H.R. 967: Advancing America’s Networking and Information Technology Research and Development Act of 2013

Introduced:
Mar 05, 2013 (113th Congress, 2013–2015)
Sponsor:
Rep. Cynthia Lummis [R-WY0]
Status:
Passed House

The bill’s title was written by the bill’s sponsor. H.R. stands for House of Representatives bill.

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Library of Congress Summary

The summary below was written by the Congressional Research Service, which is a nonpartisan division of the Library of Congress.


4/11/2013--Reported to House amended.
Advancing America's Networking and Information Technology Research and Development Act of 2013 - Amends the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991 to rename the National High-Performance Computing Program as the Networking and Information Technology Research and Development Program.
Section 2 -
Directs the federal agencies participating in the Program to:
(1) periodically assess the contents and funding levels of program component areas and restructure the Program when warranted; and
(2) ensure that the Program includes large-scale, long-term, interdisciplinary research and development (R&D) activities, including such activities in networking and information technology in areas having the potential for significant contributions to national economic competitiveness and for other societal benefits.
Requires the participating federal agencies to develop, and update every three years, a five-year strategic plan to guide activities provided for under the Program. Requires the plan to specify near-term and long-term objectives and how the Program will accomplish other specified objectives, including by:
(1) fostering the transfer of R&D results into new technologies and applications for the benefit of society, including through cooperation and collaborations with networking and information technology research, development, and technology transition initiatives supported by the states; and
(2) encouraging and supporting mechanisms for interdisciplinary R&D in networking and information technology, including through collaborations across agencies and program component areas, with industry, federal laboratories, and international organizations.
Requires the strategic plan to be accompanied by milestones and road maps for establishing the national research infrastructure required to support the Program. Instructs the entities involved in developing the plan to consider recommendations of the:
(1) advisory committee on networking and information technology (the advisory committee) (under current law, titled as the advisory committee on high-performance computing); and
(2) stakeholders whose input was solicited by the National Coordination Office, as required under section 6 of this Act. Requires the Director of the National Coordination Office to transmit the strategic plan to Congress and the advisory committee.
Requires the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) to encourage and monitor the efforts of participating agencies to allocate the resources and management attention necessary to ensure that the strategic plan is executed effectively and that Program objectives are met.
Amends the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991 to require the co-chairs of the advisory committee to meet the qualifications for membership on the committee and permits them to be members of the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. Requires the OSTP Director to develop a research, development, and deployment roadmap covering all states and regions for the provision of high-end computing and networking systems (under current law, high-performance computing and networking systems), as specified in such Act. Amends the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991 to require annual reports on the implementation of the Program to:
(1) set forth the relevant programs and activities of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS),
(2) describe the levels of federal funding for the previous fiscal year,
(3) describe the levels of federal funding for the previous fiscal year for agencies and departments participating in the Program, and
(4) include reporting on the research areas supported under section 3 of this Act. Requires the OSTP Director to include in such reports:
(1) a description of how the objectives for program component areas, and for activities that involve multiple program component areas relate to the Program's objectives identified in the strategic plan;
(2) a description of the funding required by the National Coordination Office to perform its functions for the next and current fiscal years; and
(3) the amount of funding provided for such Office for the current fiscal year.
Section 3 -
Directs the Program to encourage the federal agencies to support large-scale, long-term, interdisciplinary R&D activities in networking and information technology directed toward areas having the potential for significant contributions to national economic competitiveness and for other societal benefits.
Requires such activities to be designed to advance the development of research discoveries.
Instructs the advisory committee to make recommendations for candidate R&D areas for support.
Requires that such R&D activities shall:
(1) include projects based on applications for support that are selected through a competitive, merit-based process;
(2) involve collaborations among researchers in institutions of higher education and industry, permitting the involvement of nonprofit research institutions and federal laboratories, as appropriate;
(3) leverage federal investments through collaboration with related state initiatives, when possible; and
(4) include a plan for fostering the transfer of research discoveries and the results of technology demonstration activities to industry for commercial development.
Requires the federal agencies to give special consideration to projects that include cost sharing from non-federal sources.
Instructs, when two or more of the federal agencies or other appropriate agencies are working on large-scale R&D activities in the same area, such agencies to strive to collaborate through joint solicitation and selection of applications for support and subsequent funding of projects.
Allows R&D activities under this section to be supported through interdisciplinary research centers organized to investigate basic research questions and carry out technology demonstration activities.
Permits research to be carried out through existing centers, including the multidisciplinary Centers for Communications Research authorized under the America COMPETES Act.
Section 4 -
Requires the Program, in addition to its current requirements, to provide for:
(1) improving the security, reliability, and resilience of computing and networking systems (currently, the security of those systems) as described under federal law;
(2) increased understanding of the scientific principles of cyber-physical systems and improve the methods available for the design, development, and operation of such systems; and
(3) research and development on human-computer interactions, visualization, and big data.
Defines "cyber-physical systems" as physical or engineered systems whose networking and information technology functions and physical elements are deeply integrated and are actively connected to the physical world through sensors, actuators, or other means to perform monitoring and control functions.
Requires the Director of the National Coordination Office to convene a workshop to explore mechanisms for carrying out collaborative R&D activities for cyber-physical systems, including the related technologies required to enable such systems, and to develop grand challenges in such systems R&D. Requires workshop participants to:
(1) develop options for models for R&D partnerships, among institutions of higher education, federal laboratories, and industry, including mechanisms for the support of R&D carried out under such partnerships;
(2) develop options for grand challenges in cyber-physical systems R&D;
(3) propose guidelines for assigning intellectual property rights and for the transfer of research results to the private sector; and
(4) make recommendations for how federal agencies participating in the Program can help support R&D partnerships in cyber-physical systems, including through existing or new grant programs.
Instructs such Director to:
(1) ensure that participants in the workshop are individuals with knowledge and expertise in cyber-physical systems and that they represent a broad mix of relevant stakeholders; and
(2) submit to Congress a report that describes the findings and recommendations resulting from such workshop.
Section 5 -
Requires the Director of the National Coordination Office, through the National Science and Technology Council, to convene an interagency working group to examine:
(1) the R&D needed to enhance the effectiveness of cloud computing environments, increase the trustworthiness of cloud applications and infrastructure, and enhance the foundations of cloud architectures, programming models, and interoperability;
(2) how federal science agencies can facilitate the use of cloud computing for federally funded science and engineering research; and
(3) report to Congress on the findings and recommendations of the working group.
Repeals provisions for the National Research and Education Network. Requires continuation of a National Coordination Office. Directs the National Coordination Office to:
(1) serve as the primary point of contact on federal networking and information technology activities;
(2) solicit input and recommendations from stakeholders during the development of each strategic plan through the convening of at least one workshop;
(3) conduct public outreach, including dissemination of the findings and recommendations of the advisory committee, as appropriate; and
(4) promote access to and early application of the technologies, innovations, and expertise derived from Program activities to agency missions and systems across the federal government and to U.S. industry.
Requires the operation of the National Coordination Office to be supported by funds from agencies participating in the Program.
Section 7 -
Directs the National Science Foundation (NSF), as part of the Program, to use its existing programs, in collaboration with other agencies, as appropriate, for improving the teaching and learning of networking and information technology at all education levels and to increase participation in networking and information technology fields.
Section 8 -
Makes technical and conforming amendments, including with respect to the activities of the NSF, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Department of Energy (DOE), Department of Commerce, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and Department of Education under the Program. Requires the advisory committee to report to Congress, no less frequently than once every three fiscal years (under current law, no less frequently than once every 2 fiscal years) on the committee's findings and recommendations from its periodic evaluations of the funding, management, coordination, implementation, and activities of the Program. Requires NIST to develop and propose standards and guidelines needed for assuring the cost-effective security and privacy of information in federal computer systems (under current law, privacy of sensitive information in those systems).

House Republican Conference Summary

The summary below was written by the House Republican Conference, which is the caucus of Republicans in the House of Representatives.


This summary can be found at http://www.gop.gov/bill/113/1/hr967.

Background

The NITRD program was first authorized in the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991 (P.L. 102-194) to improve coordination among federal agencies on unclassified networking and IT R&D.  Prior to its authorization, a number of federal agencies had ongoing high-performance computing programs but did not have a coordinating body.[1]  As mentioned above, NITRD is now the federal government’s central R&D investment portfolio for coordinating unclassified networking and IT R&D among federal agencies.  NITRD’s investments encompass unclassified networking, computing, software, cybersecurity, and related information technologies.  Specific to cybersecurity, the NITRD program focuses on R&D to detect, prevent, resist, respond to, and recover from actions that compromise or threaten to compromise the availability, integrity, or confidentiality of computer-and network-based systems. 

The House passed the bill (H.R. 3834) in the 112th Congress on April 27, 2012 by a voice vote, but the Senate did not take up the measure.



[1] See House Science Committee Report 113-34.

Summary

H.R. 967 amends the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991 to update the Networking and Information Technology Research and Development (NITRD) program.  NITRD is the federal government’s central program for coordinating unclassified networking and information technology (IT) research and development (R&D) among federal agencies.  NITRD includes 15 member agencies and more than a dozen other participating agencies.  H.R. 967 updates NITRD to reflect technological developments and to account for shifts in networking and IT R&D priorities.  The bill also updates NITRD to improve interagency coordination and planning.

Specially, H.R. 967 requires the development and periodic update of a strategic plan for the NITRD program and codifies work currently conducted by the National Coordination Office (NCO) of the NITRD program.  H.R. 967 implements recommendations from the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST), including improving interagency coordination and planning with input from policy and technical experts.  The bill rebalances R&D portfolios to focus less on short-term goals and more on large-scale, long-term interdisciplinary research; and it updates research areas to reflect new terminologies.  H.R. 967 codifies a university/industry workshop to explore options for carrying out public-private cyber-physical systems research partnerships.  In addition, H.R. 967 convenes an interagency working group to identify cloud computing research gaps and examine the potential for using the cloud for federally funded research.

Cost

The CBO estimates that implementing H.R. 967 would cost about $1 million over the 2014-2018 period, subject to the availability of appropriated funds.  Enacting H.R. 967 would not affect direct spending or revenues; therefore, pay-as-you-go procedures do not apply.  For more information, see CBO’s cost estimate on H.R. 967.

House Democratic Caucus Summary

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