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Nine Down, Three to Go, in the House

After passing the Legislative Branch and State-Foreign Operations spending bills on Wednesday, the House approved mostly along party lines a seven-bill appropriations package for FY2022 on Thursday.  This means that the chamber has cleared nine of the 12 annual appropriations measures.

Included in Thursday’s package were:  Agriculture; Energy and Water Development; Financial Services; Interior and Environment; Labor-HHS-Education; Military Construction-Veterans Affairs; and Transportation-HUD.

The chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Patrick Leahy (D-VT), confirmed earlier today that the first three bills in that chamber– Agriculture, Energy and Water, and Mil Con-VA– will move next week, with the measures expected to go through the respective subcommittees on Monday and heading to the full committee on Wednesday.

 

 

CJS, Labor-HHS Bills Clear Committee, Energy-Water Is Next

During a day-long mark-up session, the House Appropriations Committee cleared yesterday both the Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) and the Labor-HHS-Education (L-HHS) bills.

CJS

  • NSF

The press release about the CJS measure passing the committee is available here.  The detailed report that accompanies the bill is available here.

The committee-approved legislation would fund the National Science Foundation (NSF) at $9.63 billion, $1.15 billion, or 13.5%, above the current level.  Within NSF, the Research and Related Activities account would be increased by $786.0 million, or 11.4%, to $7.70 billion, while the Education and Human Resources line would see an increase of $306.3 million, or 31.5%, to $1.27 billion.  The Major Research Equipment and Facilities Construction account would be funded at $249.0 million, an $8 million-increase.

The accompanying report language reads, in part, “In addition, the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (Public Law 117–2) included $600,000,000 for the National Science Foundation to fund or extend new and existing research grants, cooperative agreements, scholarships, fellowships, and apprenticeships, and related administrative expenses to prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus.”

  • NASA

As noted on Friday, NASA is slated for $25.04 billion under the bill, an increase of $1.77 billion.

The Science Mission Directorate would see an increase of $668.5 million for a total of $7.97 billion.

As part of the Office of STEM Engagement,  the bill proposes to fund the Space Grant program at $60 million, which is currently funded at $51 million.

  • NOAA

The bill calls for an increase of $1.03 billion for NOAA, for a total of $6.46 billion in FY2022. It also calls for the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR), NOAA’s research arm, to be funded at $684.5 million.  This represents an increase of approximately $114 million over the current year’s funding level, as OAR received $570.6 million for FY2021.

Also as noted previously, although there does not appear to be any explicit funding allocated for the creation of “ARPA-C”, the Climate Research program within OAR would see a $71-million increase, for a total of $253 million.

Sea Grant would see a $10-million increase to $85 million, with the increase dedicated to a coastal resiliency initiative.

The Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) would be funded at $50 million, an increase of $9 million.

Labor-HHS-Education

The committee took up the Labor-HHS bill first yesterday before moving on the CJS bill.  The press release for yesterday’s action is available here.  The detailed report accompanying the bill is also on the committee website, here.

Here are a few more details about the bill–

NIH

The bill calls for $49.4 billion for NIH, an increase of $6.5 billion above the current level.  Of the proposed $6.5-billion increase, $3.5 billion would be for the base NIH budget and $3 billion would be for the creation of ARPA-Health (ARPA-H), a new proposal from the Biden Administration.  The report states that ARPA-H should be a distinct entity within the NIH structure.

In addition to providing funds to the newly proposed ARPA-H, the bill would also add resources to other efforts at the NIH, such as:

  • $7 billion, an increase of $432 million above the FY 2021 enacted level, for the National Cancer Institute, including $194 million for the Cancer Moonshot;
  • $541 million, an increase of $41 million above the FY 2021 enacted level, for the All of Us Precision Medicine Initiative; and,
  • $612 million, an increase of $52 million above the FY 2021 enacted level, for the BRAIN Initiative.

Higher Education

International education programs (Title VI)

Under the House bill, the collection of international education programs would see an increase of 19.2% and would be funded at $93.2 million.  Currently, these programs are funded at $78.2 million.  More specifically, Domestic Programs would see an increase of $10 million, or 14.4%, to $79.35 million.  The Fulbright-Hays International Programs would be funded at $13.81 million, an increase of $5 million, or 56.8%.

Finally, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) has indicated that the Labor-HHS measure, along with five others– Agriculture, Energy and Water, Interior, Military Construction-VA, and Transportation– will be packaged into a larger bill for floor action during the week of July 26.

 

Various Science Agencies and Programs Slated for Increases in House CJS Bill

According to the report that accompanies the CJS bill scheduled to be marked up by the full Appropriations Committee in the House tomorrow, the current version of the legislation would provide increases to various science and research agencies and program of interest to UW.

NSF

The current version of the legislation proposes to increase the NSF by $1.15 billion to a total of $9.63 billion.

Within the NSF budget, the bill would fund the Research and Related Activities account at $7.7 billion, an increase of $786.0 million.  At the same time, it also calls for an increase of $306.3 million for the Education and Human Resources account for a total of $1.27 billion.

NASA

NASA is slated for $25.04 billion under the bill, an increase of $1.77 billion.

As part of the overall NASA budget, the Science Mission Directorate would see an increase of $668.5 million for a total of $7.97 billion.

Within the $147 million proposed for the Office of STEM Engagement, $60 million would be allocated to the Space Grant program, which is currently funded at $51 million.

NOAA

As part of the overall proposed budget of $6.46 billion for NOAA, the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR), NOAA’s research arm, is slated for $684.5 million.  For comparison, OAR received $570.6 million this year.

While there does not appear to be any explicit funding allocated to the Administration’s request for an “ARPA-C”, the Climate Research program within OAR would see a $71-million increase, for a total of $253 million.

Sea Grant would see a $10-million increase to $85 million, with the increase dedicated to a coastal resiliency initiative.

The Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) would be funded at $50 million, an increase of $9 million.

Like on other bills of interest, we will continue to provide additional updates.

House Committee Approves Defense Bill, More Action Scheduled for Later This Week

The full House Appropriations Committee cleared the FY2022 Defense spending bill yesterday by a party-line vote of 33-23.  Among other efforts, the legislation funds Pentagon-supported basic and applied research programs .  The detailed committee report that outlines the individual accounts in bill is available here.

The committee is scheduled to take up additional measures of interest to UW later this week, with the Labor-HHS-Education and Commerce-Justice-Science bills slated to be marked up tomorrow and the Energy and Water Development legislation on deck for Friday.

Earlier today, the committee released the reports for the Labor-HHS-Education bill and the CJS bill and we will provide additional details about all of these bills after further analysis.  The Energy and Water Development report is not yet available.

 

 

Appropriations Process Kicks Into Gear

With six more bills scheduled for at least subcommittee action this week, the annual appropriations process for FY2022 has kicked into gear. This week’s activities follow those that took place the last week of June.  This means that all 12 spending bills will have moved through at least the subcommittee process by the end of this week.

The following pieces of legislation are scheduled for subcommittee action this week:

On Tuesday, the full Appropriations Committee is scheduled to take up the Defense and Homeland Security bills.  The committee is currently scheduled to mark up the E&W and THUD bills on Friday.

The following bills have already cleared the full committee:

The Legislative Branch and Financial Services bills are still awaiting full committee action.

We will provide details as they become available.