FYI: Science Policy News
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THE WEEK OF APRIL 28, 2025
What’s Ahead
A composite image of the NSF website and X posts as well as a crowdsourced database collecting grant terminations.

Composite image of the NSF website and X posts as well as a crowdsourced database collecting grant terminations.

FYI

More grant terminations, deferred resignation offers at NSF

The National Science Foundation announced a second round of grant terminations last Friday, stating the decision reflected the agency’s “commitment to funding research opportunities for all Americans everywhere.” The first round came a week earlier, eliminating over 400 active grants, according to the Department of Government Efficiency. A crowdsourced database of NSF grant terminations over the last two weeks currently includes over 500 grants, the largest share of which falls under the STEM Education directorate. Members of the union representing NSF issued an open letter to scientific societies asking them to mobilize their members to reach out to local media outlets, contact their members of Congress, post on social media, and more “to mitigate the unfolding crisis and the threat to the long-term viability of NSF.”

NSF also re-offered deferred resignation plans to its employees following the resignation of agency director Sethuraman Panchanathan last Thursday. Employees must apply by the end of the day on May 8, and those who do will be placed on administrative leave by May 23. The memo, reviewed by FYI, “encourages” all NSF employees to consider accepting the deferred resignation agreement “in light of future restructuring, staffing reductions, and constrained budget environments.” It adds that reduced leadership positions, “standardization across directorates and increased centralization,” and the possibility of “significant workforce reductions” are expected in the coming months.

DOD reconciliation bill includes billions of dollars for Golden Dome and NNSA

Republicans on the House and Senate Armed Services Committees have released their plan for $150 billion in additional defense spending to be added to the fiscal year 2025 budget through reconciliation. The bill includes the following appropriations, among others:

  • Nearly $25 billion for projects related to President Donald Trump’s Golden Dome missile defense initiative, including $250 million for directed energy research, $5.6 billion for developing space-based missile interceptors, and $7.2 billion for developing space-based sensors.
  • $3.24 billion for the National Nuclear Security Administration, including $1 billion for facility construction and $540 million for deferred facility maintenance.
  • Over $1 billion for AI research and efforts to deploy AI in existing DOD systems. These include $250 million for “the advancement of the AI ecosystem,” $250 million for Cyber Command’s AI programs, $124 million for improvements to the Test Resource Management Center’s AI capabilities, and $200 million for the development of automation and AI systems to audit DOD financial statements.
  • $250 million for the Quantum Benchmarking Initiative.
  • $120 million for the development of small modular reactors.

The House Armed Services Committee is scheduled to vote on the bill tomorrow. If it passes, it is expected to be rolled into the larger budget reconciliation package that Republicans hope to use to pass major parts of their agenda without the threat of a Senate filibuster.

Senate to vote on NASA administrator and hold S&T nomination hearings

The Senate will hold hearings this week on several of Trump’s nominees for S&T positions. The Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee will vote Wednesday on whether to advance Jared Isaacman’s nomination to lead NASA. Isaacman appeared before the committee on April 9 and expressed support for more flagship science missions. In written answers to questions from the committee last week, Isaacman called the Trump administration’s planned cuts to NASA not “an optimal outcome.” The committee will also hold a nomination hearing Thursday for Paul Dabbar to be the deputy secretary of commerce. Dabbar served as the undersecretary for science at the Department of Energy during the first Trump administration.

On Wednesday, the Energy and Natural Resources Committee will hold a nomination hearing for Andrea Travnicek to be the assistant secretary of the interior for water and science and Theodore Garrish to lead the DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy. Also on Wednesday, the Foreign Relations Committee will vote on the nomination of Thomas DiNanno to be under secretary of state for arms control and international security. DiNanno served as the deputy assistant secretary of state for arms control during the first Trump administration.

State Department faces major reorganization

A sweeping reorganization at the State Department appears to eliminate the Office of the Science and Technology Adviser to the Secretary, FedScoop reports. Over 100 offices and 700 positions have been earmarked for elimination, including roles covering global climate policy. Social media posts indicate that staff working on international science and technology cooperation at the State Department may also be facing layoffs. In a statement on April 22, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said his comprehensive reorganization plan would consolidate region-specific offices, remove redundant offices, and eliminate non-statutory programs that are “misaligned with America’s core national interests.”

