" rework and
emphasized that an average case goes through two or three back-and-forth cycles.

and one	explained assessments

chemical submitters disagree with end up more delayed than assessments that they agree with.

also testified that identifying fewer hazards or determining that a
chemical was less hazardous led to quicker case completion.

Delays are also caused by internal scientific disagreements that are inherent to the new-chemicals
review and approval process. Staff from RAD and the New Chemicals Division testified that human
health assessors often have little-to-no test data regarding the new chemicals when writing their
reports. Instead, hazards in new-chemicals assessments are identified by finding existing chemicals that
are structurally similar to the new chemicals to use as analogues.

testified the	have

written guidance to tell them how to select the best analogue chemical but instead that the decision
was based in part on professional judgment and a review of the scientific data. According to^J

the division is working on creating objective measures for analogue selection. The data gap
and resulting need for extrapolation leaves room for scientific disagreements.

Differing Scientific Opinions While in RAD

Once a human health assessor completed an initial assessment, the OPPT deputy director and the OPPT
senior science advisor would conduct an extensive technical review and provide edits back to the
assessor. According	the OPPT deputy director and the OPPT senior science advisor

believed that the^^| human health assessors who were	including

took an overly conservative approach in their assessments, particularly with regard to hazard
identification. As noted above, hazards in new-chemicals assessments are identified by assessing and
interpreting scientific data. OPPT managers' disagreements regarding hazard identification would be
included in their edits back to the human health assessors. These disagreements were also raised at
weekly disposition meetings, where management and the human health assessors would discuss
scientific issues that arose in the new-chemicals assessments.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

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| testified that between July 2019 and July 20201
RAD and OPPT management concerning their edits to^|

J expressed differing scientific opinions to
assessments of new chemicals^^B

that was involved in I

work during this time and that attended the disposition

disagreements were about

meetings where these disagreements took place testified that I
hazard identification and analysis in assessments of new chemicals. OPPT management disagreed with
analogue chemical and point of departure selection in certain assessments.5 For example, in

May 2020,1

was asked to change the point of departure in one of assessments to align with

a prior assessment of a structurally similar chemical in which the OPPT deputy director and OPPT senior

science advisor had revised the point of departure.

disagreed with the OPPT deputy director

and OPPT senior science advisor's approach to the assessment, and

askedto set up

a meeting to discuss it. After the meeting, thel

emailedrecommendation to use the

analogue chemical and point of departure from the prior assessment; asked I

to "please make

revisions" to the assessment; and, if needed, set up a disposition meeting for final resolution. On June 2,

2020,



sent an email to the



and the



, stating that





proposed path would cause^J to designate a fetal effect as a maternal effect, which

"would not be protective of the developmental effects." The assessment was subsequently discussed at

a disposition meeting, where the attendees agreed with

decided to follow!

approach, the

approach. Although the group

, the OPPT
June 2, 2020 email "missed

deputy director, and the OPPT senior science advisor, noting that

point" and that it was "very difficult to steer the ship." The OPPT senior science advisor responded
that they should "let^J write [the assessment] up and build the record of performance."

At the time, there was no process in place for addressing and documenting these scientific
disagreements. Neither the OPPT deputy director nor the OPPT senior science advisor was officially in
the assessors' chain of command. Although they would edit the assessors' work and express any
disagreements, neither they nor the assessors' supervisors directed the assessors to make the changes.

and	human health assessors would frequently respond to

OPPT management's edits because they disagreed with them and thought that the edits were not
protective of human health. There was no mechanism to end the back-and-forth edits and responses.
Thus, when the human health assessors expressed their scientific disagreements with the OPPT deputy
director and OPPT senior science advisor's edits, the review process for the given chemical would be
delayed, as the two sides would go through multiple rounds of discussions and edits to arrive at a final
assessment.	and	human health assessors were perceived

by management as more likely to express scientific disagreements than other assessors.

testified that all assessors had delays, and one noted that assessors who did not express
scientific disagreements processed cases faster.

5 Point of departures are values taken from scientific studies that reflect the lowest dose at which test subjects experienced
observable adverse effects from exposure to the analogue chemical.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.


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and thel

human health assessors received negative attention

from political appointees, OPPT management, and RAD management for expressing scientific

disagreements.!

described how political appointees pressured

OPPT and RAD management to move new-chemicals assessments more quickly. For example, the Office

of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention



would require



to "defend the outputs from our data systems

every week" in weekly meetings about delayed assessments, which became a "never-ending status
update."recalled a meeting in which the Office of Chemical
Safety and Pollution Preventionfor new chemicals "barked" at

I, and the OPPT senior science advisor and asked why|
was not completing assessments more quickly,
recalled the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution PreventionI

communicating that RAD supervisors needed to have a "firm hand" and
| testified that the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution

constantly contacted

and focused on the division completing assessments.

push timelines
Prevention
pressuredl

OPPT management complained to RAD management about^^^^J and|

human health assessors. On April 30, 2020, the OPPT deputy director messaged

human health assessors the "worst 'conservativist[s]"' and complaining that they were "trying to indict every
chemical."described how the OPPT deputy director and the OPPT senior science
advisor began to characterize^^^^^^^^^^^^^^J human health assessors' scientific disagreements as
insubordination in 2019 and 2020. In early 2020, the OPPT deputy director stated in an email that the

human health assessors' failure to use her approaches to assessments "could be
considered insubordination." On May 29, 2020, in a message	the OPPT senior

science advisor called	human health assessors the "tox[ic]^^^H."



perceived



1 and the



human health assessors

as closely aligned with one another.!



emailed



when^J

witnessed the



human health assessors talking together and mentioned more than

once that^f assumed they would "join forces" to file a complaint.called the|

human health assessors passive-aggressive and described them as "piranhas" because^]
feared that they would make scientific integrity allegations about^^. Other assessors noticed how those

testified that disagreeing or delaying the

who disagreed with management were perceived^^^^B^^
resolution of backlogged cases could get an employee labeled as "problematic" by management.]
testified that, once management labeled an employee as problematic, they were "done."

Union and OIG Complaints

In November 2020,filed a grievance through^] union appealing^| performance evaluation
for FY2020. On June 28, 2021,	was one of four EPA employees to file an OIG Hotline complaint

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.


