Senate committee approves $1 billion in research grants
The bill dedicates money to reduce Internet access costs in rural areas and asks the National Academy of Sciences to study the impact of geography on Internet access
The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee quickly approved
a bill last week that would authorize about $1 billion over three years
for research grants to develop networking technologies to make the Internet
faster, more reliable and more accessible.
The Next Generation Internet 2000 Act (S-2046), approved by a voice
vote with no debate, authorizes grants to be administered by such agencies
as the National Science Foundation, the Defense Department, The National
Institutes of Health, NASA and others.
NSF will receive the largest amount of funds: $111.2 million in fiscal
2001, $117.3 million in fiscal 2002, and $123.8 million in fiscal 2003.
The bill also designates 10 percent of the funding to reduce Internet
access costs in rural areas, requires that 5 percent of the funding be given
to minority institutions and asks the National Academy of Sciences to study
the impact of geography on Internet access.
The committee also approved an amendment to the bill, the former Research
Investment Act, doubling federal funding for civilian research and development
over the next 11 years.
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