Also on our radar

  • The Trump administration released two higher education executive orders last Wednesday. The first pledges to increase enforcement of foreign funding disclosure requirements for US universities. The second establishes an initiative to support Historically Black Colleges and Universities by, for example, collaborating with agencies to help HBCUs compete for research grants.
  • President Trump established an AI education task force to integrate AI into education, train educators on AI, and create AI apprenticeship opportunities. The task force will solicit private-public partnerships to develop resources for educators and K-12 students.
  • The National Academies Physics and Astronomy Board will hold its spring meeting this week. DOE’s acting Office of Science director, Harriet Kung, and NSF’s Mathematical and Physical Sciences lead, David Berkowitz, will provide updates on their respective divisions.
  • The Senate Appropriations Committee will hold a hearing Wednesday on American innovation in biomedical research. Sudip Parikh, chief executive officer at the American Association for the Advancement of Science, is scheduled to appear as a witness.
In Case You Missed It

Grantmaking staff included in a new workforce classification would be subject to greater political control.

The agency is terminating hundreds of grants that run afoul of Trump priorities.

Student enrollment and guaranteed financial support are expected to fall amid anticipation of federal budget cuts, a new report finds.

Upcoming Events

AIP to host lecture on LIGO site selection

The American Institute of Physics will hold an in-person event in Washington, DC, Friday evening exploring the hidden history of how the site of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave in Livingston, Louisiana, was selected. Far from just a political decision, historian of civil and environmental engineering Tiffany Nichols will discuss how physicists, engineers, science policy analysts, attorneys, and staff at federal agencies all played a role in the success of the LIGO project. Register to attend this free event here.

All events are Eastern Time unless otherwise noted. Listings do not imply endorsement. Events beyond this week are listed on our website.

Monday, April 28

NSF: Advisory Committee for Technology, Innovation and Partnerships meeting
11:00 am - 3:00 pm

US District Court for Massachusetts: Hearing on temporary restraining order against DOE move to cut indirect costs
11:00 am

Heritage Foundation: Paving the way for transportation innovation
11:00 am - 12:00 pm

National Academies: Climate conversations: Powering AI
3:00 - 4:15 pm

Tuesday, April 29

House: Markup of multiple bills, including Celestial Time Standardization Act
10:00 am, Science, Space, and Technology Committee

House: Markup of DOD reconciliation bill
10:00 am, Armed Services Committee

The Atlantic: On the future: An Atlantic Festival event
12:00 - 7:30 pm

NSF: National Science Board Committee on Oversight teleconference
12:00 – 1:00 pm

NOAA: Science Advisory Board meeting
12:30 - 5:10 pm

BIS: Sensors and Instrumentation Technical Advisory Committee meeting
12:30 - 1:30 pm

Center for a New American Security: The stakes of Sino-American AI competition
2:30 - 3:30 pm

AAS/APS: Educator workshop: How to design a curriculum for the modern world
3:00 pm

Wednesday, April 30

National Academies: Board on Physics and Astronomy, spring meeting (continues Thursday)

Senate: Nomination hearing for assistant secretary of the interior for water and science and head of DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy
9:30 am, Energy and Natural Resources Committee

Senate: Vote on Jared Isaacman to be director of NASA and to consider several bills
10:00 am, Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee

Senate: Biomedical research: Keeping America’s edge in innovation
10:30 am, Appropriations Committee

Senate: Nomination hearing for under secretary of state for arms control and international security, among others
10:30 am, Foreign Relations Committee

Thursday, May 1

Senate: Hearing to consider nomination of Paul Dabbar to be deputy secretary of commerce
10:00 am, Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee

Stimson: Gambling on armageddon: Costs and risks of nuclear modernization
2:00 - 3:00 pm

Friday, May 2

AIP: The federal-level site selection history of LIGO with Tiffany Nichols, Lyne Starling Trimble Public Event Series
5:45 - 7:30 pm

Saturday, May 3

DCSWA: Professional development day
8:30 am - 4:00 pm

NSPN: Annual symposium
9:00 am - 7:30 pm PT

Monday, May 5

US Fusion Energy: Fusion Energy Week (continues through Friday)

NTI: Strengthening Article IV: Nuclear facility resilience in times of crisis
1:00 - 2:00 pm

Know of an upcoming science policy event either inside or outside the Beltway? Email us at fyi@aip.org.

Opportunities

Deadlines indicated in parentheses. Newly added opportunities are marked with a diamond.

On April 15, the Trump administration extended the federal hiring freeze into the summer.

