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institutional grants that give the colleges and universities greater flexibility in meeting their individual needs.

If it should be decided to implement this recommendation to increase NSF funds, it should be made clear that this arrangement to enable NSF to act as a "gap-filler" is not intended to relegate NSF to this role permanently but that it is the first step, and the only one now feasible, toward the long-range goal of equipping NSF to play the role for which it was originally established.

Serious consideration should be given to placing NSF on a 3-year authorization and appropriation cycle.

B. CONTINUE AND STRENGTHEN THE EXISTING SYSTEM OF PLURALISTIC SUPPORT

1. Role of the mission-oriented agencies: The mission-oriented agencies should continue to finance academic research which is related to and a part of their missions. To the extent consistent with its mission, each of the agencies should use its authority and funds to strengthen academic institutions whenever this can be done without interfering with its primary responsibilities. The mission-oriented agencies should also continue to support the advanced training of people required for their missions.

The alternative of centralizing all or most support for academic science and advanced training in the sciences should be rejected because a decentralized system: (1) links support of science to national goals; (2) disperses and thereby strengthens support; (3) provides an essential underpinning for applied research, development, and testing; and (4) increases in the agencies and in Congress' sensitivity to the uses of science and technology in anticipating, creating, and solving important public problems. These values far outweight the gains to be expected from centralized administration and funding and should be preserved.

2. Enhance the flexibility of Federal support of colleges and universities: Essentially every study concerned with institutional "flexibility" in recent years has concluded that there is need for increasing the amount of money given to the institution to balance the effect of expanded project support. Therefore, in order to gain full advantage from the values of the project system of research support while minimizing the inflexibility that can accompany heavy reliance on project support, additional funds should be made available on an institutional basis for research-related activities which they select. Such activities might include

Provision of support for research that cannot yet be funded externally,

Provision of central research facilities not otherwise provided for support of new investigators,

Provision of a financial "shock absorber" when grants, contracts, training grants, or fellowships are unexpectedly curtailed or terminated.

Support of this type is already provided by NSF for the total science activities of institutions, but the funds provided are grossly inadequate to fulfill the functions that are suggested here and project funding dominates present doctrine. NIH makes similar grants, restricted

to the biomedical research sector, but available funds have never reached the levels authorized by Congress. The enlargement of this type of support would involve boosting the NSF and NIH budgets since basic legislative authority for institutional support already exists.

It must be emphasized that the key to successful use of institutional funding to alleviate imbalances created by project grants is the formula employed. Careful and detailed study of the broad area of general support of higher education is a necessity before any long-term action is taken.

3. Establish NSF as a prime source of Federal funds for academic science: As a long-range objective, NSF should provide the stable primary base of Federal support for academic science as the agency acquires the capacity to secure markedly higher and stable budgets. The mission-oriented agencies should continue to support academic science, but they should not be expected to provide broadly based support for academic science without regard to the limits set by their mis

sions.

C. IMPROVE THE ADMINISTRATION OF FEDERAL ACADEMIC SCIENCE PROGRAMS

1. Reduce administrative inconsistencies: Much of the heat associated with academic science problems still comes from inconsistencies among Federal agencies in policies, procedures, and practices with respect to contract and grant administration including such matters as proposal content and format, terms and conditions of agreements, property and equipment title, and records requirements, and technical, financial, and administrative reporting. At little or no cost, steps to eliminate inconsistencies (not to establish rigid standardization) would do a great deal to restore the academic community's confidence that the Government understands and is concerned with the problems faced by the universities.

2. Cushion the shock of unexpected restriction of funds: All agencies should be instructed to take steps to minimize sudden termination of grants and contract support through arrangements to "phase out" support over a reasonable period of time. The "step-funding" approach of the type used by NASA and the DOD Project Themis (a 3-year grant with 2 years' initial funding on a 1%-1% basis) is an example of such an arrangement. The precise devices that are needed and practicable will depend upon the circumstances facing each agency. This is difficult to achieve immediately without more NOA and, of course, it is not a protection against expenditure cuts.

3. Central administrative responsibility of the Bureau of the Budget: Responsibility for further progress should rest with the Bureau of the Budget, which should provide resources for continuing improvement of the important "nuts and bolts" aspects of Government-university relations in science.

The alternative of placing responsibility in a new agency ("a GSA for academic science") has been discarded because the function is not broad enough or significant enough to warrant establishment of a new agency. The alternative of placing the function in OST was discarded because OST does not have the responsibility, management staff and

experience possessed by BOB, and because assumption of this responsibility by OST would reduce its capacity to perform its primary functions.

D. IMPROVE THE ORGANIZATION OF THE EXECUTIVE OFFICE FOR SCIENCE AND EDUCATION

Because of the gravity and urgency of policy questions relating to education and sicence and because there is now no point in the executive branch where these issues can be discussed and resolved effectively on a continuing institutionalized basis, it is concluded that a new, permanent grouping of functions is needed. Leadership and coordination of the departments and the establishment of policy for functions properly performed in a number of agencies can be effectively undertaken only in the Executive Office.

1. Alternative A.-Establish a statutory Council of Advisers on Education and Science: A Council of Advisers on Education and Science should be established by legislation. The members should be full-time Presidential appointees, as contrasted with part-time advisers (as in the case of the Presidential Science Advisory Committee) or representatives of departments and agencies (as in the case of the Space Council).

The central function of this group would be to provide a continuing institutional strong point in the Executive Office-a point which does not now exist-to help the President with policy matters involving education, science and technology, and their interrelationships. A central concern of the council would be with the kinds of complex problems relating to both education (particularly graduate education) and science (particularly academic science) noted earlier.

