Congress Finalizes FY2012 Appropriations With an NIH/NEI Increase Although A Continuing Resolution Funds the Government through
December 23
Legislative Update
December 19, 2011
*Editor’s Note: The President signed the conference agreement into law (P.L. 112-74) on December 23, 2011
Summary of the conference agreement:
- Increases NIH program funding by $299 million
- Increases NEI funding by $3.2 million
- Reduces NIH Institute and Center funding by 0.189 percent due to an across-the-board DHHS rescission
- Approves and funds the new National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
- Directs NIH to produce a number of studies and reports by specific dates
On Friday, December 16 in the House, and Saturday, December 17 in the Senate, Congress voted to adopt the conference agreement (H.R. 2055, H. Report 112-331) for a nine-bill Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 spending package that finalizes the appropriations process. This action came after the Congress passed a fourth Continuing Resolution (CR) to fund the government through December 17 (previous CR expired December 16), than a fifth CR on December 17 to fund the government through December 23, as the conference agreement must be signed by President Obama.
Although the agreement funds the National Institutes of Health (NIH) at a $30.698 billion program level in FY2012—a $299 million increase over FY2011—it will be subject to a 0.189 percent across-the-board rescission within the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). Although the House also approved an accompanying bill H.R. 3672, which provides $8.1 billion in disaster relief funding, and H. Con. Res. 94, which offsets the disaster aid with a 1.83 percent across-the-board cut to all FY2012 base discretionary funding except for the Defense and Military Construction/Department of Veterans Affairs Veterans Administration bills, the latter was disagreed to in the Senate. As a result, NIH Institutes and Centers (I/Cs) increases will only experience the internal 0.189 percent DHHS rescission, retaining a positive net increase.
The National Eye Institute (NEI) will be funded at $704.043 million, an increase of 3.2 million or .46 percent over the FY2011 enacted level of $700.8 million. NEIs net of the 0.189 rescission yields FY2012 funding at $702.7 million. Since the agreement also eliminated the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), moving most of its programs into the new National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) with its own dedicated funding line, the FY2011 funding levels are re-stated to reflect this reorganization. NEIs net FY2011 baseline funding was re-stated as $700.251 million, since it had contributed $577,000 to the Therapeutics for Rare and Neglected Diseases (TRND) program, which is now funded in the dedicated NCATS line item.
Other highlights of the agreement include: