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- Newsgroups: fj.sci.physics
- Path: sparky!uunet!ccut!s.u-tokyo!riksun!rikvax.riken.go.jp!ICHIHARA
- From: ichihara@rikvax.riken.go.jp (Takashi Ichihara)
- Subject: What's New for 12-18-92
- Message-ID: <1992Dec24.045950.11935@riksun.riken.go.jp>
- Sender: usenet@riksun.riken.go.jp
- Nntp-Posting-Host: rik835
- Reply-To: ichihara@rikvax.riken.go.jp
- Organization: RIKEN (The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research) 2-1 Hirosawa, Wako, Saitama, 351-01 Japan
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 04:59:50 GMT
- Lines: 57
-
-
- WHAT'S NEW (according to Bob), Friday, 18 Dec 92 Washington, DC
-
- 1. FY 1993 NSF OPERATING PLAN IS APPROVED--WITH A FEW EXCEPTIONS!
- At this point the plan itself is still a state secret; it was not
- shared even with NSF Division heads. Why such secrecy? Perhaps
- it was concern that some grantees would lobby the Appropriations
- Committees to urge that parts of the plan be rejected. In fact,
- some parts of the plan were disapproved. A letter signed by Sen.
- Mikulski (D-MD) and Bob Traxler (D-MI), lists several exceptions;
- curiously, no mention is made of the NSF strategic plan.
-
- 2. IN A TOUGH YEAR, LIGO SEEMS TO BE THE MOST CONTENTIOUS ISSUE.
- When it became clear that this was going to be a rotten year, NSF
- sought to scale back its $48M request for LIGO to $16M. Alas, the
- LIGO pitchmen did not let up. Over NSF objections, Congress ear-
- marked $38M for LIGO construction, with another $5M for LIGO R&D
- to be taken from Physics. Last year, Congress earmarked $2M more
- for LIGO than NSF requested--which was taken from the National
- High Magnetic Field Lab. In this year's operating plan, NSF tried
- to reduce LIGO to $25M, but the Appropriations Committees did not
- agree to the reduction, and the Mikulski/Traxler letter instructs
- NSF to go ahead and allocate the $5M to LIGO from Physics. The
- letter does call for a meeting between Committee staff and NSF
- officials in early January to resolve the disagreement. Walter
- Massey has already met with Sen. Bennett Johnston (D-LA), chair
- of the Appropriations Committee, to plead for the lower figure,
- but reportedly got nowhere. One LIGO site will be in Louisiana.
-
- 3. THE MOST POLITICAL ISSUE WAS CLEARLY THE RELOCATION OF NSF.
- Mikulski returned fire in the war between Maryland and Virginia.
- In a letter to President Bush, Rep. Frank Wolf (R-VA) urged the
- immediate firing of NSF Director Walter Massey for his refusal to
- relocate NSF to a site in Wolf's district. It all began in 1987,
- when then-Director Erich Bloch asked GSA for new office space. A
- site in Arlington, VA was selected in 1990 that would save the
- taxpayers $81M, according to a GAO report. Sen. Mikulski (D-MD),
- favors a move--but to the Maryland side of the Potomac. In March,
- the White House ordered Massey to move, but no money for the move
- was ever appropriated, since Mikulski controls the spigot. The
- money would have to come out of research, and NSF, which is two
- blocks from the White House, is not anxious to move to the burbs
- anyway. On the same day that Wolf called for firing Massey for
- not moving, the Mikulski/Traxler letter ordered Massey to stay
- put: "With regard to the proposed move, we direct the Foundation
- to withhold from taking any actions, including expenditure or
- receipt of funds, to initiate such a move." A few days later,
- Sen. Robb (D-VA) wrote to Vernon Jordan, Director of the Clinton
- Transition, charging that Massey had lobbied Congress to withhold
- funds for a move and asking for assurances that the Clinton
- Administration would not revisit the question of where to locate
- NSF. But with Robb facing indictment on charges of conspiracy to
- violate wiretap laws, it's not clear how much influence he has.
-
- Robert L. Park (202) 662-8700 The American Physical Society
-
- To: WHATSNEW(Personal Dist. List)
-