Saturday, November 05, 2022

Biden-Harris administration announces $1.5 billion from Inflation Reduction Act to strengthen America’s national laboratories

Upgrades to DOE’s National Laboratories solidify America’s global leadership in innovation, science, and clean energy

Grant and Award Announcement

DOE/US DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Biden-Harris Administration, through the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), today announced $1.5 billion from President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act to build and upgrade America’s national laboratories. The resources will upgrade scientific facilities, modernize infrastructure, and address deferred maintenance projects at DOE’s Office of Science-managed national laboratories, which are regional hubs for innovation, including clean energy technology that supports good-paying jobs and lower energy costs for families. This historic amount of support will help achieve the Biden-Harris Administration’s vision to advance solutions-driven research and innovation conducted by America’s best and brightest scientists to tackle the nation’s greatest challenges and achieve the President’s ambitious climate goals.  

“America’s commitment to science and ingenuity shaped us into the world leaders we are today, and the continued success of our national laboratories will ensure we’re at the global forefront of innovation for generations to come,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm. “Thanks to President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, these world-class institutions will receive $1.5 billion—one of the largest ever investments in national laboratory infrastructure—to develop advanced energy technologies and groundbreaking tools like Argonne National Laboratory’s powerful new supercomputer, Aurora, that we need to advance new frontiers, like modeling climate change and developing vaccines.” 

“Our world-class system of national labs has enabled American innovation and made the U.S. the world leader in science and technology for generations,” said White House Senior Advisor for Clean Energy Innovation and Implementation John Podesta. “The investments in national labs in President Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act will help drive clean energy innovation, boost our economy, lower costs for families, create good-paying American jobs, and combat the climate crisis here at home and around the world.”  

Today, at DOE’s state-of-the-art Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, Secretary Granholm will join White House Senior Advisor for Clean Energy Innovation and Implementation John Podesta, Office of Science and Technology Policy Deputy Director for Energy and Chief Strategist for the Energy Transition Sally Benson, and other senior White House and DOE officials. The visit underscores DOE’s swift action to allocate funds for science and research infrastructure provided by President Biden’s Agenda, and the critical role that DOE and the National Labs play in the newly released White House report on U.S. Innovation to Meet 2050 Climate Goals. The additional investments made possible by the Inflation Reduction Act will deliver critical benefits to the national laboratory complex that will spur and support climate science and innovation while also creating local jobs and helping attract and retain the highly skilled workforce needed to tackle the climate crisis. 

View the livestream event at Argonne National Laboratory at 2:00 pm CT: LINK 

DOE’s Office of Science is the nation’s largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences and the lead federal entity supporting fundamental research for clean energy. The Office of Science oversees the majority of DOE’s national laboratories, as well as various programs and facilities, which help achieve its mission of delivering major scientific discoveries, capabilities, and tools to transform the understanding of nature and to advance America’s energy, economic, and national security. However, decades of underfunding across DOE’s network of national laboratories have put the Office’s mission at risk and threatened America’s scientific and technological competitive edge over adversarial nations like China and Russia.   

To address this funding backlog, the Office of Science received an additional $1.55 billion in FY 2022 through the President’s Inflation Reduction Act to accelerate ongoing facility upgrade projects and national laboratory infrastructure projects. Projects include continuing construction of everything from cutting-edge electron colliders to the world’s fastest supercomputers, as well infrastructure upgrades for systems like fire alarms, electrical, and updated HVAC systems to ensure DOE’s national laboratories are modern, safe, and reliable.  

The Inflation Reduction Act will provide funding for:   

  • Advanced scientific computing research facilities  
  • Basic energy sciences projects  
  • High energy physics construction and major items of equipment projects  
  • Fusion energy science construction and major items of equipment projects  
  • Nuclear physics construction and major items of equipment projects   
  • Isotope research and development facilities
  • Science laboratory infrastructure projects  

White House Factsheet: More information on the Inflation Reduction Act’s funding and a new White House Game Changers Initiative can be found here.  

More information on the funding announced today can be found here and a complete list of funding for each facility can be found here.  

Building on the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to innovation, the funding announced today has already been distributed to selected projects to address a wide variety of long-term priorities and accelerate ongoing projects for critical facilities and other infrastructure. Together with President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the CHIPS and Science Act, the Inflation Reduction Act will position America to lead the world in the industries of the future and strengthen America’s ability to confront our biggest challenges, from climate change to quantum computing and everything in between.  

To learn more about DOE’s Office of Science and its priorities, click here.  

GSA applauds Medicare coverage of medically necessary oral and dental health therapies in physician fee schedule


Business Announcement

THE GERONTOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA

The Gerontological Society of America (GSA) — the nation’s largest interdisciplinary organization devoted to the field of aging — commends the Biden-Harris Administration for finalizing regulatory policy that will have a direct and meaningful impact in the lives of many Medicare beneficiaries. The Medicare program is taking an important step towards much-needed coverage of medically necessary oral and dental care.

Specifically, the final Physician Fee Schedule for 2023 codifies Medicare coverage for dental services that are inextricably linked and substantially related and integral to organ transplant surgery, cardiac valve replacement, valvuloplasty procedures, and head and neck cancers. The final rule also creates the opportunity for further coverage expansion by establishing “a process to identify for [the Medicare program’s] consideration and review submissions of additional dental services that are inextricably linked and substantially related and integral to the clinical success of other covered medical services.” Finally, the rule codifies Medicare coverage for the wiring of teeth related to covered medical services, the reduction of jaw fractures, the extraction of teeth in preparation for radiation treatment of neoplastic disease, dental splints for covered treatment of certain medical conditions, and oral or dental examinations relating to renal transplant surgery.

GSA members contribute to the evidence base as it relates to the importance of oral health as an essential element of healthy aging. The Society has a long-standing commitment to oral health, which includes multiple collaborations over several years. Guided by its Oral Health Workgroup, GSA works to increase awareness of appropriate oral care and strengthen the impact that all members of health care and caregiver teams have to ensure good oral care for older people. Additionally, GSA’s Oral Health Interest Group is an interdisciplinary network that provides an active opportunity for persons interested in the issue of oral health to meet and exchange information and resources.

Starting in 2016, GSA has developed and actively disseminated several relevant publications. Among them are a white paper from an interprofessional convening that included more than 20 national aging and oral health organizations titled “Interprofessional Solutions for Improving Oral Health in Older Adults: Addressing Access Barriers, Creating Oral Health Champions,” and two issues of GSA’s What’s Hot newsletter, “Oral Health: An Essential Element of Healthy Aging” in 2017 and “Interrelationships Between Nutrition and Oral Health in Older Adults” in 2020.

GSA has been a strong advocate for the inclusion of coverage of medically necessary oral and dental care in Medicare and has worked as a member of the Consortium for Medically Necessary Oral Health Coverage to advocate for Medicare coverage of medically necessary oral and dental treatment. GSA has joined roughly 240 colleagues in signing the consortium’s Community Statement to urge Congress and the Administration to explore options for extending evidence-based coverage to all Medicare beneficiaries. As a member of the consortium, GSA will now turn to the important process of expanding coverage of medically necessary oral and dental services to all medical conditions for which such services are documented to be of clinical, fiscal, and human value.

GSA thanks the administration for recognizing these facts and taking this important step to extend Medicare coverage to dental services that are integral to the delivery of covered medical services. By broadening coverage of medically necessary dental services and opening an important opportunity for stakeholders to suggest clinical scenarios to which medically necessary oral and dental services should be extended in the future, the Physician Fee Schedule makes meaningful progress to improve the clinical success of covered medical services.

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The Gerontological Society of America (GSA) is the nation's oldest and largest interdisciplinary organization devoted to research, education, and practice in the field of aging. The principal mission of the Society — and its 5,500+ members — is to advance the study of aging and disseminate information among scientists, decision makers, and the general public. GSA’s structure also includes a policy institute, the National Academy on an Aging Society.


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