|
Search
CRA TumbleLog
Archives
April 2007
March 2007 February 2007 January 2007 December 2006 November 2006 October 2006 September 2006 August 2006 July 2006 June 2006 May 2006 April 2006 March 2006 February 2006 January 2006 December 2005 November 2005 October 2005 September 2005 August 2005 July 2005 June 2005 May 2005 April 2005 March 2005 February 2005 January 2005 December 2004 November 2004 October 2004 September 2004 August 2004 July 2004 June 2004 May 2004 April 2004 March 2004 February 2004 January 2004
Archives by Category
American Competitiveness Initiative (45)
CRA (38) Computing Community Consortium (CCC) (6) Diversity in Computing (9) Events (8) FY06 Appropriations (13) FY07 Appropriations (32) FY08 Appropriations (8) Funding (135) Misc. (42) People (67) Policy (179) R&D in the Press (56) Research (45) Security (20)
Recent Entries
NY Times on Women's Interest in Computing
Time on GENI Innovation Briefing Event NSF Reauthorization Eugene Spafford Honored with ACM President's Award Innovation Bill Moves Forward CRA's Hiring Innovation Funding Featured in House Budget Resolution Announcing the Computing Research Policy TumbleLog Innovation Press Conference and Hearing
CRA Links
Computing Research News
CRA-Bulletin Computing Data and Resources CRA in the News Computing Research in the FY05 Budget
What We're Reading
Computational Complexity
CNSR Online Danger Room Defense Tech Freedom to Tinker InsideHPC Lessig Blog Nothing is as simple... Reed's Ruminations Schneier on Security Techdirt UMBC eBiquity Blog USACM Tech Policy Blog
Advocacy Materials
IT R&D One-pager (pdf)
DARPA and University Research One-pager (pdf) Cyber Security R&D One-pager (pdf) Current and Requested IT R&D Funding Charts (pdf)
Recent Testimony
|
September 22, 2004First Senate NSF Appropriations NumbersEarly word out of yesterday's Senate Appropriations Committee markup is that NSF ended up with a 3 percent increase over FY 2004, matching the President's budget request. That's $5.75 billion for FY 05, $169 million over FY 2004, and significantly better than the House's 2 percent cut to NSF's overall budget.Still, we're a long way from the 15 percent increases authorized by Congress and signed by the President in December 2002 in the NSF Authorization. Given inflation, that 3 percent increase won't mean many new opportunities for the agency. More details about specific programs as I get them. Update: Here's the breakout:
Another Update: Here's the directorate by directorate breakout:
Final Update: So, it appears computing did a little better than average in the Senate mark. Only SBE and "Integrative Activities" had higher levels of increase vs. FY 2004 than CISE, and they have considerably smaller baselines. CISE benefited in part from an increase to the Information Technology Research (ITR) line vs. the President's budget request. The program had been slated to decrease to $178 million for FY 05, but was bumped up to $190 million in the Senate mark. The remainder of the increase is apparently spread throughout the core research programs in CISE. Here are some snippets relevant to computing research from the Committee Report: NSF has completed the planned 5-year priority for Information Technology Research [ITR] within Computer and Information Science and Engineering [CISE], yet the ITR program has also increased our understanding of computing, communications, and information systems as well as the areas of large-scale networking, new high-end architectures, high-data-volume instruments, and information management. To continue this fundamental research, the Committee has provided $190,000,000 to ITR within CISE.I think a part of the credit for IT R&D remaining a priority within this appropriation has to go to all those who participated in CRA's CRAN activity to urge members of the Senate to recognize the critical role NSF plays in leading the federal IT R&D effort, and how critical that effort, in turn, is to the future of innovation in this country. But there's still more to be done. Neither the House nor the Senate bills have yet come before their respective bodies -- and it's likely neither will before the election. What is likely is that the bills will get bundled together as part of an omnibus appropriations bill that contains all of the unfinished FY 2005 appropriations bills (currently numbering 12) and passed en masse. How the discrepancies between the cuts in the House bill and the more generous Senate bill get resolved is still an open question. If you haven't yet contacted your Senators and House Member, there's still time!
Posted by PeterHarsha at September 22, 2004 09:26 AM
| TrackBack
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||