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with the help of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. The OIG Hotline complaint included
allegations of harassment, retaliation, and violations of the EPA's Records Management Policy. That
same day, the organization emailed the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention's assistant
administrator a copy of the complaint, which identified the four complainants by name and indicated
that it was sent to the OIG. Immediately after receiving the complaint, the assistant administrator
forwarded it to OPPT senior leaders, including the OPPT deputy director. The next day, at the OPPT
deputy director's request, the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention's deputy scientific
integrity official, who also served as the associate assistant administrator for the Office of Chemical
Safety and Pollution Prevention, sent the complaint to every individual mentioned in it, including many
of^^^^^J former coworkers and at least one coworker who worked with^^^^J	In

email, the deputy scientific integrity official mentioned the whistleblower protections under the
Whistleblower Protection Act, stating, "I believe these allegations qualify as protected disclosures, thus
entitling the four complainants to whistleblower protections." Despite recognizing that the
complainants should be protected from retaliation, she did not redact their names prior to distributing
the complaint. On August 3 and 31, 2021, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility filed
additional OIG Hotline complaints on behalf of^^^^J and other human health assessors. The OIG
Hotline complaint included allegations that assessors were verbally attacked in meetings for their
disagreements and that their scientific disagreements were referenced in their performance evaluations
as support for a lower rating.

Allegations of Retaliation

alleged that EPA management took six actions againstin retaliation for^J differing
scientific opinions, protected activities, and protected disclosure: (1) assignedto work on
assessments of existing chemicals in July 2020; (2) gave^J a lower performance evaluation for
FY 2020 than the previous year; (3) withheld a cash or time-off award in FY 2020; (4) decreased

,6 projects in June 2020; (5) did not select^J for a
position in April 2022; and (6) subjectedto harassment in 2019 and 2020.7

7 In addition to the allegations discussed later in this report,raised concerns regarding actions that on their face do not
fall within the OIG's jurisdiction under 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b).alleged that, on August 6, 2021,found a dead cockroach on

recently cleaned desk. It is unclear whether the cockroach was deliberately placed on^J desk in an act of intimidation;
however, because this allegation does not rise to the level of an allegation of a personnel action, it did not fall within the scope of
our investigation.also alleged that the EPA's Labor and Employee Relations Division did not follow its policies in handling

when	the	to a	late

alleged that perhaps the coworker's allegation would not have been addressed as quickly or as thoroughly if it was not
against a whistleblower. Because an investigation or fact-finding is not a personnel action, this allegation was not within the scope
of our investigation. See Sistek v. Dep't of Veterans Affairs, 955 F.3d 948, 954 (Fed. Cir. 2020) (affirming that a retaliatory
investigation, in and of itself, does not qualify as a personnel action within the meaning of the Whistleblower Protection Act).

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.


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1. Assignment to Existing-Chemicals Assessments

Prior to the October 2020 reorganization of the OPPT, RAD included both new-chemicals and
existing-chemicals assessors who were combined into mixed branches. Each branch contained assessors
from multiple disciplines, including human health assessors, some of whom worked on new-chemicals
assessments and others who worked on existing-chemicals assessments.was a human health
assessor whol

On February 20, 2020,	emailed the

interaction with a fellow team member that^f perceived as hostile,
request to be reassigned from^J team. Management discussed
of assigning^^^^J to work on either existing chemicals or
the possibility of assigning^^^^J to work on the
concerns about whether^^^^H would have a conflict with

manager regarding an

followedemail with a
request and the possibility
. In discussing
raised

Over the following two weeks,	continued to tell^^^J supervisor that^| was having

difficulties, some of which centered on^J communications with a newer team member and some of
which involvedcommunications with managment. While discussing the difficulties,noted that

was considering whether to request a shift from^| current duties to an existing-chemicals project.
By the end of April 2020,	asked supervisor for a change in duties and mentioned that^|

was thinking about leaving the Agency.testified that, due to the resource needs of RAD,
was unable to reassign^^^^J at that time but began to look for opportunities to do so. In early
June	began

preparing to leave the EPA. By the end of June 2020,	was informed that^| would be assigned

as	and began to	the role

July 2020. By the end of July 2020,	was no longer assigned to new-chemicals work.

2. FY 2020 Performance Evaluation

On November 1, 2019

received first performance evaluation in RAD and was rated as
"8. Although the majority of^J work during the performance year was in the

, which is also within the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention,
supervisor testified that^| performance while on^| detail to RAD was 'I



supervisor's background is in



U

supervised a team comprising assessors across multiple disciplines,





. Although



supervisor assigned work

to the team members who worked on new chemicals and held biweekly meetings with them to keep

8 For the FY 2019 and FY 2020 performance periods, the EPA used a five-level performance rating system. The highest level of
performance was "outstanding," followed in decreasing order by "exceeds expectations," "fully successful," "minimally
successful," and "unacceptable."

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

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apprised of their accomplishments, did not manage or oversee their work.|
feedback from the new-chemicals team managers when^B evaluated I

relied heavily on
performance.

In March 2020, the RAD new-chemicals assessors were split into two teams: a backlog team and an

incoming-submissions team.



and



human health assessors were assigned to the



and their day-to-day work was managed by



who served as



manager.



As noted above, scientific disagreements between assessors and OPPT management led to delays.
According to the testimony of management, however, such disagreements were just one of several
reasons that new-chemicals assessments frequently missed the statutory 90-day deadline. Assessments
were often delayed even in the absence of scientific disagreements.

testified that all assessors, regardless of whether they expressed
differing scientific opinions, had cases that were delayed for various reasons.

In 2019 and 2020, the OPPT deputy director, the OPPT senior science advisor, and^^^^^^^J
began to complain about scientific disagreements in general and^^^^J specifically. For
an to	manager,	noted

was raising legitimate questions but needed to move forward on assessments that were about
to go past their statutory deadline and could not "hold late cases hostage." The OPPT deputy director,
the OPPT senior science advisor,	also began to characterize the scientific

disagreements as a reflection of thehuman health assessors' performance. In an
email tothe OPPT deputy director noted that^^^^J was not performing at
the^^J level because^J resisted the OPPT senior science advisor's guidance and was overly
cautious.9 The OPPT deputy director complained that^^^^^J scientific conclusions were not well
substantiated and hurt the credibility of the division, noting that she received a complaint from a
chemical submitter about^^^^^J work. Another time, she complained to managers that chemical
submitters would be "irate" if the division took^^^^^J approach to human health assessments. In
early 2020, the OPPT deputy director stated in an email that	human health

assessors' failure to use her approaches to assessments "could be considered insubordination."

On October 30, 2020,receivedFY 2020 performance evaluation, in whichoverall
rating was lower than the rating from the previous year.^^^^J was rated	overall

and in^^J of^J four critical elements, including critical element one: "project management and
technical support to new chemicals The supervisory comments regarding critical element one,^| work
on assessments of new chemicals, noted that^^^^J produced work of	but that^|

work was|

supervisor testified that prior to approximately March 2020,had only heard positive
feedback regardingperformance.^H^^^^B during this time,^^^^^H work on new

9 "GS" refers to the classification and pay level on the General Schedule system, which is used for civilian federal employees in
professional, technical, administrative, and clerical positions.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.


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chemicals was "in	range."described that once the pressure to clear the

backlog grew,^| stopped hearing positive feedback regarding^^^^J and instead began to receive
feedback regarding performance issues. heard from	that the OPPT deputy

director and the OPPT senior science advisor were having to go back and forth with^^^^J on the
same issues and that it might be a performance issue.	explained that the

"back and forth" referred to exchanges with management about scientific disagreements. testified
that during the previous performance period, when^^^^J had a scientific disagreement, would
write it down and then move the case forward in the work process. In FY 2020, however,
engaged in "constant back and forth" about^J scientific disagreements. This created delays, according
to the^^^^^^^^|, and there was pressure in the division to meet deadlines.

^^^^^Jtried to coach	on how to resolve to^J disagreements with the OPPT deputy

director and the OPPT senior science advisor.^f explained that in givinga rating of^^^

considered the fact that^^ had to be more direct with^^^^J to help^J resolve
these disagreements.^^ believed that finding resolutions was part of the performance criteria for a
assessor.

Prior to issuing I

FY 2020 performance evaluation,!

discussed

performance with I

and the OPPT deputy director. In summarizing

their meeting, the



that



issues began to arise when





insisted on "digging into cases in search of risks which affected timeliness of reviews."

continued

that



was unwilling to take advice from more senior







explained that^l boss, thel

I, as well as the OPPT deputy director, told^l that



was not performing at the



level and asked to look into whether



could be

demoted.



supervisor said that those requests put^J "in a bad position.'

't



^^^^^^^^Jsupervisor testified that

was on the cusp between a and the

higher

" rating. testified that^^ did not think that^^ had the support of^J

chain of command to give^f

an

rating. explained that^^ did

rate^^^J as

because

While^^ was not involved in



1 new-chemicals work and did not have a human health

background,assumed that higher quality work would have fewer back-and-forth exchanges.

supervisor testified that I

also had late assignments that were separate from

scientific disagreements. However, when asked, did not provide any documentation of

late assignments that were not connected to the expression of a scientific disagreement.

was not

In November 2020, the National Treasury Employees Union filed a grievance appealing!

FY 2020 performance evaluation. The initial grievance noted that^^^^J was told that^^
an	level because

Ir. The management response to the initial grievance noted that^^^^H was expected to

In

January and March 2021, the union appealed management's response to the grievance through second-

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

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and third-step grievances. Neither of management's responses to the second- and third-step grievances
addressed the impact	scientific disagreements on^J performance evaluation or provided

further explanation for^J rating.

3. Withheld Award for FY 2020

The OPPT distributed two types of monetary awards in FY 2020: superior accomplishment awards,
known as "s-awards," and on-the-spot awards, known as "spot awards." S-awards are valued up to
$5,000 and are issued for high-quality performance of assigned duties or for special acts, services, or
achievements. Spot awards are valued up to $250 and are intended to recognize employees for
accomplishments that are "generally modest and limited in scope."

The OPPT determined these monetary awards by asking RAD management to rank their employees as
high, medium, or low. S-awards were then distributed based on each employee's rank. According to the
testimony of RAD management, s-awards were not explicitly tied to performance ratings, but the
amounts were still based upon performance.explained that employees
who received higher performance ratings received higher monetary awards, and those with lower
performance ratings received lower monetary awards. In FY 2020, the OPPT did not issue s-awards to
individuals who received a quality step increase.

In addition to monetary awards, the Agency can offer time-off awards.

explained that management asked employees eligible for awards if they would prefer a monetary award
or a time-off award. Depending on whether employees were ranked as high, medium, or low, they
would receive a time-off award in lieu of or in addition to a monetary s-award. For FY 2020, out of

101 employees in the OPPT,

was one of five who were eligible for but did not receive an s-

award or a time-off award. Four of these employees were rated as 'I

I" and one was rated

as

S-awards or time-off awards were issued to all





1 direct reports who received above a

rating. The only other employee who



did not issue an s-award or time off award received the same rating as

| i

rating of Multiple RAD employees received both an s-award and a time-off

award. Although^J did not receive an s-award,|

received a $250 spot award for|

| work on

projects.

4. Decrease	Assignments

The Toxic Substances Control Act, as amended in 2016, requires the EPA to develop a list of I

I. In 2018, the EPA developed a strategic plan to promote the development and
implementation of^^^. The strategic plan included many different^^^^^^^J projects.

explained that opportunities to work	projects were not advertised or

subject to competition; rather, volunteers were accepted to complete^^^^^^^J work as an
ancillary duty.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

11


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CUI//PRIIC/PRV CY

In 2019, 13 staff members from RAD worked	projects, which included participating in a

meeting.was one	member who

volunteered to work	projects, and^| participated in these meetings. As part of the

EPA's requirements under the Toxic Substances Control Act, one of the^^^^^^^J projects was to
maintain

|. In October 2019, the OPPT lead for^^l sent^^^^H the 2018
, the 2019^^^^| which J had already circulated, and the comments^ received on the
draft.J asked	to incorporate the comments into the draft. The finalized 2019^^ was posted

to the EPA website on December 5, 2019.testified that in the fall of 2019,work
was approximately 10 percent of^| job duties.

Around this same time, the^^J leaders from the OPPT, the Office of Pesticide Programs, the Office of
Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention, and the Office of Research and Development began planning
for a^^J conference that was held on December 17, 2019. Theleaders corresponded
frequently regarding planning. Some conference planning also occurred during a weekly meeting, in
whichwas a participant.testified that EPA employees who were "big names" were
assigned as subgroup leaders to lead various breakout sessions of the conference. While^J was in a
subgroup,	was not a subgroup leader. After th^^^J conference, the members of the weekly

meeting began working on a^^^Jworkplan. The workplan built upon the conference and comprised
the work of the subgroups. Some participants of the weekly meeting were designated to lead subgroups
for the workplan.

The weekly meeting continued after the conference, though as the year progressed, the meeting was
often canceled. Despite many meetings being canceled, a smaller subgroup of meeting participants
continued to work on a draft^^^Jworkplan that was ultimately presented to the OCSPP assistant
administrator in April 2020. While^^^^J was a member of the often-canceled weekly meeting,
was not in the smaller subgroup that continued to meet. The smaller subgroup comprised just th^^^J
leaders, the workplan subgroup leaders, and one senior executive service employee who was involved in
In May 2020,estimated that^J data science efforts, which included support to^^^J
projects, was approximately 5 percent of^| duties.

Approximately a month after the^^^Jworkplan was submitted to the EPA administrator, the original
calendar invite for the often-canceled weekly meeting was discontinued. On June 1, 2020, the
individuals in the smaller subgroup began a new weekly meeting. This new weekly meeting did not
include^^^^J or the other invitees to the original meeting who were not on the subgroup email
chains. On July 27, 2020,emailed the OPPT^^^|lead, who was a|
asking why^| was no longer in the weekly meeting. The OPPT^^J lead replied that once the
workplan was released, a smaller subgroup continued meeting on Mondays to plan for the nextl
conference. The OPPT^^J lead noted thatj was the only OPPT invitee and assured	that

there would be future opportunities to work	projects.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

12


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In October 2020, the OPPTl
update to the 20191

lead met with

and asked to work on developing an

, This

was published on the EPA's website in February 2021. In
lead were transferred from the I

early 2021, the duties of the OPPT
the OPPT senior science advisor. The OPPT senior science advisor planned to reinstate thel



, which had not met for months. In

February 2021, | sent an email

to all former members of the



to gauge interest, including



The OPPT senior science advisor planned to have the first "n



^^^meeting in May 2021, but|
did not publish an update to thel

separated from the EPA before the meeting could be held. The EPA

¦ work was

in 2022. However, in June 2022,^^^
reinvigorated as part of a new Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention fellowship program.
The fellowship program, which was announced on an internal EPA digital job board on June 29, 2022,

included nine different projects, one of which was related tol
fellowship and thus was not selected.

did not apply to the

5. Nonselection for a

Position

On November 22, 2021, al

in the ECRAD was posted on USAJobs,
the federal government's official employment website. There were 11 applicants, six of whom were
determined to be eligible by human resources and were interviewed for the position, including



The position was initially advertised for two selectees; however, a







decided to hire

only one.

testified	position a

should take a broad approach to the work of the ECRAD.noted that^| was seeking an applicant
who could do more than quality control of risk assessments and could help set up, implement, and
sustain the existing-chemicals program. In^J interview,spoke about^J strength as a one-
on-one mentor. However, the selecting official testified that^| wanted	to

focus on the broad needs of the divison rather than individualized needs of team members. In April
2022, the new ECRADwas announced.	was not selected. According to

the selectee had experience taking the desired broader approach. For example,
led the team that developed the division's new workplan.^^^^^^^^^^^J also noted that the
selectee had served in management and had experience with strategic thinking.

6. Harassment

alleged that|
science advisor, and I

was harassed in late 2019 and 2020 by the OPPT deputy director, the OPPT senior
in retaliation for expressing differing scientific opinions.10

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

13


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CUI//PRIIC/PRV CY

testified that the OPPT deputy director harassed those with whom she disagreed via
"disrespectful" comments in meetings and in writing. According to^^^^^J the OPPT deputy director
questioned assessors' skills and capabilities based on their scientific opinions.examples
included the OPPT deputy director asking such questions as "Why would you think you could use this?"
or "Why would you think this is a thing?"	also recalled a meeting during which, according to a

colleague ofthe OPPT deputy director rolled her eyes the entire time that^^^^J spoke,
recalled watching the OPPT deputy director have similar reactions when others spoke too.
also testified that the OPPT deputy director would sneer or have an angry look on her face if
she did not agree with an assessor. In addition,testified that in written communications, it
was the OPPT deputy director's practice to use all capital letters, bold font, underlined font, and
excessive punctuation marks. For example, when^^^^J identified a new study with a more
protective point of departure that was applicable to one of^J assessments, the OPPT deputy director
wrote to^J in all capital letters, directing that^| not use the new study and instead "keep moving
with what you have."

testified that the OPPT senior science advisor was rude to^J because he disagreed with^J
scientific opinions. According to^^^^^J the way that the OPPT senior science advisor would ask
questions in meetings implied that he believed was "an idiot" or that he was in "complete disbelief"
that^| could arrive at a particular conclusion. recalled a meeting in which he askedto do
somethingdisagreed with. When^J explained that^| did not have support to write what he
wanted, he told^J that "a	could do what I'm asking."contrasted this behavior with his

behavior toward those who "didn't give him any problems," whom he helped and spoke to "like a
professor."	said that^| believes the OPPT senior science advisor spoke to^J this way to

embarrassinto changing^| scientific determinations.also described comments that he made
about^J work and the work of others he disagreed with, such as "we're not going to defend you" from
industry.	said that while making these comments, the OPPT senior science advisor was audibly

agitated and raised his voice.	said that he made similar comments in writing. On one occasion,

provided him with what^| described as a well-documented reason why^| would not accept his
edits to^J assessment; he wrote back that^J case was "a mess."^^^^^ also testified that the
OPPT senior science advisor would ignore^| or not engage with^J For example, in a meeting in
which work product was discussed, he stated, "I disagreed with what the reviewer did," as though
was not in the room.	felt as though he was indicating that^| was not worth talking to.

also detailed an instance in which he refused request for help, despite offering to help others.



testified that, although





still held power over

¦

because

¦

noted previously in this report.

was not in^J chain of command, the
supervisor was not involved in^J work, as
reported that, although saw the OPPT deputy director and

harassed^! in the same manner as the OPPT deputy director and the OPPT senior science

scoldedin a meeting in front of others and would

as

advisor. testified that
similarly chastise and criticize other staff.described interactions with
being curt, such as in one meeting that occurred right before

transfer to existing-chemicals

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

14


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CUI//PRIIC/PRV CY

work when



shouted, "This case is going to have to be reassigned." As another

example,



described how



1 would tell human health assessors, "You

have to do this" instead of "I'd like

you to do this."



testified that





would get impatient withl



when

attempted to explain

scientific disagreements. When



started to perceive

i

as "a problem," began copying





on emails.



1 viewed this as an attempt to "get



in trouble."



Analytic and Legal Framework

The Whistleblower Protection Act prohibits retaliation against most executive branch employees for
making protected disclosures or engaging in protected activity. 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(8)-(9). To allege a
reprisal violation under section 2302(b), complainants must allege that they made a protected disclosure
or engaged in protected activity and that the protected disclosure or activity was a contributing factor in
a covered action taken, threatened, or withheld from them. The EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy extends
the protections of Whistleblower Protection Act to all EPA employees who uncover or report allegations
of scientific and research misconduct or who express a differing scientific opinion.11

The first step in assessing these retaliation allegations is to determine whether the complainant
expressed a differing scientific opinion, engaged in protected activity, or made a protected disclosure.12
The EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy does not define the term differing scientific opinion. However, in
October 2020, the EPA's Scientific Integrity Program issued a guidance document, Approaches for
Expressing and Resolving Differing Scientific Opinions. This guidance document defines "differing
scientific opinion" as:

[A] differing opinion of an EPA employee who is substantively engaged in the science
that may inform an EPA decision. It generally contrasts with a prevailing staff opinion
included in a scientific product under development. The differing opinion must
concern scientific data, interpretations, or conclusions, not policy options or
decisions. These approaches do not address personal opinions about scientific issues
that are not accompanied by scientific arguments, are not part of a scientific product,
and are not made in the context of an EPA decision.

