WASHINGTON -- NASA's vision for space exploration
received a boost in the Senate Sept. 21 when a budget panel approved $16.38
billion for the agency for next year, $200 million more than the White House
requested.
The Senate Appropriations Committee had been poised
to recommend providing just $15.579 billion for NASA next year, $200 more
than the agency's 2004 budget and some $665 million less than the White House
requested. But an amendment offered by Sens. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) and Kay
Bailey Hutchison (R-Tex.) to add $800 million of so-called emergency funding for
the space shuttle program and a Hubble Space Telescope servicing mission was
approved, resulting in the higher number.
The space shuttle program would receive $500 million
of the added funding to help defray the cost of returning the fleet to flight
status. The remaining $300 million would go toward the early planning for a
robotic mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope.
Including the emergency funding, the Senate bill
would provide a total of $4.8 billion for the space shuttle program. The
international space station would get $1.6 billion, about $120 million less than
NASA asked for in its request, which was sent to Congress in
February.
Senate appropriators also approved $268 million for
NASA to get started on the Crew Exploration Vehicle and $20 million to begin
designing of a robotic lunar exploration mission. Both projects are priorities
under the space exploration vision laid out by U.S. President George W. Bush in
January.
The Senate's proposed NASA budget -- included in a
$128 billion spending bill that also funds veterans' benefits, housing programs,
environmental protection and other programs -- stands in marked contrast to the
counterpart bill approved by the House Appropriations Committee this summer. The
House bill would trim $1.1 billion from the NASA request and deal a serious blow
to the agency's space exploration ambitions.
The House and Senate must reconcile the differences
in their respective bills to finalize NASA's 2005 budget. Congressional sources
said the budget wrangling is likely to continue well into the fall and possibly
into next year.