IEEE-USA President's Column

MARCH 2008
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Russell Lefevre, Ph.D.
2008 IEEE-USA President |
Congressional Visits Seek Full Funding for U.S.
Innovation and Competitiveness Legislation
In early March, I joined more than 250 engineers
and scientists in Washington to participate in
the annual Congressional Visits Day (CVD). This
event, under the auspices of the
Science-Engineering-Technology Working Group (SETWG),
works to assure the future vitality of the U.S.
science, mathematics, and engineering
enterprise. IEEE-USA is one of SETWG's leading
organizations.
Our message this year was that research funding
should not be viewed as an expense, but an
investment. And past investments have paid huge
dividends. It has been noted by many economists
that more than 50 percent of all industrial
innovation and growth in the United States since
World War II can be attributed to advances
pioneered through scientific research. Whether
the applications are broad and enabling, or part
of a new product or process, publicly funded
science is at the core of our society's
progress. Most federal agencies require research
to achieve their goals for our government and
taxpayers. The nation's scientists and engineers
produce those research results, ensuring our
national strength, security, health, economy and
workforce development.
It is well known that the Internet is the result
of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
developing a computer-based means for their
researchers to communicate rapidly. The Global
Positioning System (GPS) is an outgrowth of the
U.S. Navy's need to know the location of its
assets around the world. These two technologies
alone have resulted in hundreds of thousands of
jobs in the United States.
Congress in 2007 passed one of the most
important pieces of legislation for the
high-tech community in decades, the America
COMPETES Act. The competitiveness and
innovation legislation, which the President
signed into law in August, supports research in
science, technology, engineering and mathematics
(STEM), as well as improved STEM educational
programs to help the United States maintain its
global leadership in science and technology.
Unfortunately, Congress and the administration
were unable to agree on the appropriations
necessary to enact the provisions of the
America COMPETES Act. And there is very
little funding for the act in 2008. The
President's budget for 2009, however, contains
substantial funding for programs closely related
to the legislation. The budget would include
funding that would put the National Science
Foundation (NSFG), the Department of Energy
Office of Science, and the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) on a path to
double their research and development (R&D)
funding in seven years.
During visits to our senators and House
representatives, our message was that the
inability of the Congress and the administration
to agree on appropriations for 2008 has caused a
"train wreck" for the high-tech community. We
urged our legislative representatives to do
whatever was necessary to remedy the situation.
We also strongly encouraged them to ensure that
the 2008 appropriations supplied adequate
funding for engineering and science programs in
2009.
On 4 March, I was honored to serve as master of
ceremonies for a SETWG-sponsored press
conference to help make the media aware of our
important mission. The press conference was led
by the co-chairs of the Congressional R&D
Caucus, Reps. Rush Holt (D-N.J.) and Judy
Biggert (R-Ill.). The high-tech community has no
bigger friends in the Congress than these two
representatives. They are always supportive of
our programs and have led the way in many
legislative initiatives important to IEEE-USA
and the U.S. science and engineering community.
The press conference resulted in very favorable
media coverage.
The members of the Congress we met with were
very supportive of our agenda. The House passed
its budget resolution on 6 March and it would
fund our priorities substantially. Here's the
message accompanying the legislation:
"It is the sense of the House that the House
should provide sufficient funding so that our
Nation may continue to be the world leader in
education, innovation and economic growth; last
year, Congress passed and the President signed
the America COMPETES Act, bipartisan
legislation designed to ensure that American
students, teachers, businesses, and workers are
pre-pared to continue leading the world in
innovation, research, and technology well into
the future; this resolution supports the efforts
authorized in the America COMPETES Act,
providing substantially increased funding above
the President's requested level for 2009, and
increased amounts after 2009 in Function 250
(General Science, Space and Technology) and
Function 270 (Energy); additional increases for
scientific research and education are included
in Function 500 (Education, Employment, Training
and Social Services), Function 550 (Health),
Function 300 (Environment and Natural
Resources), and Function 370 (Commerce and
Housing Credit), all of which receive more
funding than the President's budget provides;
because America's greatest resource for
innovation resides within classrooms across the
country, the increased funding provided in this
resolution will support initiatives within the
America COMPETES Act to educate tens of
thousands of new scientists, engineers, and
mathematicians, and place highly qualified
teachers in math and science K-12 classrooms;
and because independent scientific research
provides the foundation for innovation and
future technologies, this resolution will keep
us on the path toward doubling funding for the
National Science Foundation, basic research in
the physical sciences, and collaborative
research partnerships, and toward achieving
energy independence through the development of
clean and sustainable alternative energy
technologies."
IEEE-USA's leadership plans to continue working
to ensure that 2009 appropriations follow the
directions of the budget resolution. U.S. IEEE
members are encouraged to meet with their
representatives to support this message.
Please send
comments to
president@ieeeusa.org.
Updated:
15 August 2008
Contact: Chris McManes,
c.mcmanes@ieee.org
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