Peter Freeman, head of NSF’s Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE) Directorate announced today that he’ll be leaving the post in January to take over a new position with the Washington Advisory Group. This isn’t a huge surprise as Peter’s term as Assistant Director of NSF was due to expire in early 2007. Hopefully this also means that the search for Peter’s replacement is nearing its completion, too. The job of AD CISE is a pretty thankless one even in the best of times. [Updated…see below.] Peter has presided over a period in which the pressure on NSF funding for computing has probably never been greater. The field has grown significantly — both in breadth and in number of faculty — budgets have been relatively flat (on a constant dollar basis), and one historically key source of research funding for computing (DARPA) has scaled back its role significantly. For the duration of Peter’s term, NSF has essentially been the only game in town for fundamental computing research funding. Dealing with the corresponding rise in proposal pressure and decline in award rates can’t have been much fun. His reorganization of the Directorate helped provide some much needed flexibility.
Peter’s legacy as AD may be his drive to get the community to “think bigger and bolder” with projects like the proposed Global Environment for Networking Innovations (GENI) and the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) (which CRA is convening). It will also be his ardent belief in the need to increase the participation of women and minorities in computing. Under his watch, CISE established the Broadening Participation in Computing program, which is already making its mark on the field.
It’s good to know that Peter will remain here in Washington, putting to good use what he’s learned about how science policy works (or doesn’t) inside the Beltway. The community can surely use all the help it can get. We here at CRA World HQ wish him all the best in his new role!
Here’s Peter’s official announcement:
Tuesday, November 28, 2006
Peter Freeman, Assistant Director of the NSF for Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE), announced today that he will leave NSF in January to become a Director at the prestigious Washington Advisory Group. The Washington Advisory Group provides strategic counsel and management consulting to the leaders of companies, universities, governments and non-profit organizations. It was founded in 1996 by a group of leaders in national science policy and research funding, including Erich Bloch, former Director of NSF.
Dr. Freeman has led CISE since 2002, having come from Georgia Tech, where he was Founding Dean of Computing and continues as an emeritus professor. “Dr. Freeman’s tenure at NSF was filled with many valuable achievements” stated Dr. Arden Bement. Dr. Freeman led the Information Technology Research Program, oversaw a comprehensive reorganization of CISE, helped lead the elevation of cyberinfrastructure to a major activity across NSF, initiated the GENI Internet Research project, coordinated homeland security research across NSF, and substantially expanded cybersecurity R&D. He was instrumental in starting several key CISE programs, including Broadening Participation in Computing, Science of Design, Revitalizing Computing Education, and the Computing Community Consortium. He also served as co-chair of the NSTC Subcommittee on Networking and Information Technology R&D (NITRD).
In addition to consulting, Dr. Freeman will remain active in the computing community and with Georgia Tech. He will continue living in Washington.
We’ll have word on Peter’s replacement whenever we learn who it might be. Update: (11/30/2006) — Peter Freeman wrote to take issue with my characterization of the AD job as “thankless.” Of course he’s right. I was being a bit glib while trying to thank him for the effort he’s put forth in a challenging, but apparently very rewarding position. With his permission, here’s some of what he wrote:
I want to take exception to your comment that the AD job is “pretty thankless.” I have actually received a lot of thanks over the past 5 years in the formal sense and even more in the informal sense of it being an extremely rewarding job. In many ways, it has been absolutely the best position I have ever had because of the opportunity to make a difference for our community, science, and the entire Nation. It also has been extremely invigorating intellectually, collegially, and just on a daily basis. Perks like a trip to the South Pole, many of the big science sites in this country, attending interesting functions in official Washington, and the opportunity to play on the international stage (meaningfully) only add to the personal rewards. Finally, of course, is the sense of having been able to give back at least as much as the field has given to me.
Also, I should note that the official NSF announcement of Peter’s departure is now featured on NSF’s website.
As mentioned previously in this space, the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation held a press conference for the release of the Benchmarks II report on Thursday. Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, David Abshire, President of the Center for the Study of the Presidency, and Larry Wortzel, Chairman of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission and Vice President for Foreign Policy at the Heritage Foundation addressed a full house of Congressional staff, reporters, and other interested members of the DC crowd. This years Benchmarks report, called Measuring the Moment: Innovation, National Security, and Economic Competitiveness, focused more on defense and homeland security related research than the previous report. National Journals Technology Daily and GovExec.com both ran an article on the event and report. A bit from the article:
A group of high-tech leaders and national security experts is asking President Bush to include basic defense research in his American competitiveness initiative.
The Task Force on the Future of American Innovation backed the request Thursday with a new report that warns that while funding for military research and development is at a record high, recent increases have focused on applying existing ideas to new weapons and equipment.
“We have been under-investing in the basic research needed for the next-generation military technology,” the report warned. The task force was formed in 2004 to advocate for more federal support for research in the physical sciences and engineering
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said the long-term goal should be not just combating terrorism but leading in science by investing in national security advances. “Otherwise we’ll have opponents that have scientific capabilities we don’t understand,” Gingrich said.
He added that his biggest mistake as House speaker in the mid-1990s was not also tripling the National Science Foundation budget when Republicans doubled the National Institutes of Health budget.
Well keep you updated on the Task Forces activities, press coverage of the report, and any impact it might have moving forward as we work with the Congress through the end of the year and into the next budget cycle.
A PDF of the Benchmarks II report can be found here.
NSF Director Arden Bement encouraged colleges and universities to expand high speed networking tools as a path to innovation in a speech to The Chronicle of Higher Educations Technology Forum yesterday. The Chronicle article on the speech is available for free here for the next five days and then to subscribers only here.
A couple highlights from the speech and article:
“Leadership in cyberinfrastructure may well become the major determinant in measuring pre-eminence in higher education among nations,” he said. “Indeed, to be even more provocative, I would suggest that leadership in cyberinfrastructure may determine America’s continued ability to innovate — and thus our ability to compete successfully in the global arena….”
Mr. Bement said cyberinfrastructure was a “comprehensive phenomenon that involves creation, dissemination, preservation, and application of knowledge.” He said it was not just about building new networking tools, but new “norms of practice and rules, incentives, and constraints that shape individual and collective action.”
In the previous entry, I mentioned that the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation (of which CRA is a member) was planning an event on November 16th to release its “Benchmarks II” report and press Congress to finish its good work on funding the President’s American Competitiveness Initiative. Well, we can now share some details about it. Should be a good event!:
** MEDIA ADVISORY **
WHO:
Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the House
David Abshire, President, Center for the Study of the Presidency, former Special Counsel to President Reagan and former Ambassador to NATO
Larry Wortzel, Chairman, U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission and Vice President for Foreign Policy, Heritage Foundation
Rep. Jim Cooper (D-TN), House Armed Services Committee.
WHAT:
1. Participants will challenge the Administration and Congress to provide greater Defense Department funding of basic research.
2. Participants will support full funding of President Bush’s American Competitiveness Initiative.
3. Release of the 2006 Benchmarks Report of the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation. To read 2005 report, go to http://futureofinnovation.org/PDF/Benchmarks.pdf (pdf).
WHERE:
Reserve Officers Association
One Constitution Avenue, NE
5th Floor Conference Room
WHEN: Thursday, November 16, 11:00 AM to Noon
– # # # –
The Task Force on the Future of American Innovation (www.futureofinovation.org), comprised of organizations from industry and academia, advocates increased federal support for research in the physical sciences and engineering.
Formed in 2004, the Task Force urges strong, sustained increases for research budgets at the National Science Foundation, Department of Energy Office of Science, National Institute of Standards and Technology, and Department of Defense.
For more information, to RSVP, or to request an embargoed copy of the report, please contact:
Anne Caliguiri
202.682.4443
anne_caliguiri@aeanet.org
Barry Toiv
202.408.7500
barry_toiv@aau.edu
So, the bloodshed appears to have ended for the moment and the Dems are now in charge of both the House and the Senate. The obvious question is: “What’s in it for us? (the computing research community)” The short answer at the moment is: I dunno. Lots of questions remain unanswered about how the remainder of the 109th Congress will play out and how the 110th Congress will organize and move forward, but here are some thoughts.
