U.S. Senate economic stimulus package is better than the one passed by the House!
Thursday, February 12, 2009
At least in one area:
The U.S. Senate passed an $838 billion economic stimulus package Tuesday that includes $1.3 billion for NASA - more than double the amount the House approved Jan. 28 for the U.S. space agency in its version of the bill.$1.3 billion is still pretty small though in the whole scheme of things, and amounts to less than 10% of NASA's yearly budget.
The Senate voted 61-37 on its version of the bill, which proposes spending $450 million to narrow the five-year gap between the scheduled 2010 retirement of the space shuttle and 2015 debut of its successor. The House put no money into addressing the gap.
Also note that the CSA (Canadian Space Agency) also got a slight funding increase to the tune of $100 million extra over the next three years:
Canada's top astronaut Steve MacLean said Monday he was pleased with the government's contribution of $110 million towards robotics research in the federal budget, saying it would allow the Canadian Space Agency to be ready when other nations announce major projects.
"We have a heritage in robotics," said CSA head MacLean, speaking at the agency's headquarters in Longueuil, Que., outside Montreal. "What this $110 million does, given that we are at a crossroads where the International Space Station is finishing its assembly, is it allows us to protect that heritage it allows us to protect the leading-edge technologies that we have."
The federal budget announced Jan. 27 called for the agency to get $110 million over three years to support the development of space technology and advanced robotics, with an eye towards developing a next-generation rover to travel on the Moon or Mars.
But the budget also calls for the space agency to trim $10 million over the same three years from its existing budget by doing more collaborative work with academia and industry, putting the net gain at closer to $100 million.
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