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 PRESIDENT’S FY 2000 BUDGET SEEKS
$746 MILLION FOR TECHNOLOGY ADMINISTRATION
TO POWER PROGRAMS FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE:
12:30 p.m., Feb. 1, 1999
         Contact: Michael Newman
               (301) 975-3025
                TA 99-01

President Clinton’s fiscal year 2000 budget request for the Commerce Department’s Technology Administration is $746 million, Commerce Secretary William Daley announced today.

Daley said, "We are in a new era, with a new kind of economy—one driven by technology. In the 21st century, to be economically competitive, all Americans and all American businesses must be technologically sophisticated. The President—and his budget for our Technology Administration—are firmly investing in the nation’s technology base in order to strengthen our economy, create new and better jobs, and ensure our future competitiveness."

Led by the Under Secretary for Technology, the Technology Administration includes the Office of the Under Secretary for Technology (including the Office of Space Commercialization), the Office of Technology Policy, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the National Technical Information Service.

Highlighting the FY 2000 budget request are:

The President’s FY 2000 request for TA breaks down as follows:

Following are detailed descriptions of the three requests summarized above:

Office of the Under Secretary for Technology/Office of Technology Policy

The FY 2000 request will enable US/OTP to serve: (1) as the federal government’s primary advocate for innovation and industrial competitiveness, analyst of civilian industrial technology issues, and incubator of new models of domestic and international technology cooperation; (2) as the government Secretariat of the Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles, a collaboration among the federal government, the auto industry, universities and hundreds of suppliers to aggressively develop technologies such as hybrid-electric vehicle drive systems, direct-injection engines, fuel cells and lightweight materials that will enable the production of highly fuel-efficient vehicles; (3) in the development of new national space policies; and (4) as administrator of the National Medal of Technology.

The FY 2000 request includes a decrease of $1.7 million for the Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Technology. EPSCoT, a program to stimulate technology commercialization and partnerships in states traditionally under-represented in federal R&D funding, will have completed two grant competitions by FY 2000, and most of the projects funded under the first competition will be complete or nearing completion. In FY 2000, US/OTP will assess the program’s direction and effectiveness.

National Institute of Standards and Technology

The FY 2000 budget request for NIST is divided into three appropriations:

This request includes:

- $285 million for the Measurement and Standards Laboratories. Included is $5.5 million to support three initiatives:

- $5 million for the Baldrige National Quality Program to manage the annual award competition, conduct the annual Quest for Excellence conference where Baldrige award winners share their performance excellence strategies, maintain a comprehensive database on state and local quality awards, and facilitate information sharing among all sectors of the U.S. economy.

This request provides:

-        $239 million for the Advanced Technology Program. This includes an additional $41.2 million over FY 1999 funding for the program which promotes industry’s ability to make technologically challenging efforts that have broad economic benefits. The funding, when combined with anticipated carryover and prior year recoveries, will permit approximately $73 million for new awards in FY 2000.

-        $100 million for the Manufacturing Extension Partnership. The request will permit NIST to continue providing the federal share of funding needed to support the network of centers serving smaller manufacturers in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. The overall decrease of $7 million from FY 1999 appropriations reflects a lower federal share of the centers’ operating costs since the federal share decreases as centers mature; the number of centers is not expected to change.

The request includes $1 million to gather, promote and effectively deploy to all MEP extension centers the highest-priority best practices.

The remaining $12 million would be used to address the highest priority projects among a substantial backlog of critical safety and maintenance needs.

National Technical Information Service

During its 50-year lifetime, NTIS has amassed more than 3 million items related to U.S. government research and compiled the most comprehensive collection of data and results from federal R&D. The agency had been able for many years to cover all necessary costs through fees for its products and services. In FY 2000, however, NTIS is requesting $2 million to partially fund activities to organize and preserve its information clearinghouse.

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NOTE TO EDITORS: A summary chart of the FY 2000 Technology Administration budget request is available at http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/budget/2000_chart.htm. Reporters needing more detail may obtain a more comprehensive document, "FY 2000 Technology Administration Budget Highlights," by calling (301) 975-2762, faxing a request to (301) 926-1630, or sending an electronic mail request to media@nist.gov.

The Budget Highlights also are available electronically on NIST’s World Wide Web site at http://www.nist.gov/public_affairs/budget/2000budget_hilite.htm.

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