Protected activities are defined as the exercise of any appeal, complaint, or grievance right granted by
any law, rule, or regulation; testifying for or otherwise lawfully assisting any individual in the exercise of
any appeal, complaint, or grievance right granted by any law, rule, or regulation; cooperating with or

11	We did not assess the EPA's authority to extend the statutory protections of 5 U.S.C. § 2302 via Agency policy.

12	An individual who has not made a protected disclosure may still be entitled to protection under section 2302 if the individual
is perceived to be a whistleblower. See King v. Dep't of the Army, 116 M.S.P.B. 689, 694 (Sept. 14, 2011). In such cases, the
analysis focuses on the perceptions of the officials involved in the personnel actions at issue and whether those officials
believed that the complainant made or intended to make disclosures that evidenced the type of wrongdoing listed in the
statute. Id. at 694-95.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

15


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disclosing information to the inspector general or the special counsel; or refusing to obey an order that
would require the individual to violate a law, rule, or regulation. 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(9).

A protected disclosure is defined as a communication about actual or suspected wrongful conduct that
the employee reasonably believes is evidence of a violation of any law, rule, or regulation; gross
mismanagement; a gross waste of funds; an abuse of authority; or a substantial and specific danger to
public health or safety. 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(8). Vague, conclusory, or facially insufficient allegations of
government wrongdoing are insufficient to state a claim under section 2302(b)(8).13 A reasonable belief
exists if a disinterested observer with knowledge of the essential facts known to and readily
ascertainable by the employee could reasonably conclude that the actions of the government evidence
one of the categories of wrongdoing listed in the statute.14

Once it has been established that the complainant expressed a differing scientific opinion, engaged in
protected activity, or made a protected disclosure, the next step is to analyze whether a preponderance
of the evidence supports that one or more, differing scientific opinions, protected activities, or
protected disclosures were a contributing factor in the decision to take, threaten, or withhold a
personnel action from the complainant.15 "Contributing factor" is defined as any factor which, alone or
in connection with other factors, tends to affect in any way the outcome of the decision.16 The
whistleblower can establish that a disclosure or activity was a contributing factor through circumstantial
evidence showing that (1) "the official taking the personnel action knew of the disclosure or protected
activity" and (2) "the personnel action occurred within a period of time such that a reasonable person
could conclude that the disclosure or protected activity was a contributing factor in the personnel
action." 5 U.S.C. § 1221(e)(l)(A)-(B).17

Once a preponderance of the evidence establishes that one or more protected activities or disclosures
was a contributing factor in the personnel action, the retaliation allegation is substantiated unless clear
and convincing evidence establishes that the covered action would have been taken in the absence of

13	Johnston v. Merit Sys. Prot. Bd., 518 F.3d 905, 909 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (outlining the jurisdictional threshold for claims under the
Whistleblower Protection Act).

14	Lachance v. White, 174 F.3d 1378,1381 (Fed. Cir. 1999).

15	A preponderance of the evidence is defined as "[t]he degree of relevant evidence that a reasonable person, considering the
record as a whole, would accept as sufficient to find that a contested fact is more likely to be true than untrue." 5 C.F.R.

§ 1201.4(q). A personnel action is defined as "(i) an appointment; (ii) a promotion; (iii) an action under chapter 75 of this title or
other disciplinary or corrective action; (iv) a detail, transfer, or reassignment; (v) a reinstatement; (vi) a restoration; (vii) a
reemployment; (viii) a performance evaluation under chapter 43 of this title or under title 38; (ix) a decision concerning pay,
benefits, or awards, or concerning education or training if the education or training may reasonably be expected to lead to an
appointment, promotion, performance evaluation, or other action described in this subparagraph; (x) a decision to order
psychiatric testing or examination; (xi) the implementation or enforcement of any nondisclosure policy, form, or agreement;
and (xii) any other significant change in duties, responsibilities, or working conditions." 5 U.S.C. § 2302(a)(2).

16	Marano v. Dep't of Justice, 2 F.3d 1137 (Fed. Cir. 1993).

17	Although the EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy notes that employees who uncover or report allegations of scientific and research
misconduct or express a differing scientific opinion are protected "from retaliation or other punitive actions," because it is
unclear what "other punitive actions" entails, we did not incorporate this into our analysis.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

16


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the protected activity or disclosure. 5 U.S.C. § 1221(e)(2).18 In other words, if the evidence shows that it
is highly probable that the employer would have taken the personnel actions against the employee
regardless of the protected activity or disclosure, the retaliation allegation is not supported. The
relevant factors to consider in this determination are (1) the strength of the evidence in support of the
Agency's decision, (2) the existence and strength of any retaliatory motive by the officials involved in the
decision, and (3) any evidence that the employer has taken similar actions against employees who are
not whistleblowers but are otherwise similarly situated.19

Analysis

is an EPA employee. alleges that individuals with personnel authority took personnel
actions against^J in retaliation for expressing differing scientific opinions, filing a union grievance, and
providing information to the OIG. As^^^^J alleged a prima facie violation of 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(8),
(9)(A), and (9)(C) and a violation of the EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy, the OIG has jurisdiction over^J
retaliation allegations.

Did^^m Express a Differing Scientific Opinion, Engage in Protected
Actlvmes^rMake a Protected Disclosure?

disagreements with

I, the OPPT deputy director, and the OPPT

senior science advisor between July 2019 and July 2020 constitute differing scientific opinions.



expression of differing scientific opinions was corroborated by^J



as well as

by



andl



. We obtained testimony and

documentary evidence confirming that



1 disagreements concerned interpretations of scientific

data, such as the selection of analogue chemicals that were to be used in the assessments The EPA's

scientific disagreements

assessments of new chemicals constitute scientific products. Thus,^^^H^^
meet both the plain language meaning of a differing scientific opinion and the formal definition of a
differing scientific opinion that was issued by the Scientific Integrity Program in October 2020.

In addition,	was widely perceived by OPPT and RAD management to have made differing

opinions.testified that^^^^J
and the otherhuman health assessors were more likely than other assessors
to disagree about scientific decisions made in assessments. The OPPT deputy director and the OPPT
science advisor complained about^^^^^J and the otherhuman
health assessors' differing scientific opinions.

engaged in protected activities when^J filed with the union regarding^^ FY 2020
performance evaluation from November 2020 through March 2021 and when^J provided information
to the OIG via Hotline complaints filed by the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility in June

18	Clear and convincing evidence is defined as "that measure or degree of proof that produces in the mind of the trier of fact a
firm belief as to the allegations sought to be established." It is a higher standard than preponderance of the evidence. 5 C.F.R.
§ 1209.4(e).

