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February 23, 2006 8:39 AM PST

Bush's tech budget favors Homeland Security Dept.

The Department of Homeland Security would receive the biggest boost in technology spending among top-level federal departments under the president's $2.8 trillion budget proposal for 2007.

If Congress ultimately approves the president's request, which he made public earlier this month, the department's slice of the information technology allotment would jump more than 21 percent, to about $4.4 billion. According to a report released Thursday morning by government research firm Input, the additional $772 million proposed for the agency represents nearly half of the overall new IT spending proposed for next year.

The total federal IT budget proposed for government agencies rose by less than 3 percent, to about $64.3 billion for 2007. Spending related to IT security would compose about $5.2 billion of that total.

The Defense Department's allotment remains by far the highest, at some $30.5 billion, though that number represents only about a 3 percent increase from last year. After the Homeland Security Department, the Department of Housing and Urban Development would see the second-largest percentage increase in IT spending, at about 15 percent. But at $298 million, its overall share of IT spending would remain only a fraction of the allotments for nearly every other cabinet-level department.

Still, the wide-ranging budget drew praise from the Information Technology Association of America lobbying group. "Today, it makes perfect sense to focus all kinds of investments on defense and homeland security, but we are also pleased to see (that) the president did not leave out crucial civilian IT investments," ITAA President Robert Laurence said in a statement.

But not everyone was so pleased. Five of the 27 agencies included in the budget proposal would experience cuts. They ranged from about 1 percent for the Department of Education to more than 5 percent for NASA.

Congressional Democrats decried several of the tech-related cuts in their latest budget analysis (click for PDF), expressing concern that the elimination of certain technology education programs would undermine America's competitiveness in science in technology.

"The elimination of this funding--which allows all children access to technology and the Internet, helps train teachers how to use and integrate technology into the curriculum, and provides funding and support for core curricular content--runs completely counter to the goals and vision outlined by the president," said Sheryl Abshire, who heads the Consortium for Education Technology, an advocacy group.

Overall, the multitrillion-dollar budget includes a record-high $439.3 billion proposal for defense-related spending and calls for $65 billion in cuts to entitlement programs such as Medicare over the next five years.

See more CNET content tagged:
allotment, IT-spending, homeland security, cut, proposal

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 8 comments
They'll need every penny
by rcrusoe February 23, 2006 9:22 AM PST
It takes a lot of money to maintain all those windows computers that are so easily damaged by a "bumbling computer nerd".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/4715612.stm
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Broadband over Powerlines for Security of the power grid
by 200mbpsBPL February 23, 2006 9:45 AM PST
" Transformers have eyes and ears

Security of the power grid is a high priority for us. The communication signal on the lines allows us to place cameras and other monitoring equipment on the electrical grid. All the data is piped into a central location, reducing the time and resources needed to monitor the grid. This frees up manpower to do more important things, like making sure your power keeps flowing."

http://www.duke-energy.com/news/plc.asp
Reply to this comment
At the Cost of Technology in Schools
by marileev February 23, 2006 10:53 AM PST
The story cited the cutback in technology education programs stresses an already maxed out U.S. education system already pressured to "...train 70,000 high school teachers, to lead advanced-placement courses in math and science, bring 30,000 math and science professionals to teach in classrooms, and give early help to students who struggle with math, so they have a better chance at good, high-wage jobs." -- President Bush State of the Union http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/01/31/sotu.transcript/index.html

Many of the new budget proposals run in direct opposition to the State of the Union's blindly optimistic marks, with many states unable to hire new teachers. In Washington State, we are 46th. in class size - http://www.washingtonea.org/

Can we afford to cut the potential futures of our kids?
Reply to this comment View reply
Sadly
by heystoopid February 23, 2006 12:59 PM PST
Sadly, it looks like the average school teacher will now need three job's just merely to support him/or herself in the suburban dream!

So there ain't no incentive to become a teacher! at this rate they will be down to $6 an hour, for average school board to fund basic education for the first six years from the cent in the dollar budget(well we are still fighting and losing Nixon's war on drugs(1973) and juniors new war on terrorism(*2000))

Oh well, as nelson would say Ha! Ha!
Reply to this comment
Grand Announcements
by Riphly February 24, 2006 12:51 AM PST
That's the Bush administartion style all over! - make the grand
announcement on TV and in the NP headlines that he's gonna
build up and support education, he's such a good old joe, such a
caring guy!
But when the buck stops at his desk, it gets shoved into the
black hole of "security" where there is no accounting for it's use,
secrecy doncha know, and payment to 'security services' that
create nothing and benefit only the companies providing the
service.
Education might create an educated child, but then that child
would be able to think and evaluate Bush administration-like
activities and then VOTE AGAINST them. Now that just wouldn't
do...
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