February 06, 2006
From an external source
Christine Gunderson/Dan Nelson
202-482-4883
Commerce Department FY 2007 Budget Maintains Commitment to Job Growth and U.S. Competitiveness
COMMERCE DEPARTMENT FY 2007 BUDGET MAINTAINS COMMITMENT TO JOB GROWTH AND U.S. COMPETITIVENESS
For Immediate Release
WASHINGTON, D.C
. – U.S. Commerce Secretary Carlos M. Gutierrez today
announced that President Bush’s $6.1 billion budget
request for the U.S. Department of Commerce maintains the
Department’s priorities of promoting job growth and U.S.
competitiveness while also restraining discretionary Federal
spending.
“This budget request reflects President Bush’s
commitment to maintaining a strong and vibrant economy that
enables U.S. businesses to innovate, compete and succeed in the
global marketplace,” said Gutierrez. “This
administration is determined to continue providing American
entrepreneurs and workers with the tools they need to fuel our
economy while also reining in federal spending.”
The Commerce Department’s budget will focus on its main goals of providing information and tools to maximize U.S. competitiveness; fostering science and technological leadership, including protecting intellectual property rights; and observing, protecting and managing the earth’s resources to promote environmental stewardship.
Maximizing Competitiveness and Economic Growth
A central theme for the President’s FY 2007 Budget is
economic growth and maximizing U.S. competitiveness.
The
International Trade Administration
(ITA) supports U.S. commercial interests at home and abroad by
strengthening the competitiveness of American industries and
workers, promoting international trade, opening markets to U.S.
businesses, and ensuring compliance with domestic and
international trade laws and agreements. The President’s
FY 2007 Budget requests $409 million for ITA to serve its goals
along with an increase of $2 million to support the
President’s Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development
and Climate. This partnership will reduce the barriers to
energy efficient American products and technologies in
Australia, China, India, Japan and South Korea.
The
Economic Development Administration
(EDA) is charged with leading the federal economic development
agenda by promoting innovation and competitiveness while
preparing American regions for growth and success in the
worldwide economy. The President’s FY 2007 Budget expands
the programs of EDA by $47 million to $327 million. This is a
17 percent increase reflecting the Administration’s
emphasis on regional competitiveness and measuring performance
as the underlying strategy for federal economic development
policy. EDA will work collaboratively with other federal
partners in the establishment of a proactive, regionally based
federal economic development framework to empower
America’s communities to be globally competitive.
The
Bureau of Economic Analysis
(BEA) promotes the understanding of the United States economy
and its competitive position. Under the umbrella of the
Economics and Statistics Administration (ESA), BEA provides key
objective data on the Nation’s economic condition in a
timely and cost-effective manner. The President’s FY 2007
Budget requests $80 million to continue providing statistics
that are critical to public and private sector decision-making.
In support of their role as the leading source of quality data
regarding the nation’s people and economy, the
President’s FY 2007 Budget request for ESA’s
Census Bureau
is $878 million. Among the additional funding for programmatic
changes included in this budget request for Census is an
increase of $44 million to reengineer the collection of basic
census data to meet constitutional and legal mandates in
preparation for the 2010 Decennial Census, implement the
American Community Survey to obtain detailed annual data, and
modernize the Bureau’s geographic database. Other program
additions include $11 million to develop tools and systems to
support the 2007 Economic Census and $3 million for the Census
of Governments to collect data supporting the 2007 Census.
The
Bureau of Industry and Security
(BIS) regulates the export of sensitive goods and technologies
to protect the security of the U.S. The President’s FY
2007 Budget requests $78.6 million to enable BIS to effectively
carry out this mission. The proposed budget includes an
increase to modernize the Export Control Automated Support
System which is critical for processing export licenses.
To continue their focus on accelerating the competitiveness and
growth of minority-owned businesses, the President’s FY
2007 Budget request for the Minority Business Development
Agency (MBDA) is $29.6 million.
Fostering Leadership in Science and Technology
The President’s FY 2007 Budget request of $581 million
for the
National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST), a part of the
Technology Administration
(TA), will advance measurement science, standards, and
technology disciplines such as nanotechnology, quantum
information science and neutron research. This request includes
a $104 million increase for NIST laboratories, National
Research Facilities, and Construction and Major Renovations to
implement the President’s ten-year American
Competitiveness Initiative.
For the third year in a row, President Bush is recommending
that the
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
(USPTO) keep all of the fees it will collect. USPTO will use
the $1.8 billion in spending authority contained in the
President’s FY 2007 Budget request to reduce application
processing time and increase the quality of its products. This
funding would allow for the hiring of additional examiners, the
refining of the electronic patent application filing and
processing system, the improvement of quality assurance
programs, and the implementation of higher standards for
examiner certification and recertification.
For the
National Telecommunications and Information
Agency
(NTIA), the President’s FY 2007 Budget request proposes
programs in support of the Digital Television Transition and
Public Safety Fund. These programs will provide consumers with
vouchers to aid in purchasing digital-to-analog television
converter boxes, assist public safety agencies in acquiring
interoperable communications systems, and support an interim
digital television broadcast system for New York City. The
Digital Television Transition and Public Safety Fund, created
by the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, funds a number of
programs with the auction proceeds of electromagnetic spectrum
recovered from discontinued analog television signals.
Promoting Environmental Stewardship
The President’s FY 2007 Budget request of $3.6 billion
for the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
(NOAA) reflects the Administration’s commitment to
environmental stewardship. Within Operations, Research and
Facilities, the request provides an increase of $12.4 million
to operate the U.S. Tsunami Warning System, increases to
several programs that will support a variety of fisheries in
the Gulf of Mexico, and $6 million for the Open Rivers
Initiative (ORI): a competitive grant program using a
community-based model to remove river barriers in coastal
states, thus enhancing populations of key NOAA trust species
and supporting the President’s Cooperative Conservation
Initiative.
For Procurement, Acquisition and Construction, major program
increases include funding to have the NOAA Center for Weather
and Climate Prediction facility ready to begin operations in
2008, $20 million for NOAA’s share of the National
Polar-Orbiting Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS) which
will replace the Polar-Orbiting Environmental Satellite series,
and $113 million to continue the Geostationary Operational
Environmental Satellite (GOES-R) series system acquisition
which will be the next generation follow-on to the current
GOES-N satellites used to track storm development and
movement.
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