The immediate legislative concern of many of us in the science advocacy community is the status of the NSF, NIST and DOE appropriations increases called for in the President’s American Competitiveness Initiative and currently tied up in the unfinished Science, State, Justice, Commerce and Energy and Water appropriations bills. The big question is whether the current congressional leadership will want to make progress on the bills in the lame-duck session starting next week, or simply punt the problems to the Democrats in the new Congress next year. The current conventional wisdom is that the GOP will probably push through a new “continuing resolution” that will continue to fund the federal government at the FY 06 levels through February 2007 and leave the challenge of passing the 11 outstanding appropriations bills to the Democratic leadership to deal with when they take over. Part of the motivation here is that the FY 07 Defense Appropriations bill passed by Congress before the election actually busted the budget caps by about $5 billion — money that would have to be found in the remaining bills.
There is some incentive for taking care of business now on both sides of the aisle, if it can be done. One reason is that these appropriations bills are, as usual, loaded with earmarks for just about every member of Congress to insure their passage. Starting the current approps process over from scratch next Congress puts those earmarks at risk. Another motivation is that the Democrats would rather not have to make the tough decisions that will be required to hit the budget caps with the current approps bills — and starting from scratch on FY 07, while simultaneously beginning the FY 08 budget process, is a lot to do.
As we’ve noted before, we would much rather Congress take care of business now — either by passing the appropriations bills individually (under “regular order”) or as part of an omnibus that preserves the ACI increases. Passing a continuing resolution and beginning the process anew in February puts all of the ACI gains we’ve worked hard for this year at risk (at least for FY 07). It does appear that Congress — or at least the Senate — will be in session for much of December working on the confirmation of Robert Gates as the new Secretary of Defense (more on that below). So there’s at least the opportunity for Congress to act during the lame-duck to finish their work on appropriations. Just not sure there’s the will.
CRA will help make the case for acting now at an event next week we’re participating in as part of the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation. You’ll recall that the Task Force released a report last year (“Benchmarks of Our Innovation Future”) that we endorsed (and actually helped produce) that helped drive much of the debate within the Administration about the need to address some of the competitiveness concerns that American universities and, increasingly, American companies were raising. We’ve updated the report for 2006, added a bit of a national security angle as well, and will be releasing it at a press conference on Thursday, Nov 16th, with some remarks by a few Washington notables (keep tuned here for details…should be worth the wait). The point of the report is to note that though the U.S. continues to hold a dominant position in the global economy, that position isn’t guaranteed and, indeed, many trends suggest it’s at risk long-term. The report highlights the importance of federal support for fundamental research as a key point in the innovation chain necessary for insuring our continued global competitiveness. We’ll use the event to call on Congress to finish their work on ACI-related issues — especially finishing the already agreed-to but not passed appropriations bills that would fund NSF, NIST and DOE. We’ll have more on the report in a few days.
The industry members of the Task Force have also once again chosen to weigh in heavily. Most recently, the Business Roundtable today ran two <a href=nice (pdf) full-page ads (pdf) — one in the Washington Post, one in the NY Times — urging Congress to act in a bipartisan way and address the outstanding competitiveness issues.
Over the longer term (at least for FY 08 and FY 09), we should be in good shape with a Democratic congress. The Democratic Innovation Agenda was very similar to what became the President’s American Competitiveness Agenda. Both are heavily influenced by the National Academies “Rising Above the Gathering Storm” report. The Democrats might place more emphasis on federal education efforts (NSF EHR) and “applied and industrial” R&D (NIST ATP and MEP) than the Republicans have, and may place more emphasis on workforce/offshoring issues, but should otherwise share a similar commitment to increasing the research budgets of NSF, NIST, NOAA, NIH and DOE.
There are, however, a few things though that could skew the picture a bit. The first is that it’s not clear exactly how Democratic priorities will impact upcoming apporpriations. While support for the federal role in fundamental research is bipartisan at the “meta” level, there are some differences at the agency level. Though the Democrats were generally supportive of the “physical sciences” thrust of the ACI, they were not as pleased with the relative deemphasis of NIH funding in the President’s plan. Because the budget environment hasn’t changed significantly — there will still not be any significant amount of “new” money in the budget — any effort to increase the relatively flat NIH budget will necissitate cuts elsewhere. Will that put other research budgets at risk?
