عمومی | science mag

Final 2020 spending bill is kind to U.S. research

Most U.S. research agencies have received healthy increases for 2020 in a spending bill that resolves a 3-month deadlock between Democrats and Republicans in Congress.

Legislators released details today of how they plan to fund each federal agency for the 2020 fiscal year that ends on 30 September. In almost every case involving science, Congress agreed to give the agency an absolute increase--and much more money than the cuts President Donald Trump had often sought for them in his 2020 budget request last February.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH), for example, will receive a 7% boost, or $2.6 billion more, to $41.7 billion. The National Science Foundation (NSF) was given an additional $203 million, a 2.5% increase that lifts its budget to $8.28 billion. The budget of the Department of Energy’s Office of Science will grow by $415 million, or 6.3%, to exactly $7 billion, and space science at NASA will rise by 3.4%, or $233 million, to $7.14 billion.

Democrats in the House of Representatives struck a deal with Senate Republicans and the White House last July for $320 billion more in overall spending for 2020 and 2021 than would have occurred under a 2011 budget agreement aimed at reducing the federal deficit. The deal was sealed when Democrats agreed to more money this year for the military--$738 billion--and Trump acceded to higher spending on domestic programs, totaling $632 billion. But House and Senate leaders couldn’t agree on how to distribute the money among the 12 appropriation bills that set spending for individual agencies.

That logjam broke last week, and legislators then worked out the final details with a series of compromises. In return for higher defense spending, for example, Democrats won support for slashing Trump’s $8.6 billion request for a wall along the U.S.-Mexican border to $1.4 billion, along with a 3.1% civilian pay raise. Similar horse trading occurred on hundreds of other provisions.

Congress is expected to approve the massive spending bill in time for President Trump to sign it before the current spending freeze ends on 20 December. Here are some highlights: