The OSA/SPIE delegates discussed with lawmakers the importance of the nation's broad portfolio of investments in science, engineering and technology in promoting national security, prosperity and innovation, and provided a constituent perspective on the local and national impact of these programs and their significance to optics and photonics. The group also stressed the importance of the National Science Foundation's Math Science Partnership program and the growing ways the fields of optics and photonics can further the missions of the US government.
OSA said more than 50 percent of all industrial innovation and growth in the US since World War II can be attributed to advances pioneered through scientific research, with publicly funded R&D the foundation for today's scientific and technological progress.
Highlights of the two-day event included remarks by leading science administrators in the federal government, including Ray Orbach, director of the Office of Science in the Department of Energy, and Arden Bement, National Science Foundation interim director; briefings by congressional staff members; and a reception at the Rayburn House Office Building to award Reps. Judy Biggert (R-IL) and Rush Holt (D-NJ) the George E. Brown Jr. Science, Engineering, Technology Leadership Award. CVD participants had a breakfast meeting with Rep. Nick Smith (R-MI) before visiting their senators and representatives.
For more information, visit: www.osa.org