HR-3858-117
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 178.
What it does
This bill would require the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) to create a national science and technology strategy and submit it to Congress every four years. It would also require OSTP to complete a review of the U.S. science and technology enterprise no later than December 31, 2022, and every four years after that. The bill updates existing OSTP reporting requirements to align with these new deadlines and scope.
Who benefits
Federal agencies involved in research and development, who would receive clearer strategic direction. Universities and research institutions that rely on federal R&D funding priorities. Technology companies that benefit from coordinated national research goals. Congress, which would gain a structured, recurring report to inform oversight and appropriations decisions. Policymakers seeking a unified framework for science and technology planning.
Who is hurt
OSTP staff, who would face new mandatory reporting workloads and deadlines. Taxpayers who fund the administrative costs of producing the strategy and review. Agencies or research priorities that may be deprioritized or excluded from the national strategy. Researchers in fields that fall outside the strategy's defined national objectives could see reduced attention or funding alignment.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States lacks a consistent, long-term framework for coordinating science and technology priorities across the federal government, leaving agencies to operate in silos without a shared national vision. They contend that a mandatory four-year strategy would help align federal R&D spending with emerging challenges — such as competition from foreign nations in advanced technology sectors — and ensure that Congress has the information it needs to make informed funding decisions. Proponents say that requiring a formal review process creates accountability and transparency, making it harder for administrations to neglect strategic planning. They also argue the bill imposes minimal cost while potentially yielding significant benefits by preventing duplicated efforts and identifying gaps in the national research portfolio.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating a rigid four-year strategy cycle could produce bureaucratic documents that are outdated almost immediately, given how rapidly the technology landscape changes. They contend that the bill adds reporting requirements without providing new funding or enforcement mechanisms, making it likely to generate paperwork rather than meaningful policy change. Critics may also argue that centralizing science and technology priorities in a single OSTP-led strategy risks politicizing research agendas, potentially steering federal resources toward politically favored fields rather than those with the greatest scientific merit. Some may further argue that existing agency-level strategic plans already fulfill this function, making a separate national strategy redundant and an inefficient use of OSTP resources.