Another potentially complicating factor is that we have no idea at this point whether the Democratic leadership will want to make significant changes to the existing committee structure — something well within their power to do. Altering how the appropriations committees are laid out, or even how the authorizing committees are assembled (what subcommittees will exist, what their jurisdictions will be), could have a substantial impact on the way science policy gets implemented in Congress. (You can see here what we thought about Republican plans to reorganize the committee structure back in ’05.)
One other change — one that has the potential to improve the computing research community’s fortunes a bit — is the resignation of Donald Rumsfeld as Sec. of Defense and the nomination of current Texas A&M University president Robert Gates to succeed him. As a close friend of the President, Gates has, for the last couple of years, been one of the people the higher-ed community has looked to often to help carry the message of the importance of federal support for fundamental research to the Administration. As a result, he should be familiar not only with our basic issues, but also have a decent familiarity with the science advocacy community here in town. Hopefully, that means he’d be a bit more open to listening to the concerns of our community than the current DOD leadership has been.
So lots of changes ahead, but much of the agenda — at least the agenda related to issues important to the computing research community — will likely remain the same. We’ll have additional updates when we have some sense of how the Democrats and GOP will choose to organize their leadership and committee structures. And we’ll provide quick updates as soon as we know anything at all about how appropriations are going to shake out. Update: From today’s Washington Post:
Pelosi said that Democratic leaders want to demonstrate their effectiveness, and build up some trust with the White House, by tackling legislation that will have bipartisan support. Bush’s “innovation agenda,” laid out last year in his State of the Union address, has largely lain dormant. Democrats would like to take up Bush’s proposals to expand funding for basic research and alternative energy sources such as ethanol, she said.
We are pleased to announce that the following individuals have agreed to serve on the interim CCC Council. The interim Council will begin immediately to implement the activities envisioned in the CCC proposal (see www.cra.org/ccc or the November 2006 Computing Research News).
Greg Andrews, Arizona
Bill Feiereisen, LANL
Susan Graham, California-Berkeley
Jessica Hodgins, CMU
John Hollerbach, Utah
Daniel Jackson, MIT
Anita Jones, Virginia
Dick Karp, California-Berkeley
Ken Kennedy, Rice
John King, Michigan
Peter Kogge, Notre Dame
Ed Lazowska, Washington
Ran Liebskind-Hadas, HMC
Dan Ling, Microsoft
Dan Reed, UNC
Frances Sullivan, IDA
David Tennenhouse, A9
Ellen Zegura, Georgia Tech
We are currently constituting a Nominating Committee to generate potential appointees to the more permanent (rotating three-year terms) CCC Council and Chair. Our intent is to move quickly towards appointing this group.
CSIA R&D Strategic Issues
CSIA R&D Technical Topics and Priorities (as listed in the request)
CSIA R&D Roadmap
R&D Recommendations in the Federal Plan
CSIA is looking for papers to be submitted by November 30 but the submission guidelines state: White papers submitted by January 31, 2007 will be used to the greatest extent possible.
For questions or more information visit the web site or contact Dr. Ernest McDuffie at csia-comments@nitrd.gov or 703.292.4504.
The Government Accountability Office has just released its report (pdf) on the state of Federal Coordination for Cyber Security R&D requested by the House Committee on Government Reform. It’s goal wasn’t to assess the state of the research portfolio, but to look at how the agencies coordinate. Here’s what they recommended:
To strengthen cyber security research and development programs, we recommend that the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy take the following action:
Establish firm timelines for the completion of the federal cyber security R&D agenda that includes near-term, mid-term, and long-term research. Such an agenda should include the following elements:
timelines and milestones for conducting research and development activities;
goals and measures for evaluating research and development activities;
assignment of responsibility for implementation, including the accomplishment of the focus areas and suggested research priorities; and
the alignment of funding priorities with technical priorities.
We also recommend that the Director of the Office of Management and Budget implement the following action:
Issue guidance to agencies on reporting information about federally funded cyber security R&D projects to the governmentwide repositories.
The report is here (pdf). It’s a pretty quick read at only 30 pages. GCN.com have online coverage here.
OSTP apparently had no comment on the recommendations in the GAO report. The establishment of a research agenda for federal cyber security R&D was also a recommendation and focus of the PITAC report Cyber Security R&D: A Crisis of Prioritization. The committee laid out in the 2005 report ten specific research areas it felt warranted prioritization, along with recommending immediate increases to the cyber security research budgets of NSF, DARPA and DHS (but especially NSF, which they felt was really carrying the load for fundamental, long-term cyber security research). While progress on these funding recommendations has been slow, NITRD has added a Cyber Security and Information Assurance working group into its interagency planning effort….
While CRA highly encourages all computing research community members to attend the annual Congressional Visit Days held in Washington, DC throughout the year, we know it is sometimes difficult to take two or three days to come to the Capitol. Since it is important that everyone be involved in the process and meet with their Representative and Senators, we are adding a space to the CRA Government Affairs web site regarding advocacy through district visits. Visiting your members of Congress while they are in your neighborhood is an equally effective and less time consuming way to express how important federal funding for computer research is to you and your community and is usually more low-key and less chaotic than similar meetings in DC. In doing a district visit, please be sure to keep your institutions government affairs contact informed as he or she can give valuable advice and assistance. To find out who your Representative is, visit Write Your Representative.
The 2007 Congressional and Senate calendars have not been published and things are a bit up in the air regarding sessions at the end of this year. As soon as recess schedules are announced we will list them on the web site. Please visit the new District Visits portion of the web site for updates to the recess listings and as always if you have questions or need assistance with making an appointment, contact Melissa Norr in CRA’s Government Affairs office at mnorr@cra.org or 202.234.2111 ext. 111.
Steve Lohr has a great piece today in the NY Times on the state of CS, called “Computing, 2016: What Won’t be Possible?” The essay was apparently spurred by last week’s CSTB’s 20th Anniversary symposium, which I regret that I couldn’t attend. (Fortunately Cameron and David from ACM’s U.S. Public Policy Committee did and have some greatwrite-ups.)
Here’s a snippet from the NY Times piece:
Computer science is not only a comparatively young field, but also one that has had to prove it is really science. Skeptics in academia would often say that after Alan Turing described the concept of the universal machine in the late 1930s the idea that a computer in theory could be made to do the work of any kind of calculating machine, including the human brain all that remained to be done was mere engineering.
The more generous perspective today is that decades of stunningly rapid advances in processing speed, storage and networking, along with the development of increasingly clever software, have brought computing into science, business and culture in ways that were barely imagined years ago. The quantitative changes delivered through smart engineering opened the door to qualitative changes.
Computing changes what can be seen, simulated and done. So in science, computing makes it possible to simulate climate change and unravel the human genome. In business, low-cost computing, the Internet and digital communications are transforming the global economy. In culture, the artifacts of computing include the iPod, YouTube and computer-animated movies.
Whats next? That was the subject of a symposium in Washington this month held by the Computer Science and Telecommunications Board, which is part of the National Academies and the nations leading advisory board on science and technology.
Glad to see that the CSTB event succeeded in getting the message across that computing is a discipline still rich with challenges and contributions to make. Let’s hope this piece gets as wide a circulation (and has as big an impact) as this previous NY Times piece….
You can read all of Lohr’s piece today here.
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Freeman to Step Down as AD CISE at NSF in January
/In: People /by Peter HarshaPeter Freeman, head of NSF’s Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE) Directorate announced today that he’ll be leaving the post in January to take over a new position with the Washington Advisory Group. This isn’t a huge surprise as Peter’s term as Assistant Director of NSF was due to expire in early 2007. Hopefully this also means that the search for Peter’s replacement is nearing its completion, too.
The job of AD CISE is a pretty thankless one even in the best of times.[Updated…see below.] Peter has presided over a period in which the pressure on NSF funding for computing has probably never been greater. The field has grown significantly — both in breadth and in number of faculty — budgets have been relatively flat (on a constant dollar basis), and one historically key source of research funding for computing (DARPA) has scaled back its role significantly. For the duration of Peter’s term, NSF has essentially been the only game in town for fundamental computing research funding. Dealing with the corresponding rise in proposal pressure and decline in award rates can’t have been much fun. His reorganization of the Directorate helped provide some much needed flexibility.Peter’s legacy as AD may be his drive to get the community to “think bigger and bolder” with projects like the proposed Global Environment for Networking Innovations (GENI) and the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) (which CRA is convening). It will also be his ardent belief in the need to increase the participation of women and minorities in computing. Under his watch, CISE established the Broadening Participation in Computing program, which is already making its mark on the field.