Job Openings

National Electrical Manufacturers Association: Director of government relations (ongoing)
GEM Technology: Nonproliferation policy expert (ongoing)
Advanced Management Strategies Group: DOE nonproliferation, export controls, and nuclear verification policy experts (multiple positions) (ongoing)
Keystone Space Collaborative: Grant manager (ongoing)
Sancorp: Program manager, DOD Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Science and Technology (ongoing)
Johns Hopkins: Assistant director, federal strategy (ongoing)
APS: Managing editor, physical science and physics education (ongoing)
AEI: Science policy research assistant (ongoing)
SpaceX: Satellite policy analyst (ongoing)
SpaceX: Global government affairs manager for Starlink (ongoing)
AIP: Associate director of public policy research and analysis (ongoing)
White House: OSTP summer internships (April 30)
National Academies: Climate Crossroads Congressional Fellowship (April 30)
WV STeP: West Virginia Science and Technology Policy fellowship (May 2)
Pennsylvania: Governor’s science and technology fellowship (May 2)
Institute for Progress: Metascience fellow (May 11)
NASA: Space technology investments internship (May 16)

Solicitations

AAAS: Assessing the impacts of federal policies on the US STEMM community (ongoing)
APS: Survey collecting stories about the positive impact of federally funded research (ongoing)
National Academies: Committee on Astronomy and Astrophysics: Call for experts (April 30)
DOE: RFI on AI infrastructure on DOE lands (May 7)
BIS: RFC on national security impacts of semiconductors and semiconductor manufacturing equipment imports (May 7)
NSF: RFC on grantee reporting requirements for science and technology centers (May 11)
OMB: RFI on deregulation (May 12)
BIS: RFC on national security investigation of imports of processed critical minerals and derivative products (May 16)
DHS: RFC on training plan for STEM OPT students (May 19)
NSB: Call for nominations to the National Science Board (May 30)

Know of an opportunity for scientists to engage in science policy? Email us at fyi@aip.org.

Around the Web

News and views currently in circulation. Links do not imply endorsement.

White House

White House: Executive order on reforming accreditation to strengthen higher education
White House: Executive order on restoring equality of opportunity and meritocracy
White House: On Earth Day, we finally have a president who follows science
White House: American public submits over 10,000 comments on White House’s AI action plan
Wall Street Journal: Trump follows but rebrands Biden’s semiconductor policy (perspective by Jim Secreto)
FedScoop: State Department reorganization impacts science, cyber bureaus
Washington Post: Musk says he will step back from DOGE, refocus on Tesla after earnings plunge
Wired: The ACLU is suing the government to get access to DOGE records

Congress

Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA): Murray tours NOAA western regional office in Seattle
Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA): “Devastating loss”: Murray slams Trump gutting women’s health initiative
E&E News: Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) planning May 5 retirement announcement

Science, Society, and the Economy

Scientific American: Firing science advisors will leave the US senseless (perspective by Dan Vergano)
CBS News: FDA head falsely claims no scientists laid off, as agency shutters food safety labs
ITIF: Why university research is crucial to US competitiveness (perspective by Trelysa Long)

Education and Workforce

Nature: A Nature analysis signals the beginnings of a US science brain drain
Inside Higher Ed: Five key takeaways from tracking student visa revocations
Wall Street Journal: Chinese scientists in America come under new wave of suspicion
NPR: Colleague of Harvard scientist held by ICE warns that foreign scientists are scared
Chronicle of Higher Education: More than 200 higher-ed leaders decry Trump administration’s ‘unprecedented government overreach’
Chronicle of Higher Education: Trump’s executive order bashes accreditors, blames DEI for low standards and poor outcomes
Chronicle of Higher Education: New Carnegie classification aims to shake up how higher ed sees itself
Issues in Science and Technology: Unions help protect postdocs (perspectives)
FedScoop: What the dismantling of the Education Department means for its data
Politico: Education Department to begin garnishing wages on defaulted student loan borrowers
Bloomberg: Harvard seeks speedy resolution of suit over Trump funding cuts
New York Times: Some Harvard donors still want it to strike a deal with Trump
Wall Street Journal: Elite universities form private collective to resist Trump administration

Research Management

Chronicle of Higher Education: The rise (and fall?) of the National Science Foundation (perspective by Carly York)
Bloomberg: The day Trump’s anti-disinformation campaign came to Boston University
Stat: New England Journal of Medicine gets swept up in US attorney inquiry into alleged bias
Nature: Science sleuths flag hundreds of papers that use AI without disclosing it
Financial Times: Publishing grapples with where to draw the line on AI
Scholarly Kitchen: Rubber ducking for research communication: Why explaining to nobody helps you explain to anybody (perspective by Charlie Rapple)
Scholarly Kitchen: Bridging the gap: Localizing open science for Asia’s research realities (perspective by Maryam Sayab)

