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Pittsburgh's March For Science could draw thousands

Pittsburgh's March For Science could draw thousands

Science has been attacked from multiple directions throughout the ages, with current challenges to established research on climate change, evolution and environmental stewardship and continuing cuts in research funding through the National Institutes of Health and other federal agencies.

So scientists and the pro-science community are striking back peaceably with a March For Science noon Saturday in Washington, D.C., with sister marches in more than 400 cities worldwide, including one in Pittsburgh’s neighborhood of Oakland that’s expected to attract 2,000 to 5,000 people.

“Budget cuts, censorship of researchers, disappearing datasets, and threats to dismantle government agencies harm us all, putting our health, food, air, water, climate, and jobs at risk,” says an online statement from the March For Science website. “It is time for people who support science to take a public stand and be counted.”

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The street march is scheduled to begin at noon on Bigelow Boulevard between Forbes and Fifth avenues, and continue for less than an hour around several blocks before circling back to the starting point. The march event also is scheduled to include speeches from notable scientists and others, with music and other festivities in the area of the Cathedral of Learning.

“We hope people will take away from this that science is something we need to fund and protect and pay attention to when it is threatened,” said University of Pittsburgh student Rebecca Tasker, a 20-year-old anthropology major from Clintonville, Venango County.

She is serving as event spokeswoman as a member of Pitt Progressives, which is working alongside Pittsburgh Progressives to organize the Oakland march. Other organizations and sponsors are assisting with the event.  

Ms. Tasker said the apolitical march was organized in conjunction with the D.C. march but seemed a natural in Pittsburgh, given the city’s role as a research center with its top universities and an economy largely based on health care. “It made sense to march here rather than send our scientists to Washington, D.C.,” she said.

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Other organizations including the American Psychosomatic Society went further in saying the march is designed to protect science “against recent threats by the Trump Administration to overturn science-based policies on the environment, energy, and health care; restrict travel; and substantially reduce research funding.”

Overall, Ms. Tasker said, the event promises to be “a giant science party,” with a positive theme.

“We hope people take away from this that science is a movement that affects us all, all of the time,” she said. “It is something that needs funding and protection, and we must pay more attention to it when it is threatened.”

David Templeton: dtempleton@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1578.

First Published: April 17, 2017, 4:00 a.m.

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