19	Carrv. Social Sec. Admin., 185 F.3d 1318,1323 (Fed. Cir. 1999).

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

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and August 2021. Filing a complaint through a union is the exercise of an appeal, complaint, or grievance
right granted by law, rule, or regulation under 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(9)(A). Providing information to the OIG
is a protected activity under 5 U.S.C. § 2302(b)(9)(C).

also made at least one protected disclosure in^J OIG hotline complaints. The August 2021
complaint included an allegation that assessors' scientific disagreements were referenced in their
performance evaluations as support for a lower rating. Retaliation for differing scientific opinions
violates the EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy, which is a rule. As such, it was reasonable for^^^^J to
believe that referencing differing scientific opinions in a performance evaluation is evidence of a
violation of a rule. Accordingly,	made at least one protected disclosure.20

Was a Personnel Action Taken Against, Threatened, or Withheld from	?

alleged six retaliatory actions in the information provided in^J Hotline complaint to the OIG:
(1) an assignment to work on existing-chemical assessments in July 2020, (2) a FY 2020 performance
rating, (3) a withheld cash or time-off award in FY 2020, (4) a decrease	work in June

2020, (5) a nonselection for a	position in April 2022, and (6) harassment in 2019

and 2020. We determined that three of these actions constitute personnel actions.

1. Assignment to Existing-Chemicals Assessments

In summer 2020,was assigned to work on existing-chemicals projects instead of
new-chemicals assignments. This change in work assignment came at^J request, due to^J

A voluntary	does

constitute a personnel action.21 An employee-initiated action is considered voluntary unless the
employee can show that the action was obtained through duress or coercion or that a reasonable
person would have been misled by the agency.22 A stressful work environment is not enough to find that
an action was coerced.23 Dissatisfaction with work assignments, a feeling of being unfairly criticized, or
difficult or unpleasant working conditions do not constitute coercion.24 Accordingly,
requested change from new-chemicals assignments to existing-chemicals assignments does not
constitute a personnel action.

20	For the purposes of this analysis, we did not assess whether each allegation contained within the complaints constituted a
protected disclosure.

21	Jay v. Dep'tofthe Navy, 51 Fed. Appx. 4 (Fed. Cir. 2002); Comito v. Dep't of the Army, 90 M.S.P.R. 58, H 13 (2001).

22	Staats v. U.S. PostalServ., 99 F.3d 1120,1124 (Fed. Cir. 1996) (declining to find an involuntary resignation in cases in which
"an employee decides to resign or retire because he does not want to accept a new assignment, a transfer, or other measures
that the agency is authorized to adopt, even if those measures make continuation in the job so unpleasant for the employee
that he feels that he has no realistic option but to leave").

23	Brown v. U.S. Postal Serv., 115 M.S.P.R. 609,1115 (2011).

24	Miller v. Dep't of Def, 85 M.S.P.R. 310,11 32 (2000).

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

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2.	FY 2020 Performance Evaluation

In October 2020,received FY 2020 performance evaluation, in whichwas rated as

overall. A performance evaluation is among the personnel actions specifically
enumerated in the statute. 5 U.S.C. § 2302(a)(2)(viii).

3.	Withheld Award for FY 2020

In FY 2020,	was one of five employees who was not given a cash or time-off award. A decision

regarding a cash or time-off award is a personnel action. 5 U.S.C. § 2302(a)(2)(A)(ix). Accordingly, the denial
of a cash or time-off award for^^^^H constitutes a personnel action.

4. Decrease in

Assignments

started

projects only constituted 5 to 10 percent of

projects in October 2019 as an ancillary duty.^^^^^^f
H job duties in FYs 2019 and 2020. As 2020 progressed,



was

phased out of one of the multiple

|

projectswas working on but

continued to be involved in other^^^^^^^J

projects.

work comprised only a small

amount o1

duties and, although^]

was removed from one

project, was assigned other



tasks. The decrease in^|

IB

assignments does not constitute a significant change in

duties and as such is not a personnel action.25

applied for the	position around November 2021. In April 2022, a

different applicant was selected for the position. An appointment is among the personnel actions
specifically enumerated in the statute. 5 U.S.C. § 2302(a)(2)(A)(i). Accordingly, the failure to select
for the position constitutes the failure to take a personnel action.

6. Harassment

alleged that in 2019 and 2020was harassed in retaliation for expressing differing scientific
opinions. While harassment is not a personnel action enumerated in the statute, it can be considered a
personnel action when it constitutes a significant change in duties, responsibilities, or working
conditions. 5 U.S.C. § 2302(a)(2)(A)(xii).26^^^^J alleges that^| was subjected to harsh
disagreements with^| scientific opinions and comments in meetings, emails, and^| written work

25	White v. Social Sec. Admin., 76 M.S.P.R. 447, 462 (1997) (finding that removal of certain cases from an administrative law
judge's docket did not amount to a significant change in duties because he was assigned other similar cases);

Martin v. Dep't of Veterans Affairs, 2014 WL 7045133 (Dec. 11, 2014) (finding that the assignment of seven additional cases to
an attorney's docket was not a significant change in duties or working conditions).

26	Covarrubias v. Social Sec. Admin., 113 M.S.P.R. 583, H 15 n.4 (2010) (finding harassment constituted a significant change in
working conditions when a supervisor monitored the employee's phone calls and whereabouts, including following the
employee to the restroom), overruled on other grounds by Colbert v. Dep't of Veterans Affairs, 121 M.S.P.R 677, H 12 n.5
(2014).

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

19


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product, which^J characterized as rude and disrespectful. Verbal criticism and rudeness are not
usually considered personnel actions.27 Whistleblower Protection Act case law discussing alleged
constructive discharge is also instructive here. The Merit Systems Protection Board has consistently held
that a feeling of being unfairly criticized or difficult or unpleasant working conditions are generally not
so intolerable as to compel a reasonable person to resign and thus are not personnel actions.28 These
cases contemplate that criticism and unpleasantness in the workplace alone are not actionable under
the Whistleblower Protection Act. Accordingly, the criticism and disagreements that^^^^J
experienced do not constitute a personnel action.

In summary,FY 2020 performance evaluation, the Agency's failure to provide^^^^J with
a cash or time-off award for FY 2020, and^^^^^J nonselection for aposition
constitute personnel actions under 5 U.S.C. § 2302(a)(2).	reassignment to existing-chemicals

assessments,^! decrease	projects, and the alleged harassment do not constitute

personnel actions under 5 U.S.C. § 2302(a)(2).

Were
Disclosure

Differing Scientific Opinions, Protected Activities, or Protected
ontributing Factors in Personnel Actions Taken Against^M?

A differing scientific opinion, protected activity, or protected disclosure is a contributing factor in a
decision to take a personnel action if the official taking the covered action knew of the differing
scientific opinion, protected activity, or protected disclosure and if the action occurred within a period
of time such that a reasonable person could conclude that it was a contributing factor in the personnel
action.29 After assessing these two factors, knowledge and timing, we determined that^^^^^J
differing scientific opinions were a contributing factor in three personnel actions:^! FY 2020
performance evaluation and^^ withheld cash or time-off award for FY 2020, and^^ nonselection for a

position. protected activities and protected disclosure were also a
contributing factor in^^ non selection.

FY 2020 Performance Evaluation and Withheld Award

expressed differing scientific opinions regarding new chemicals from approximately July 2019
through July 2020.supervisor, who completed^! performance evaluation and
provided input for^^ withheld cash or time-off award, had knowledge of^^^^^J differing scientific
opinions. In approximately March 2020, the^J supervisor began to receive feedback about^^^^^J
differing scientific opinions.was also included on multiple emails discussing^^^^^J differing
scientific opinions. The OPPT distributed cash awards in July 2020, and^^^^^H FY 2020 performance

27	Greenspan v. Dep't of Veterans Affairs, 94 M.S.P.R. 247, H 22 (2003), rev'd and remanded on other grounds, 464 F.3d 1297
(Fed. Cir. 2006); Special Counsel v. Spears, 75 M.S.P.R. 639, 670 (1997) (oral counseling does not constitute disciplinary or
corrective action within the coverage of the Whistleblower Protection Act).

28	Millerv. Dep't of Def, 85 M.S.P.R. 310 11 32 (2000); Brown v. U.S. Postal Serv., 115 M.S.P.R. 609, 616-18 (2011), aff'd, 469 F.
App'x 852 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (holding that a pattern of poor treatment, including groundless criticism and allegedly throwing and
destroying a desk, did not compel the complainant's retirement and thus did not constitute a personnel action).

29	5 U.S.C. § 1221(e).

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

20


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evaluation was issued to^J in October 2020. The timing between^^^^^J differing scientific
opinions and^J FY 2020 performance evaluation and withheld cash or time-off award was less
than 18 months, which is a reasonable amount of time to conclude that they were contributing factors
in the actions.30

Nonselection for a

Position

was the selecting official for the ECRADl

position. As

discussed above, had knowledge of



differing scientific opinions regarding new-chemicals

assessments. By the end of July 2020,



was no longei

r assigned to new-chemicals work.31



nonselection for the ECRAD



position was in April 2022. The timing

between!

differing scientific opinions and^l nonselection for the position was less than two

years, which is a reasonable amount of time to conclude that they were contributing factors in the
actions.32 Further,

engaged in protected activities when^| filed a grievance regarding^|
FY 2020 performance evaluation from November 2020 through March 2021 and when^J provided
information to the OIG in June and August 2021.also made a protected disclosure in^| OIG

had knowledge of I

protected activities and disclosure,

complaint.

as^J testified that^| read news articles about the disclosures to OIG and read the grievance. The
timing betweenprotected activities and disclosure and the nonselection was less than two
years, which is a reasonable amount of time to conclude that they were a contributing factor in^|

nonselection for a I

position.

In summary, because EPA management had knowledge of^^^^^J differing scientific opinions,
protected activities, and protected disclosure and because the personnel actions at issue were taken less
than two years after^J expressed differing scientific opinions, engaged in protected activities, and make
a protected disclosure, we determined that^^^^J established by a preponderance of the evidence
that^J differing scientific opinions were contributing factors in^J FY 2020 performance evaluation,
withheld awards in FY 2020, and^J nonselection for aposition. We also found
that^l protected activities and protected disclosure were contributing factors in^| nonselection.

30 The U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board has found time periods longer than a year between the protected disclosure and
adverse action to be reasonable in establishing that a disclosure was a contributing factor. See e.g., Redschlag v. Dep'tofthe
Army, 89 M.S.P.R. 589, H 87 (2001) (holding that a suspension proposed 18 months after an employee's protected disclosure
was a sufficient time period where a reasonable person could conclude that the disclosure was a contributing factor in the
suspension).

may have expressed differing scientific opinions while working in the existing-chemicals program and in the ECRAD.
However, the scope of this investigation was limited to the retaliation allegations as outlined in Public Employees for
Environmental Responsibility's disclosures to the OIG, which was retaliation for expressing differing scientific opinions
regarding new-chemicals assessments. As such, retaliation for differing scientific opinions regarding existing-chemicals
assessments is outside of the scope of this investigation.

32 Mastrulleo v. Dep't of Labor, 123 MSPR 110, H 20 (2015) (concluding that appellant's August 2010 disclosure was a
contributing factor in the agency's failure to give him a 40 hour time off award in June 2012).

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

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CUI//PRIIC/PRV CY

Would the Agency Have Taken the Personnel Actions Against^^^^^M in the
Absence ofJH Differing Scientific Opinions, Protected ActiviVes^n^Hrotected
Disclosure?

Once a preponderance of the evidence establishes that one or more differing scientific opinions,
protected activity, or protected disclosures contributed to the personnel actions taken against the
complainant, the retaliation allegation is substantiated unless clear and convincing evidence establishes
that the action would have been taken in the absence of the differing scientific opinion, protected
activity, or protected disclosure. To make this determination, our analysis weighs the following three
factors: (1) the strength of the evidence in support of each action; (2) the existence and strength of any
motive to retaliate on the part of the officials who were involved in the decision, referred to as animus
evidence; and (3) any evidence that the employer has taken similar actions against employees who are
not whistleblowers but are otherwise similarly situated, referred to as comparators.

After analyzing the three factors, we determined that the EPA could not establish by clear and

convincing evidence that it would have rated

as

in critical element one,

which addressedwork on new-chemicals assessments, and that it would not have providedan
award in the absence of differing scientific opinions. Analysis of the same three factors led us to
determine that the EPA could establish by clear and convincing evidence that it would have failed to
select^| for	position in the absence ofdiffering scientific opinions,

protected activities, and protected disclosure.

