The Senate Appropriations Committee would cut some science and technology budgets while allocating large increases for next-generation projects that include the Commerce Department’s polar satellite and NASA’s space telescope. The committee approved the Commerce, Justice, Science and related agencies spending package totaling $53 billion for fiscal 2012, $626 million below the fiscal year 2011 enacted level, according to a Sept. 15 news release.

Artistic rendition of NOAA’s JPSS…

Artist’s impression of the James Webb Space Telecope.
Credit: ESA
Other science programs would see reductions under the Senate bill. The National Science Foundation would get funding of $6.7 billion in fiscal 2012, $162 million below the current enacted level. The National Institute for Standards and Technology would receive $680 million, $70 million below the fiscal 2011 enacted level. The senators did not include any money for NIST’s Technology Innovation Program and Baldrige Excellence Program. The Senate has not yet voted on the appropriations bill, and the approved Senate bill needs to be reconciled with the final House version before the spending package can become law.


