![]() ![]() – $4.4 billion for NASA, of which $4 billion is for facilities repair and modernization with most of the remainder for projects related to climate change research, sustainable aviation, and wildfire preparedness. – $1.2 billion is for NIST research and $1B for NIST infrastructure. There are several projects and programs specific for computing that are called out, with exascale and QIS getting noticeable attention. – $12.8 billion for DOE Office of Science, for projects, programs, and facilities. – $11 billion for NSF, of which $7.5 billion is for research and education programs and $3.4 billion is for infrastructure projects, including $1 billion for projects based at academic institutions with a $300 million carveout for HBCUs and MSIs. Highlights of the legislation for the agencies of most importance to the research community: Last week the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee held a markup of their $45 billion portion of the overall bill. To that end, we are getting our first insights into how research agencies will fare during this process. With a very short window open to handle such a complex package of bills, the committees are moving at a breakneck pace. Speaker Pelosi (D-CA) has set September 15th as the deadline for all the House committees to complete work on their assorted draft legislation. The House of Representatives is making quick work of their Budget Reconciliation bills and for good reason. Center for Evaluating the Research Pipeline.Creating Institutional Homes for Computing.National Virtual Computing Research Mentor Program (UR2PhD). ![]()
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