It’s good to know that Peter will remain here in Washington, putting to good use what he’s learned about how science policy works (or doesn’t) inside the Beltway. The community can surely use all the help it can get. We here at CRA World HQ wish him all the best in his new role!
Here’s Peter’s official announcement:
We’ll have word on Peter’s replacement whenever we learn who it might be.
Update: (11/30/2006) — Peter Freeman wrote to take issue with my characterization of the AD job as “thankless.” Of course he’s right. I was being a bit glib while trying to thank him for the effort he’s put forth in a challenging, but apparently very rewarding position. With his permission, here’s some of what he wrote:
Also, I should note that the official NSF announcement of Peter’s departure is now featured on NSF’s website.
Task Force Releases Benchmarks II
/In: American Competitiveness Initiative, Funding, FY07 Appropriations, Policy, R&D in the Press /by MelissaNorrAs mentioned previously in this space, the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation held a press conference for the release of the Benchmarks II report on Thursday. Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, David Abshire, President of the Center for the Study of the Presidency, and Larry Wortzel, Chairman of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission and Vice President for Foreign Policy at the Heritage Foundation addressed a full house of Congressional staff, reporters, and other interested members of the DC crowd. This years Benchmarks report, called Measuring the Moment: Innovation, National Security, and Economic Competitiveness, focused more on defense and homeland security related research than the previous report.
National Journals Technology Daily and GovExec.com both ran an article on the event and report. A bit from the article:
Well keep you updated on the Task Forces activities, press coverage of the report, and any impact it might have moving forward as we work with the Congress through the end of the year and into the next budget cycle.
A PDF of the Benchmarks II report can be found here.
Highlighting Cyberinfrastructure
/In: American Competitiveness Initiative, Funding, People, R&D in the Press, Research /by MelissaNorrNSF Director Arden Bement encouraged colleges and universities to expand high speed networking tools as a path to innovation in a speech to The Chronicle of Higher Educations Technology Forum yesterday. The Chronicle article on the speech is available for free here for the next five days and then to subscribers only here.
A couple highlights from the speech and article:
Task Force Event Thursday!
/In: American Competitiveness Initiative, Funding, FY07 Appropriations, Policy, R&D in the Press /by Peter HarshaIn the previous entry, I mentioned that the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation (of which CRA is a member) was planning an event on November 16th to release its “Benchmarks II” report and press Congress to finish its good work on funding the President’s American Competitiveness Initiative. Well, we can now share some details about it. Should be a good event!:
Watch this space for all the details….
Post-Election: Where do we stand?
/In: American Competitiveness Initiative, Funding, FY07 Appropriations, Policy /by Peter HarshaSo, the bloodshed appears to have ended for the moment and the Dems are now in charge of both the House and the Senate. The obvious question is: “What’s in it for us? (the computing research community)” The short answer at the moment is: I dunno. Lots of questions remain unanswered about how the remainder of the 109th Congress will play out and how the 110th Congress will organize and move forward, but here are some thoughts.
The immediate legislative concern of many of us in the science advocacy community is the status of the NSF, NIST and DOE appropriations increases called for in the President’s American Competitiveness Initiative and currently tied up in the unfinished Science, State, Justice, Commerce and Energy and Water appropriations bills. The big question is whether the current congressional leadership will want to make progress on the bills in the lame-duck session starting next week, or simply punt the problems to the Democrats in the new Congress next year. The current conventional wisdom is that the GOP will probably push through a new “continuing resolution” that will continue to fund the federal government at the FY 06 levels through February 2007 and leave the challenge of passing the 11 outstanding appropriations bills to the Democratic leadership to deal with when they take over. Part of the motivation here is that the FY 07 Defense Appropriations bill passed by Congress before the election actually busted the budget caps by about $5 billion — money that would have to be found in the remaining bills.
There is some incentive for taking care of business now on both sides of the aisle, if it can be done. One reason is that these appropriations bills are, as usual, loaded with earmarks for just about every member of Congress to insure their passage. Starting the current approps process over from scratch next Congress puts those earmarks at risk. Another motivation is that the Democrats would rather not have to make the tough decisions that will be required to hit the budget caps with the current approps bills — and starting from scratch on FY 07, while simultaneously beginning the FY 08 budget process, is a lot to do.
