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CNSF
Coalition
for National Science Foundation
1527 Eighteenth Street, NW Washington, DC 20036
(202) 588-1100
The
Coalition for National Science Funding (CNSF), a group of eighty scientific,
engineering, and professional
societies, universities, and corporations, commends Congress and the
Administration for providing the National Science Foundation (NSF) with the
largest dollar increase in the agency's history. The Coalition appreciates the
efforts of Senators Christopher "Kit" Bond and Barbara Mikulski to
double the NSF's budget, and the support of Representatives James Walsh and Alan
Mollohan for the NSF. We applaud the goal of doubling the NSF budget and the FY
2001 appropriation clearly sets us on the right path.
To maintain
this momentum, CNSF strongly urges the Administration and Congress to provide no
less than $5.1 billion, a 15% increase, for the NSF in FY 2002. We believe this
increase to be a necessary step toward doubling the NSF's budget by 2006.
Our
national knowledge base in the sciences, mathematics, and engineering is
increasingly important to broad economic and social interests. Doubling the NSF
budget by 2006 will fund the crucial investments that the agency makes in key
components of this vital knowledge base. These funds will permit investments in
the basic research needed to rejuvenate and stimulate core disciplines of
science, mathematics, and engineering, which are the underpinnings of
technological innovation.
The
primary source of federal support for non-medical basic research in colleges and
universities, the NSF is the only federal agency whose mission consists of
comprehensive support for the sciences and engineering. Equally important are
investments in people who will apply new knowledge and expand the frontiers of
science and engineering. Through its support of research and education programs,
the agency plays a vital role in training the next generation of scientists,
engineers, and mathematicians. Currently, the NSF must decline almost as many
highly-rated grant proposals as it can fund. Increased funding for the NSF will
not only enable the funding of more outstanding proposals that will help broaden
the nation's knowledge base, it will also enable the agency to increase the size
and duration of its grants.
Over
the past half century the NSF has had monumental impact on our society. The NSF
investment has paid dividends in building the infrastructure of the individual
scientific disciplines, as well as laid the groundwork for innovative
interdisciplinary research to meet modem day scientific and technical
challenges. Many new methods and products arise from the NSF investment in
research, such as geographic information systems, World Wide Web search engines,
automatic heart defibrillators, product bar codes, computer aided modeling
(CAD/CAM), retinal implants, optical fibers, magnetic resonance imaging
technology, and composite materials used in aircraft. NSF-sponsored research has
triggered huge advances in understanding our planet's natural processes, which
lead to providing a sound scientific framework for better decision-making about
earth's natural environment. These methods, products, and advances in
understanding accrue from basic research performed over many years, not always
pre-determined research efforts aimed toward a specific result. Furthermore, the
NSF traditionally receives high marks for efficiency - less than four percent of
the agency's budget is spent on administration and management.
For these reasons, CNSF
highly recommends that Congress and the Administration continue to invest in NSF
by providing, at a minimum, $5.1 billion for FY 2002, and work to double the
NSF's budget by 2006.
FY 2002 Endorsement List
American
Association of Engineering Societies
American Astronomical Society American Chemical Society
American Geological Institute
American Geophysical Union
American Meteorological Society
American Physical Society
American Physiological Society
American Political Science Association
American Psychological Association
American Psychological Society
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
American Society for Cell Biology
American Society for Engineering Education
ASEE Engineering Deans Council
American Society for Microbiology
American Society of Agronomy
American Society of Civil Engineers
American Society of Mechanical Engineers International, Council on Education
American Society of Plant Physiologists
American Sociological Association Associated Universities, Inc.
Association for Women in Mathematics
Association of American Geographers
Association of American Universities
Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors
Association of Research Libraries
Association of Systematics Collections
Battelle Memorial Institute
Biophysical Society
Coalition for Academic Scientific Computation Columbia University
Consortium of Social Science Associations Cornell University
Council for Chemical Research Council of Graduate Schools
Council on Undergraduate Research
Crop Science Society of America Ecological Society of America
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
Federation of Behavioral Psychological and Cognitive Sciences
Linguistic Society of America
Louisiana State University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Mathematical Association of America
Michigan State University
National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges
National Council for Science and the Environment
Northwestern University
Ohio State University
Pennsylvania State University
Princeton University
Rutgers University
Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics
Society for Neuroscience
Soil Science Society of America
State University of New York at Stony Brook
The California State University System
The International Society for Optical Engineering
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
University of California
University of California –Riverside
University of Michigan
University of North Carolina
University of Tennessee
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Virginia Tech
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