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ÌÇÐÄÉÙÅ®Partners with White House OSTP to Host Climate Change Solutions Forum

Representatives from approximately 80Ìýcolleges and universitiesÌýmet in Washington D.C.Ìýon March 8thÌýand 9th for an exciting two-day forum co-hosted by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and the ÌÇÐÄÉÙÅ® to discuss how to leverage the capabilities of colleges and universities to catalyze climate solutions in communities across the country. The attendees represented a cross-section of American higher education from almost all 50 states, including those from Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic-Serving Institutions, Tribal Colleges and Universities, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian-Serving Institutions, and Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander-Serving Institutions. ÌÇÐÄÉÙÅ®was represented by Maya Tolstoy, Dean of the College of the Environment and Meade Krosby, University of Director of the Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center (pictured below). Ìý

The first day of the forum was held at the White House campus where higher education professionals were joined by government officials for three panels to discuss the various ways that higher education and the federal government can partner together to showcaseÌýhow campuses canÌýact as proving grounds for new climate solutions and pathways to net-zero emissions; provide essential climate extension services to states, municipalities, and indigenous communities; and ensure that students have the knowledge and skills to lead in the clean industries of the future.ÌýÌýThe meetingÌýalsoÌýincludedÌýremarks fromÌýprominent speakers including the White House Deputy National Climate Advisor Mary Frances Repko;ÌýOSTP Deputy Director for Energy Sally Benson;ÌýNational Science Foundation Assistant Director for Geosciences Alexandra Isern; OSTP Chief of Staff for Climate and Environment and Assistant Director for Climate Resilience Laura Petes;Ìýand UW’s very own Maya Tolstoy,Ìýwho delivered final remarksÌýfor the day.ÌýÌý

The attendees then headed to theÌýUniversity of the District of Columbia for Day 2 which included a full day of panels and breakoutÌýsessions where attendees discussed strategiesÌýand experiences around four themes: campus sustainabilityÌýandÌýresilience,ÌýprovidingÌýclimate services to communities, living laboratories for climate solutions, and climate action in the classroom. The forumÌýendedÌýwith a call for action to continue this momentum andÌýmaintainÌýa strongÌýchannel of communication between higher education and the federal government to advance climate change solutions.ÌýÌýÌý

To learn more, clickÌýÌýfor the White House Read Out of the event andÌýÌýto watch the full live stream of Day 1.Ìý

FY24 Appropriations Process Is Underway: President’s Budget Request is Released

Earlier this month, the (PBR) was released outlining the administration’s priorities for the coming fiscal year. The overall request is self-described as a blueprint to build on the past two years to “grow the economy from the bottom up and middle out by investing in America, lowering costs for families, protecting and strengthening Medicare and Social Security, and reducing the deficit by nearly $3 trillion over the next decade”.Ìý

The FY24 PBR included: ÌýÌý

  • $8,215 per Pell Grant award (an $820 increase over FY23)ÌýÌý
  • $21 billion in discretionary spending for CHIPS & Science-authorized activities including $1.2 billion for the Directorate of Technology Innovation and Partnerships (TIP) Ìý
  • $48.26 billion for NIH (an increase of 1.7% over FY23)ÌýÌý
  • $2.5 billion for ARPA-H (a $1 billion increase over FY23) Ìý
  • $27.2 billion for NASA (a 7.1% increase over FY23), and Ìý
  • $11.3 billion for NSF (an 18.6% increase over FY23 enacted level of $9.5 billion) Ìý

Now the House and Senate will review the request and vote on a Budget Resolution that decides on topline numbers for discretionary funding. Here is where things could get tricky as the new divided Congress will likely have trouble coming to an agreement.Ìý

Check out a more complete list of programs and accounts on our updated appropriations tracker, including the FY24 budget request numbers, . We will continue to add to this once more budget justifications are released and as the appropriations process continues. ÌýÌý

ÌÇÐÄÉÙÅ®& WSU Engineering Deans Visit with Washington Delegation in D.C.

Last week, the UW’s College of Engineering Dean, Dr. Nancy Allbritton, met with Washington’s congressional members and staff in Washington, D.C. (including with Senator Cantwell pictured above!)Ìý Dr. Allbritton was accompanied by Washington State University’s Dean of Engineering, Dr. Mary Rezac, for a few of the meetings to discuss how federal investment in research is helping lead Washington state to the forefront of scientific knowledge and discovery in areas from quantum and AI to clean energy and aerospace.

For more information about visiting the district and setting up meetings with congressional offices, please click here.

House Still Making History

The House of Representatives is still making history today, failing to elect a Speaker after a fifth round of voting, which concluded just a few minutes ago.Ìý The last time the voting for Speaker among the House Members went beyond the first ballot was a hundred years ago.Ìý The level of opposition to Kevin McCarthy of California among the House Republicans actually grew between the first and the fifth votes.

Read more about the developments , , and .

President Biden Signs FY23 Appropriations Bill Into Law

President Biden signed the FY23 appropriations bill right before the end of the year to fund the government and its agencies through the 2023 fiscal year.

The bill includes $772.5 billion in nondefense spending ($42.5 billion more than FY22) and $858 billion in defense spending ($76 billion more than last year). The bill also includes $1.8 billion in new funding to implement the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act of 2022. In a previous blog (linked here) we highlight other final numbers including the Pell Grant increase, ARPA-H, etc.

The final FY23 numbers can be found on our appropriations tracker linked . We will continue to update these numbers as final calculations come in.