As we’ve noted before, we would much rather Congress take care of business now — either by passing the appropriations bills individually (under “regular order”) or as part of an omnibus that preserves the ACI increases. Passing a continuing resolution and beginning the process anew in February puts all of the ACI gains we’ve worked hard for this year at risk (at least for FY 07). It does appear that Congress — or at least the Senate — will be in session for much of December working on the confirmation of Robert Gates as the new Secretary of Defense (more on that below). So there’s at least the opportunity for Congress to act during the lame-duck to finish their work on appropriations. Just not sure there’s the will.
CRA will help make the case for acting now at an event next week we’re participating in as part of the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation. You’ll recall that the Task Force released a report last year (“Benchmarks of Our Innovation Future”) that we endorsed (and actually helped produce) that helped drive much of the debate within the Administration about the need to address some of the competitiveness concerns that American universities and, increasingly, American companies were raising. We’ve updated the report for 2006, added a bit of a national security angle as well, and will be releasing it at a press conference on Thursday, Nov 16th, with some remarks by a few Washington notables (keep tuned here for details…should be worth the wait). The point of the report is to note that though the U.S. continues to hold a dominant position in the global economy, that position isn’t guaranteed and, indeed, many trends suggest it’s at risk long-term. The report highlights the importance of federal support for fundamental research as a key point in the innovation chain necessary for insuring our continued global competitiveness. We’ll use the event to call on Congress to finish their work on ACI-related issues — especially finishing the already agreed-to but not passed appropriations bills that would fund NSF, NIST and DOE. We’ll have more on the report in a few days.
The industry members of the Task Force have also once again chosen to weigh in heavily. Most recently, the Business Roundtable today ran two <a href=nice (pdf) full-page ads (pdf) — one in the Washington Post, one in the NY Times — urging Congress to act in a bipartisan way and address the outstanding competitiveness issues.
Over the longer term (at least for FY 08 and FY 09), we should be in good shape with a Democratic congress. The Democratic Innovation Agenda was very similar to what became the President’s American Competitiveness Agenda. Both are heavily influenced by the National Academies “Rising Above the Gathering Storm” report. The Democrats might place more emphasis on federal education efforts (NSF EHR) and “applied and industrial” R&D (NIST ATP and MEP) than the Republicans have, and may place more emphasis on workforce/offshoring issues, but should otherwise share a similar commitment to increasing the research budgets of NSF, NIST, NOAA, NIH and DOE.
There are, however, a few things though that could skew the picture a bit. The first is that it’s not clear exactly how Democratic priorities will impact upcoming apporpriations. While support for the federal role in fundamental research is bipartisan at the “meta” level, there are some differences at the agency level. Though the Democrats were generally supportive of the “physical sciences” thrust of the ACI, they were not as pleased with the relative deemphasis of NIH funding in the President’s plan. Because the budget environment hasn’t changed significantly — there will still not be any significant amount of “new” money in the budget — any effort to increase the relatively flat NIH budget will necissitate cuts elsewhere. Will that put other research budgets at risk?
Another potentially complicating factor is that we have no idea at this point whether the Democratic leadership will want to make significant changes to the existing committee structure — something well within their power to do. Altering how the appropriations committees are laid out, or even how the authorizing committees are assembled (what subcommittees will exist, what their jurisdictions will be), could have a substantial impact on the way science policy gets implemented in Congress. (You can see here what we thought about Republican plans to reorganize the committee structure back in ’05.)
One other change — one that has the potential to improve the computing research community’s fortunes a bit — is the resignation of Donald Rumsfeld as Sec. of Defense and the nomination of current Texas A&M University president Robert Gates to succeed him. As a close friend of the President, Gates has, for the last couple of years, been one of the people the higher-ed community has looked to often to help carry the message of the importance of federal support for fundamental research to the Administration. As a result, he should be familiar not only with our basic issues, but also have a decent familiarity with the science advocacy community here in town. Hopefully, that means he’d be a bit more open to listening to the concerns of our community than the current DOD leadership has been.