An important role for the Council would be to meet the urgent needs of Congress for an understanding of the facts and the position of the administration on national goals in science, technology, and education. It would report to various committees of Congress on the progress being made by both public and private bodies, and thereby contribute to the understanding in Congress. Although the council would not be responsible for carrying out programs, its relationship to the President, to the Bureau of the Budget, to Cabinet-level officers, and to Congress could be such that its influence would be substantial.

In more specific terms, it would be concerned with the problems that now concern OST, plus the central policy issues faced by the Federal Government with respect to education. It would advise with respect to support of institutions and support of students. On the science side, the new Council would be concerned with examination of the interactions of science with social development, international relations, technological advance and economic growth. It would study the mix of national investment in research, identify gaps, and evolve longrange science policy goals. A central concern of the Council would be the integration of policies with respect to support of graduate education and science.

PSAC would be retained. The Federal Council for Science and Technology would be needed also.

So far as operating methods are concerned, the Council would re

place OST, whose staff might become the Council staff while the director of OST might become Chairman of the Council.

A subalternative worthy of serious consideration is a limitation of the role of the Council to graduate education and to academic science. This smaller package is more coherent, but lacks breadth and the full scope of problems in education and science should be encompassed, particularly if legislation is sought. However, if on political or other grounds the narrower definition seems preferable, such a council would still represent an advance. Extension of functions could be informal and later ratified by legislation if this seemed desirable.

2. Alternative B.-Broaden and strengthen OST: The charter of the Office of Science and Technology should be redrafted to encompass policy toward graduate education as well as policy for science and technology. The change should be ratified by general legislation (as contrasted with a reorganization plan) to expose the issues to debate and to secure positive congressional action. A persuasive reason for seeking legislation is that the debates in Congress would assist in generating congressional understanding and support, and a feeling that OST is adequately responsive to Congress while remaining responsible to the President.

As between a new statutory Council and a revision of the charter of OST (either by Presidential action or legislation), it is recommended that a council be established by law, although either alternative would result in marked improvement of the capability of the Executive Office to serve the President and to help Congress.

The reasons for preferring the statutory Council are these:

Science and education are now as significant to the national welfare as economic development and the Federal role in these areas is expanding and becoming more complex. It is important that Congress ratify this estimate.

A new statutory council would avoid the strong coloration of science and technology that would follow from putting the combined functions in OST.

The Council form would provide for the expression of varying philosophies by persons with dissimilar backgrounds.

Establishment of a council by law would expose issues to broad public debate and would ratify the operation in the eyes of Congress,

E. CONTINUE TO STUDY THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW CABINET DEPARTMENT OF HIGHER EDUCATION AND SCIENCE

The establishment of a new Cabinet Department of Higher Education and Science might be a means of dealing with many of the problems cited earlier in this paper. As a general principle, it is desirable to place as many of the functions of the executive branch as possible in operating departments and agencies in order to keep the responsibilities of the presidency within manageable bounds. However, as you know, it is a great problem to define the functions of a new department in a manner that will provide a broad, coherent set of tasks while keeping to a minimum the interfaces and points of overlap with other agencies.

While the functions of higher education and science are in many

respects coherent, such a grouping would present obvious questions and problems:

Should the Federal Government be organized so that responsibility for higher education is separated from other education? Should responsibility for science be separated from responsibility for technology?

Might it not be advisable to consider establishing a broad Department of Education, and a separate Department of Science? Should the education function be split from the health and welfare functions, involving a significant shift in the philosophy underlying the existing Department of Health, Education, and Welfare?

In summary, it is my conclusion that the next practical steps involve changes short of the establishment of a new Cabinet department. It is, in fact, highly probable that the establishment of the proposed statutory Council on Education and Science would serve adequately for the foreseeable future and functions that have been suggested for a new department, because the key functions are those that can be performed effectively only as part of the presidency.

Some examples of the problems that must be faced if centralization in a department or agency is chosen as the route are given in concluding sections of the additional paper which I have submitted to the subcommittee.

(The document submitted for the record is as follows:)

SOME SUGGESTIONS FOR IMPROVING THE ADMINISTRATION OF FEDERAL PROGRAMS OF SUPPORT FOR ACADEMIC SCIENCE

(By Ivan L. Bennett, Jr., M.D., Director, New York University Medical Center, New York, New York)

SUMMARY

Developments over the past five years make advisable a series of changes in the administration of academic science:

-In 1968, the Federal Government provided $2.3 billion for academic science and $2.1 billion to colleges and universities for support of colleges and universities totally. The non-science component is not only growing rapidly but is also increasingly interwoven with academic science programs, thus creating an important new interface between Federal programs for academic science and for general support of higher education. -Although state, local, and private funding of both general expenses and academic science of colleges and universities will continue to expand, the Federal Government's role in both areas is becoming more significant, and this will generate important questions of policy and of organizational capabilities to define and answer questions of policy.

-Federal support for academic science has leveled off sharply, resulting in serious short-run underfinancing (particularly for NSF), and cutbacks in research in universities. Unpredictability and instability of funding are incompatible with long-range national goals, and with missions of Federal agencies, which depend on academic science.

-An accretion of Federal rules and practices among the several supporting agencies has created administrative machinery that is needlessly complicated and expensive both for the Federal Government and universities. The following measures are recommended as an approach to the long-range solution of these problems:

A. Establish More Stable Funding for Academic Science

BOB and OST should prepare, in consultation with the agencies, a new "three-year indicative plan" for Federal financing of academic science. This would tend to (1) increase the predictability of funding, (2) ensure more

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