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Committee on Science
http://www.house.gov/science/
SHERWOOD BOEHLERT, CHAIRMAN
Boehlert's Web Site: http://www.house.gov/boehlert/
Boehlert's email: Rep.Boehlert@mail.house.gov
February 4, 2002
BOEHLERT STATEMENT ON SCIENCE BUDGET
WASHINGTON, D.C ° House Science Committee Chairman Sherwood
Boehlert (R-NY) today released the following statement
in response to the Administration's proposed fiscal
year 2003 budget:
I have to greet the proposed fiscal year 2003
R&D budget with mixed emotions. On the one hand, non-defense
research spending is being treated better than other
domestic discretionary programs.“ Even excluding the
substantial increase for the National Institutes of
Health (NIH), non-defense research spending is slated
to grow at a rate 1 percent higher than discretionary
spending as a whole, which is also about 1 percent above
inflation.“ I applaud the Administration for highlighting
some priority programs, such as the $80 million Climate
Change initiatives; for evaluating programs to ensure
their productivity; and for recognizing the National
Science Foundation as a model of effectiveness and good
management.
All that said, however, research spending (excepting
NIH) would remain anemic under this budget.“ The current
concerns about defense and homeland security should
make us more aware than ever that we need to make long-range
investments now to fend off problems later.“ To take
one obvious example, we must invest more in cybersecurity
research, as the House will acknowledge later this week
when it passes our bill, H.R. 3394. Yet this budget
places too many eggs in one basket, homeland security,
and then defines that basket narrowly to include only
those programs that yield immediate benefits. I want
to work with the Administration to re-examine the wisdom
of that approach.

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