Labs and Facilities

CERN: CERN joins the build-up phase of EOSC Federation
Sandia National Lab: Sandia’s unique role in nuclear deterrence

Computing and Communications

Export Compliance Daily: Chip industry group urges BIS to revisit ‘burdensome’ AI diffusion rule
Bloomberg: This is what President Biden’s CHIPS office actually did
The Information: China quietly drops 125% retaliatory tariff on crucial US semiconductors
Lawfare: The case for a joint US-China AI lab (perspective by Simon Goldstein and Peter Salib)
Lawfare: Beyond a Manhattan Project for artificial general intelligence (perspective by Matt Chessen and Craig Martell)
GAO: Artificial intelligence: Generative AI’s environmental and human effects (report)
FedScoop: GAO suggests policy reform to mitigate generative AI’s human, environmental risks
HPCwire: NSF budget dispute threatens progress on TACC’s Horizon system

Space

Ars Technica: Republican space officials criticize “mindless” NASA science cuts
Scientific American: Slashing NASA’s programs will squander America’s place in space (perspective by Louis Friedman)
NASA Watch: Erasing women’s health studies – in space?
Fusion Industry Association: FIA launches fusion spacecraft propulsion roadmap (report)
SpaceNews: The guardian’s rifle: Why mission-essential space support cannot be outsourced (perspective by Charles Beames and Angel Smith)
SpaceNews: DARPA requests proposals for water-prospecting lunar orbiter
New York Times: Willy Ley was a prophet of space travel. His ashes were found in a basement
Sky & Telescope: Tariffs alarm the amateur astronomy industry

Weather, Climate, and Environment

American Meteorological Society: Without a strong weather enterprise, America’s economic leadership is at risk (report)
ProPublica: White House proposal could gut climate modeling the world depends on
E&E News: Climate websites revived after renewal of lapsed NOAA contracts
E&E News: Rubio shutters State Department climate office
Politico: Federal judge orders immediate thaw of climate, infrastructure funds
Science: EPA orders staff to begin canceling research grants
E&E News: Senators face pressure to safeguard EPA research arm
E&E News: Trump EPA issues first layoff notices
E&E News: Zeldin says EPA will launch formal rulemaking effort to overturn key climate finding
E&E News: White House asks FERC commissioner to step down
Nature: Arctic researchers need to find ways to keep working together (perspective by Torben Christensen)

Energy

E&E News: Republican bill would cement Trump’s energy council
E&E News: Details emerge on surging DOE departures
American Nuclear Society: Nuclear advocates fight potential cuts at DOE’s Loan Programs Office
DOE Office of Science: DOE announces plans to host an informational meeting for the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility management and operating contract competition
ANWA Deterrence Center: Nuclear power: The future of energy security
E&E News: Trump efforts to split Europe and China on clean energy fall flat

Defense

DefenseScoop: DOD kicks off review of major defense acquisition programs as Hegseth touts reforms
NPR: Trump wants a Golden Dome over America. Here’s what it would take
Politico: Pentagon’s ‘SWAT team of nerds’ resigns en masse
Breaking Defense: Air Force scouts three states as potential sites for new homeland defense radar
Inside Defense: FY26 budget relook means potential program cancellations for Army

Biomedical

Wired: Here’s all the health and human services data DOGE has access to
Science: New NIH director defends grant cuts as part of shift to support MAHA vision
Science: NIH guts its first and largest study centered on women
Annals of the American Thoracic Society: With sadness and resolve: Why I resigned as chief medical officer of an NIH institute and what comes next (perspective by Joshua Fessel)
Stat: Government word search is killing my cutting-edge research (perspective by John Quackenbush)
Stat: The nation’s top addiction researcher still has a job at the NIH — for now
Nature: China overtakes the US in cancer research output

International Affairs

Science|Business: Germany could spend part of its €500 billion stimulus package attracting US scientists
Nature: Europe must become a research epicenter as US system gets undermined (perspective by Anna Rubartelli, et al.)
Science|Business: Associated countries call for ‘stand-alone’ FP10
Research Professional: UK academic tracks Trump’s agenda ‘to discredit science’
Research Professional: UK has ‘massive opportunity’ to attract US scientists
Research Professional: Researchers say UK Space Agency needs ‘clearer vision’
Science|Business: Serbia’s academics outraged over limits to research, disappointed by EU response
University World News: New African Space Agency to coordinate continent’s work
Science: In China, trade war with US taking a toll on research labs
Reuters: China, Russia may build nuclear plant on Moon to power lunar station, official says
Science, Technology, & Human Values: Making the global local: The case of Chinese research and innovation evaluation systems (research paper)

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