July 2013
During the week of July 8, congressional committees began the formal process of developing legislation for appropriating funds in the 2014 fiscal year for several agencies that fund education research: the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the Department of Education.
National Science Foundation
Proposed FY 2014 Appropriations for IES Compared With FY 2013
Program Function
Senate-Proposed
FY 2014 Appropriations
(in millions)
Final FY 2013 Appropriations
(in millions)a
Amount Change
Percentage Change
Research, development, and dissemination
$195.0
$179.9
$15.1
8.39%
Statistics
$112.0
$103.0
$9.0
8.74%
Regional Educational Laboratories
$57.3
$54.4
$2.9
5.33%
Special education research
$69.9
$47.3
$22.6
47.78%
Special education studies and evaluations
$11.4
$10.8
$0.6
5.56%
Statewide longitudinal data systems
$75.0
$36.1
$38.9
107.76%
Assessment
$124.6
$122.8
$1.8
1.47%
National Assessment Governing Board
$7.7
$8.2
-$0.5
-6.10%
IES Totalb
$652.9
$562.5
$91.4
16.07%
a Final FY 2013 figures are from http://www2.ed.gov/about/overview/budget/budget13/13action.pdf.
b Totals may differ due to rounding.
As a general provision, the Senate Labor-H bill mandates agencies or agency divisions covered in the legislation with over $100 million in research expenditures to create an open access repository similar to NIH’s PubMed Central for published research stemming from federal funds 12 months after publication.
The House Appropriations Committee has not yet announced a time frame for when the Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies will take up the House version of the Labor-H bill.