The Scientist : NewsBlog Print: US science funding frozen
The Scientist: NewsBlog:
US science funding frozen
Posted by Bob Grant
[Entry posted at 30th September 2008 04:29 PM GMT]

The financial crisis befalling the nation has proven that its tentacles reach even into the scientific community. On Saturday (Sept. 27), the US Senate decided to freeze federal funding of any program except those relating to veterans affairs and national security by passing bill HR 2638.

This leaves many US science agencies including NASA, the National Institutes of Health, and the National Science Foundation high and dry for the first half of the 2009 fiscal year. The bill, which received broad bipartisan support in Congress, keeps the budgets of NASA, the NIH, the NSF, and the Department of Energy at current levels from tomorrow - October 1, the beginning of the fiscal year - until March 6, 2009.

The passage of this legislation scuttles an attempt to boost the NIH budget by $500 million before the start of the fiscal year as well as other planned NIH budget increases. Only the $150 million increase that the NIH got as part of a supplementary funding bill back in July will stand. Researchers applying for new or continued NIH funding this year will likely feel the pinch in the form of less grant awards and reduced funding levels on existing grants, according to Science.

The legislation now goes to President George W. Bush's desk to await his signature.

 

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Econ 101
by Caroline Abbott

[Comment posted 2008-10-02 15:19:52]
This is a guns-and-butter bill. Science is butter. Guns win.



priorities
by anonymous poster

[Comment posted 2008-09-30 14:21:26]
Congress needs to get its priorities straight. A crash course in Economics 101 is needed.



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