“I refer to this one as ‘the big one,’” said the official, Matt Combes, an ecological health unit science supervisor for the Missouri Department of Conservation. He added: “Calling something a near-total fish kill for 60 miles of a river is astounding and disheartening.”
I’m reminded of how the COVID Tracking Project pulled together fragmented data about tests, cases and deaths because it just wasn’t available on a national level. I heard an interview with the original volunteers, where they explained that they didn’t expect to be collating the data for long, just until the federal government could get its shit together.
Then huzzah! Finally the white house are giving numbers in their briefings, seems like they’ve finally gotten it together and these volunteers can wind down their work and stop feeling so overwhelmed and out of their depth. What’s more, the white house’s figures were in line with their own figures, so that was a relief — an indication they were doing something right. Except the figures seemed a little too in line, and with a creeping dread, they slowly realised that the white house were using their figures. It’s not just that cavalry wouldn’t be coming to bail them out, but that they, a ragtag team of hundreds of self organised volunteers, were the cavalry.
It’s a story that’s inspirational and harrowing in equal measure and it’s why I would be more surprised if the EPA did have data available nationally.
Our government needs a nation technology team. They could provide infrastructure and code to the state organizations that set up these systems so they could keep managing things on their own but in a consistent way that can be shared across states. Any Web site the government needs to build should use the libraries and tools provided by that team. It would save time and money and give so many benefits.