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White House Budget Would Fund Additional Manufacturing Hubs

The Obama administration's budget proposal unveiled this week calls for seven new national manufacturing innovation hubs, along with funding to build toward a national network of 45 such sites. Much of the president's budget is considered dead on arrival in the Republican-controlled Congress, and GOP lawmakers who've complained about...

The Obama administration's budget proposal unveiled this week calls for seven new national manufacturing innovation hubs, along with funding to build toward a national network of 45 such sites.

Much of the president's
budget is considered dead on arrival in the Republican-controlled Congress, and GOP lawmakers who've complained about spending levels in the proposal may be loath to grant billions in additional funding to federal agencies.

Still, a
handful of provisions in the White House budget could hold the potential for bipartisan compromise, and the hubs -- which utilize federal and non-federal funds to build research clusters involving companies, universities and nonprofit groups -- have drawn bipartisan support in the past.

Overall, the administration's proposal would allocate $350 million in the Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, and Energy departments to fund the
new hubs, with $1.9 billion in funding for the 29 hubs comprising the remainder of the network. 

Lawmakers have funded nine new hubs through fiscal year 2015. The fifth of those nine, an Energy Department cluster aimed at reducing the cost and energy needed make advanced composites, was
dedicated last month in Tennessee at a ceremony that included that state's GOP governor and both Republican senators.

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