From: Mulka, Christina (Durbin)
[mailto:Christina_Mulka@durbin.senate.gov]
Sent: Friday, December 21, 2007 2:13
PM
To: Mulka, Christina
(Durbin)
Subject: DURBIN,
OBAMA, BIGGERT CALL ON BUSH ADMINISTRATION TO INCREASE FUNDING AT
FERMILAB
For Immediate
Release:
Contact:
Christina Mulka (Durbin)
202-228-5643
Michael Ortiz
(Obama)
202-228-5566
Zachary
Cikanek (Biggert)
202-329-6812
December 21,
2007
DURBIN, OBAMA, BIGGERT CALL ON BUSH
ADMINISTRATION TO INCREASE FUNDING AT FERMILAB
In light of
recent funding cuts,
WASHINGTON, D.C. –
U.S. Senators Dick
Durbin (D-IL) and Barack Obama (D-IL) and Representative Judy Biggert (R-IL)
today sent the following letter to Jim Nussle, Director of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), calling on him to increase next year’s funding for
the High Energy Physics (HEP) program, which supports research at Fermilab in
Illinois, and at several other laboratories and universities across the nation
that are doing vital, cutting edge research.
Durbin, Obama, and Biggert are in discussions with
Congressional appropriations and authorization committees and the Department of
Energy to address the current funding situation and avoid potential layoffs
during fiscal year 2008. They also plan to call for an
Adequate funding for the labs is critical to ensure that
our country maintains its technological edge and that we continue to add to our
high-tech manufacturing base. Fermilab is the nation’s premier high-energy
physics laboratory. The laboratory leads
-30-
[text of the letter is
below]
Dear Director Nussle:
We are writing to you concerning a matter of critical
importance to our country, to science in
As you know, the budget approved this week by Congress
dealt a severe blow to HEP, which received $88 million less than requested. This
budget rejected funding for the NOvA neutrino experiment at Fermilab, and
drastically cut funding for research and development on the International Linear
Collider. These cuts could cripple Fermilab's ability to remain one of the
world's preeminent research facilities. And this is at a time when
Fermilab has achieved outstanding success, with significant results in each of
its central areas of research: neutrinos, the high energy frontier, and particle
astrophysics.
The facilities at Fermilab are essential for the basic
scientific research that nurtures technological and scientific advances, and
that fuels American innovation. Fermilab is one of a handful of our nation's
premier training sites for scientists, and a centerpiece of the system of DOE
National Laboratories. Disruptive funding shortfalls have ripple effects
throughout the American scientific community, displacing today's scientists and
discouraging tomorrow's. We must work together to restore funding in basic
physics research to maintain America's role as the innovator in technology, to
retain our leading scientific institutions and their skilled workforces, and to
provide opportunities for future scientists.
While we recognize the formidable challenges you face
regarding the demands on the federal budget, we respectfully encourage you to
increase the funding request for the Office of Science, particularly for the HEP
program, in the President’s FY2009 Budget.
Sincerely,
Barack Obama
Richard J. Durbin
Judy
Biggert