Commerce: IT heavyweight
The Commerce Department's 2004 budget request includes funding to strengthen the nation's measurement and standards infrastructure, modernize the Patent and Trademark Office, homeland security standards, and continue development of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's environmental satellites.
The Commerce Department's 2004 budget request includes funding to strengthen the nation's measurement and standards infrastructure, modernize the Patent and Trademark Office, homeland security standards, and continue development of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's environmental satellites.
The request reflects the nation's "war footing," said Philip J. Bond, the under secretary of Commerce for technology during a briefing today.
While new or additional funds for many initiatives throughout the federal government are limited during a wartime footing, technological innovation at the Department of Commerce will receive a noticeable boost in this environment, he said.
The president's top priorities for 2004 are national security, homeland security and economic security, Bond said. "This is a budget that reflects the President's priorities-and technology is the common denominator," he said.
The president's fiscal 2004 budget provides $5.8 billion in funding for Commerce, of which $1.2 billion will be spent on IT funding, according to department officials. The proposal reflects the central role that the department will play in protecting the nation and its economy, especially in the areas of science and technology, according to the department.
The 2004 budget provides for the Commerce Department to receive:
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