So lots of changes ahead, but much of the agenda — at least the agenda related to issues important to the computing research community — will likely remain the same. We’ll have additional updates when we have some sense of how the Democrats and GOP will choose to organize their leadership and committee structures. And we’ll provide quick updates as soon as we know anything at all about how appropriations are going to shake out.
Update: From today’s Washington Post:
So, that’s a good thing.
From “Reid, Pelosi Expected to Keep Tight Rein in Both Chambers.”
CRA Appoints Interim Computing Community Consortium Council
/In: Computing Community Consortium (CCC), CRA /by Peter HarshaFrom CRA Executive Director Andy Bernat:
Previous coverage of the CCC.
Cyber Security Road Map
/In: Policy, Research, Security /by MelissaNorrNITRD is asking the computing community for input on a roadmap for cyber security R&D called for in the Federal Plan for Cyber Security and Information Assurance Research and Development. Individuals from academic institutions, industry, government research labs and development centers, and international organizations are encouraged to submit white papers. The request was put out by the Cyber Security and Information Assurance Interagency Working Group.
The CSIA request includes submission guidelines, background and scope, and questions that the white papers need to address. The broad topics that the questions are under are:
CSIA is looking for papers to be submitted by November 30 but the submission guidelines state: White papers submitted by January 31, 2007 will be used to the greatest extent possible.
For questions or more information visit the web site or contact Dr. Ernest McDuffie at csia-comments@nitrd.gov or 703.292.4504.
GAO Report on Cyber Security R&D
/In: Security /by Peter HarshaThe Government Accountability Office has just released its report (pdf) on the state of Federal Coordination for Cyber Security R&D requested by the House Committee on Government Reform. It’s goal wasn’t to assess the state of the research portfolio, but to look at how the agencies coordinate. Here’s what they recommended:
The report is here (pdf). It’s a pretty quick read at only 30 pages.
GCN.com have online coverage here.
OSTP apparently had no comment on the recommendations in the GAO report. The establishment of a research agenda for federal cyber security R&D was also a recommendation and focus of the PITAC report Cyber Security R&D: A Crisis of Prioritization. The committee laid out in the 2005 report ten specific research areas it felt warranted prioritization, along with recommending immediate increases to the cyber security research budgets of NSF, DARPA and DHS (but especially NSF, which they felt was really carrying the load for fundamental, long-term cyber security research). While progress on these funding recommendations has been slow, NITRD has added a Cyber Security and Information Assurance working group into its interagency planning effort….
Visiting Congress At Home
/In: Events, People, Policy /by MelissaNorrWhile CRA highly encourages all computing research community members to attend the annual Congressional Visit Days held in Washington, DC throughout the year, we know it is sometimes difficult to take two or three days to come to the Capitol. Since it is important that everyone be involved in the process and meet with their Representative and Senators, we are adding a space to the CRA Government Affairs web site regarding advocacy through district visits. Visiting your members of Congress while they are in your neighborhood is an equally effective and less time consuming way to express how important federal funding for computer research is to you and your community and is usually more low-key and less chaotic than similar meetings in DC. In doing a district visit, please be sure to keep your institutions government affairs contact informed as he or she can give valuable advice and assistance. To find out who your Representative is, visit Write Your Representative.
The 2007 Congressional and Senate calendars have not been published and things are a bit up in the air regarding sessions at the end of this year. As soon as recess schedules are announced we will list them on the web site. Please visit the new District Visits portion of the web site for updates to the recess listings and as always if you have questions or need assistance with making an appointment, contact Melissa Norr in CRA’s Government Affairs office at mnorr@cra.org or 202.234.2111 ext. 111.
NY Times on Computing’s Future
/In: R&D in the Press /by Peter HarshaSteve Lohr has a great piece today in the NY Times on the state of CS, called “Computing, 2016: What Won’t be Possible?” The essay was apparently spurred by last week’s CSTB’s 20th Anniversary symposium, which I regret that I couldn’t attend. (Fortunately Cameron and David from ACM’s U.S. Public Policy Committee did and have some great write-ups.)
Here’s a snippet from the NY Times piece:
Glad to see that the CSTB event succeeded in getting the message across that computing is a discipline still rich with challenges and contributions to make. Let’s hope this piece gets as wide a circulation (and has as big an impact) as this previous NY Times piece….
You can read all of Lohr’s piece today here.