FY 2020 Performance Evaluation

was rated as "
majority of^J work during FY 2019 was in the
that^J performance in RAD during FY 2019 w;

supervisor testified that

FY 2019 performance evaluation. Although the







In FY 2020,



was rated as 'I
relied heavily on the feedback of the other

managers when rating^^^^H

explained that^| considered

new-chemicals work to

be the

' range, untilheard from



about the back-and-

forth disagreements with^f



which testified was a reference to

differing scientific



explained that^| did not rate

as



because of I

|. Althoughsupervisory comments noted that
produced work of good quality, testified that^| assumed that higher quality work may
have fewer back-and-forth exchanges with managment. And while^| explained that I

differing scientific opinions created delays, also testified that I

also had late assignments

that were separate from^B differing scientific opinions. However, when asked, thel

not provide any documentation of^^^^J
expression of a differing scientific opinion.

late assignments that were not connected to the

supervisor relied heavily on feedback from management officials who expressed animus
regarding^^^^^J differing scientific opinions. The OPPT deputy director and the OPPT senior science
advisor complained about^^^^^J differing scientific opinions, and the^^^^^^^^J believed that

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

22


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CUI//PRIIC/PRV CY

they viewed the differing scientific opinions as insubordination. The OPPT deputy director even noted in

an email that chemical companies complained aboutl

assessments and that those companies

would be angry if the division took her approach to assessments.





also



received feedback about



differing scientific opinions from







. The



noted that issues began to arise whei



dug into cases,

affecting the timeliness of reviews, and^J characterized this as
hostage."	and the OPPT deputy director asked

look into whether^^^^H could be demoted, which

explained that^^H^^

|" rating butthatj
the higher rating.

"hold[ing] late cases

Hto

in a difficult

position. The|
the higher '¦
chain of command to givel

| testified put|	

| was on the cusp between a	and

did not believe that^| had the support of^|

There are no apt comparators by which to evaluatel

FY 2020 performance evaluation. The



had



human health assessors, including









. Other human health assessors who may have reported

to





would not have had the same



deadline for their work



because





We find that the Agency's support for^^^^^J rating in critical element one was mostly based upon
explicit references to^J differing scientific opinions. After reviewing the Agency's support for

rating, the animus evidence, and the lack of comparators, we have determined that the
Agency cannot establish by clear and convincing evidence that it would have ratedas^^J
in critical element one in the absence of^J differing scientific opinions. Accordingly,

FY2020 performance rating violated the EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy.

Withheld Award for FY 2020

In FY 2020, OPPT employees received one or more of the following three types of awards: s-awards,
time-off awards, and spot awards. According to the testimony of management, s-award amounts were
based upon performance, even if they were not tied directly to performance ratings. In other words,
employees with higher performance ratings received higher monetary awards and time-off awards, and
those with lower performance ratings received lower award amounts.	received a spot award

for^J work on^^J projects but did not receive an s-award or a time-off award.

As discussed above,rating for critical element one was largely influenced by officials who
expressed animus regarding^| differing scientific opinions. Performance awards were closely tied to
performance evaluations. As such, the animus that influenced^^^^^J performance rating also had
an effect on^| ability to receive monetary and time-off awards.

Comparator evidence shows that^^^^^J lack of an s-award or time-off award was closely tied toj
performance rating. In FY 2020,	was one of five OPPT employees who were

eligible for but did not receive an s-award or a time-off award. Four of these employees were rated as
|." S-awards or time-off awards were issued to all of	supervisor's direct

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

23


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CUI//PRIIC/PRV CY

reports who received above a	rating. The only other employee who|

did not issue an s-award or time off award received a	rating.

We find that the Agency's support for^^^^^J withheld s-award or time-off award is the same as the
support for^J performance rating, which, as discussed above, referenceddiffering scientific
opinions. After reviewing the Agency's support for^^^^^J rating, the animus evidence, and the
neutral comparator evidence, we determined that the Agency cannot establish by clear and convincing
evidence that it would have withheld an s-award or time-off award in the absence of differing
scientific opinions. Accordingly, the Agency's withholding of an s-award or time-off award violated the
EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy.

Nonselection for a

Position



was not selected for the



position in the ECRAD.





, testified that

¦

| was seeking a candidate who could

focus on the broad, strategic needs of the office, rather than the individualized needs of team members,
wanted a^

	who could help set up, implement, and sustain the existing-

chemicals program. The candidate who was ultimately selected for the position had previous
management experience and had led the team that developed the ECRAD's new workplan.
had not served in a management position, and while^f had served as|

¦ did not have the broad strategic experience of the selectee.

While earlier personnel actions taken against^^^^J were influenced by the animus of higher-level
officials, those officials were not involved in the	selection process. We are

not aware of any evidence of animus expressed by I

was one of 11 applicants for the position. Six of the applicants were determined to be
qualified by human resources, including	In addition to^^^^^J four other qualified

applicants were not selected for the position.

Because the selectee had previous management experience and led the team that developed the
ECRAD's new workplan, we find that the Agency's support for choosing its selectee is strong. We
determined that the strong supporting evidence, paired with the lack of animus evidence and the
neutral comparator evidence, supports the finding that the Agency could show by clear and convincing
evidence that it would have not selected	for the	position in the

absence of^J differing scientific opinions, protected activities, and protected disclosure.

Conclusions

We determined that^^^^J expressed differing scientific opinions, engaged in protected activities,
and made a protected disclosure, which were contributing factors in three personnel actions taken
against^l (1) a FY 2020 performance rating, (2) a withheld cash or time-off award, and (3) the

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

24


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CUI//PRIIC/PRV CY

nonselection for aposition. We substantiated
with respect toFY 2020 performance evaluation and
Scientific Integrity Policy. We did not substantiate

retaliation allegations
withheld award, in violation of the EPA's
retaliation allegations with respect to^|

nonselection for a I

position.

Recommendations

We recommend that the EPA administrator consider appropriate corrective action considering our
findings.33

33 If the inspector general of an agency determines that a supervisor committed a prohibited personnel practice under the
Whistleblower Protection Act, the head of the agency in which the supervisor is employed shall propose suspending the
supervisor for a period that is not less than three days. 5 U.S.C. § 7515(b)(l)(A)(i). While the EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy
extends whistleblower protections to employees who express a differing scientific opinion, it does not state whether the
Whistleblower Protection Act's mandatory suspension provision applies when these protections are violated.

Any request to the EPA for public release must be sent to the EPA OIG for processing under

the Freedom of Information Act.

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Whistleblower Protection

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
The whistleblower protection coordinator's role
is to educate Agency employees about
prohibitions against retaliation for protected
disclosures and the rights and remedies against
retaliation. For more information, please visit
the OIG's whistleblower protection webpage.

Contact us:

Congressional Inquiries; OIG.CongressionalAffairs@epa.gov

Media Inquiries: OIG.PublicAffairs(5)epa.gov
'line EPA OIG Hotline: OIG.Hotlineffiepa.gov

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