Scientists and Engineers for America was an organization focused on promoting sound science in American government, and supporting candidates who understand science and its applications. SEA was formed on September 27, 2006, and describes itself as non-partisan. ---- SEA appears to have ceased active operations in October 2011. The following note was posted on SEA's Facebook page on October 28, 2011, by former SEA Program Director Brie Welzer: The remainder of this page describes SEA when it was still active. ---- SEA is organized as a 501 organization, and represents a reorganization of Scientists and Engineers for Change, an organization founded in 2004 to support the election of John Kerry. Its current executive director is Tom Price. SEA operates a wiki site called the Science, Health And Related Policies Network, which allows members to track and contribute information on Congressional representatives, candidates, and science policy issues. SEA is associated with a 501 organization known as the SEA Action Fund, whose president is geneticist Michael Stebbins.
The Science, Health and Related Policies Network is a wiki to track congressional representatives, senators, and candidates as well as presidential candidates.
The Campaign Education and Training project is a workshop aimed at training science-oriented professionals to run for public office. Along with the workshop, SEA also hosts an online advice column called Campaign Lab for scientists to ask political experts on different aspects of running for political office.
SEA chapters
SEA chapters provide a way for students and members of the scientific community to influence the interface between science and politics. These chapters develop the means for both current and future scientists and engineers to influence the policy arena and expand the forum through which SEA involves scientists and engineers in the political and civic process.
Board of Advisers
Among others, the SEA Board of Advisers includes noted Nobel Laureates such as:
Peter Agre
Sidney Altman
Philip W. Anderson
Johann Deisenhofer
Alfred Gilman
Douglas D. Osheroff
Martin Perl
Burton Richter
Harold E. Varmus
Criticism
Soon after its foundation, the organization was accused of partisanship by several conservative media outlets. An editorial in The Wall Street Journal criticised the organization for seeming to stifle scientific dissent: In a rebuttal posted on the SEA website, founding executive director Michael Brown stated: