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ATP
Strikes Out in House, Gets On Base with Senate
April 25, 2005
Reprinted from
SSTI Weekly Digest, a publication of the State
Science and Technology Institute
While NIST's
Advanced Technology Program (ATP) is still engaged with its portfolio
of two-year awards from 2004, Congress did not appropriate any funding
for a 2005 solicitation cycle for new projects. The Administration's
fiscal year 2006 budget request recommended terminating the program
altogether. Since 1990, ATP has provided early-stage funding for
768 projects to accelerate the development of innovative technologies
that promise significant commercial payoffs and widespread benefits.
A key House Science subcommittee excluded the program in its approved
version of H.R. 250, a NIST authorization bill entitled "the
Manufacturing Technology Competitiveness Act of 2005." The
National Journal's Tech Daily reported March 15 that the bill will
be considered by the full House Science Committee next month.
Meanwhile, the
full Senate passed an amendment to the Senate's version of the budget
authorization bill on a 53-46 vote "expressing the sense of
the Senate urging the Senate Committee on Appropriations to make
efforts to fund the Advanced Technology Program, which supports
industry-led research and development of cutting-edge technologies
with broad commercial potential and societal benefits." Senate
Amendment 238 to S. Concurrent Resolution 18 was introduced by Senator
Carl Levin (D-MI) and co-sponsored by senators Jeff Bingaman (D-NM),
Mike DeWine (R-OH), John Kerry (D-MA), Leiberman (D-CT) and Debbie
Stabenow (D-MI).
The fate of
H.R. 250 remains to be seen, as a similar measure passed the full
House last year but did not survive the Senate. More critical, perhaps,
is what weight the Levin Amendment to the Budget Resolution will
carry through the budget process as significant differences in the
House and Senate versions of the FY06 budget authorization levels
remain to be reconciled.
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