Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 90 Part 1.djvu/519

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PUBLIC LAW 94-000—MMMM. DD, 1976

PUBLIC LAW 94-282—MAY 11, 1976

90 STAT. 469

(b) Members of the Committee appointed by the President pursuant to subsection (a)(2) of this section shall— (1) be qualified and distinguished in one or more of the following areas: science, engineering, technology, information dissemination, education, management, labor, or public affairs; (2) be capable of critically assessing the policies, priorities, programs, and activities of the Nation, with respect to the findings, policies, and purposes set forth in title I; and (3) shall collectively constitute a balanced composition with respect to (A) fields of science and engineering, (B) academic, industrial, and government experience, and (C) business, labor, consumer, and public interest points of view. (c) The President shall appoint one member of the Committee to Chairman, serve as Chairman and another member to serve as Vice Chairman for such periods as the President may determine. (d) Each member of the Committee who is not an officer of the Fed- Compensation, eral Government shall, while serving on business of the Committee, be entitled to receive compensation at a rate not to exceed the daily rate prescribed for GS-18 of the General Schedule under section 5332 of title 5, United States Code, including traveltime, and while so serving 5 USC 5332 note. away from his home or regular place of business he may be allowed travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, in the same manner as the expenses authorized by section 5703(b) of title 5, United States Code, for persons in Government service employed intermittently. FEDERAL SCIENCE, ENGINEERING, AND TECHNOLOGY SURVEY

SEC. 303. (a) The Committee shall survey, examine, and analyze the 42 USC 6633. overall context of the Federal science, engineering, and technology effort including missions, goals, personnel, funding, organization, facilities, and activities in general, taking adequate account of the interests of individuals and groups that may be affected by Federal scientific, engineering, and technical programs, including, as appropriate, consultation with such individuals and groups. In carrying out its functions under this section, the Committee shall, among other things, consider needs for— (1) organizational reform, including institutional realinement designed to place Federal agencies whose missions are primarily or solely devoted to scientific and technological research and development, and those agencies primarily or solely concerned with fuels, energy, and materials, within a single cabinet-level department; (2) improvements in existing systems for handling scientific and technical information on a Government-wide basis, including consideration of the appropriate role to be played by the private sector in the dissemination of such information; (3) improved technology assessment in the executive branch of the Federal Government; (4) improved methods for effecting technology innovation, transfer, and use; (5) stimulating more effective Federal-State and Federalindustry liaison and cooperation in science and technology, including the formation of Federal-State mechanisms for the mutual pursuit of this goal;