IEEE Home Search IEEE Shop Web Account Contact IEEE IEEE
 

IEEE-USA Home: Communications: News Releases: 2005

Quick Links
For the Media
News Releases
Media Relations Contacts
IEEE-USA In the News
IEEE-USA Officer Profiles

Public Awareness
Mass Media Fellows
Student Video Competition
EWeek
New Faces of Engineering
Engineering Journalism Awards

Publications
Today's Engineer
IEEE-USA in ACTION
IEEE-USA E-Books
Eye on Washington
IEEE-USA Annual Reports
 
2008 2007 2006
2005 2004  
Professional Guideline Series
Other News Sources

 

News Release

 
Contact: Terry Costlow
Phone: + 1 847 966 0973
E-Mail: tcostlow@core.com
Pender M. McCarter, APR, Fellow PRSA
IEEE-USA Communications & Public Relations Director
Phone: +1 202 785 0017 ext. 8353
E-Mail: p.mccarter@ieee.org

House Science Committee Chair Addresses Engineering Jobs, Education and Hubble: Exclusive IEEE-USA Today's Engineer Interview

WASHINGTON (28 April 2005) — Science and engineering are under pressure from many areas, from offshore interests to Congressional budget cutters. In an expansive IEEE-USA Today's Engineer interview in April, Rep. Sherwood Boehlert (R-N.Y.), the House Science Committee chair, examines the ways those pressures affect education, offshoring and immigration, as well as rescuing the Hubble space telescope.

Boehlert has been a proponent of scientific and engineering programs since joining Congress in 1982, but he expressed many concerns over the state of engineering today. "We've got to produce more engineers, we've got to have a better educational system, we've got to solve the visa problem," he said.

Though engineers are hunting for jobs in some regions, the inability to get talent in some areas is a big concern in some parts of New York. "It bothers me that the American business community, in some of the engineering disciplines, can't accommodate its needs with a homegrown workforce," Boehlert told Today's Engineer . Though he's in favor of creating jobs for Americans, Boehlert feels that employers should have access to foreign workers who now find it difficult to get visas.

Another hot scientific topic in Washington is the Hubble telescope. "I want to extend the life of Hubble, but not at all costs," Boehlert said. Expenses seem too high for a Shuttle mission, around $2 billion, while a robotic rescue can't be done in a timely manner, putting a dark cloud over Hubble's future.

The nation's tight finances have also led to a reduction of government funding for R&D. While NASA is seeing an increase, other budgets are "inadequate" after recent cuts. According to the House Science Committee chair, "Our future is largely dependent on our response to the challenge to invest more in R&D on the part of the government."

For the complete Today's Engineer interview with Boehlert, go to www.todaysengineer.org/2005/Apr/interview.asp. A related article on the Hubble can be found at www.todaysengineer.org/2005/Apr/hubble.asp. To see the latest monthly Today's Engineer, and to be added to the subscription list at no charge, go to www.todaysengineer.org/emailupdates.

IEEE-USA is an organizational unit of the IEEE. It was created in 1973 to advance the public good and promote the careers and public policy interests of the more than 220,000 technology professionals who are U.S. members of the IEEE. The IEEE is the world's largest technical professional society. For more information, go to www.ieeeusa.org.

IEEE-USA
2001 L Street, N.W., Suite 700
Washington, DC 20036-5104
Phone: 202-785-0017, Fax: 202-785-0835

Last Update:  29 September 2011
Staff Contact: Pender M. McCarter, p.mccarter@ieee.org

 

 

 Copyright © 2012 IEEE

Terms & Conditions - Privacy and Security - Nondiscrimination Policy - Contacts/Info