NIAID's ability to plan funding opportunities for extramural researchers ties into the budget planning cycle for each fiscal year. Learn more in the sections below.
Table of Contents
Planning Research Opportunities
How NIAID Plans Funding Opportunities
Like other NIH institutes, NIAID must at times promote basic and applied research in scientific areas that pose an emerging opportunity or need.
Unlike many other institutes, we must also respond to new emerging diseases, such as West Nile virus, pandemic flu, and SARS, for which the public expects us to develop countermeasures.
We meet these needs by issuing requests for applications (RFA), program announcements (PA), or requests for proposals (RFP).
Although much of our budget pays for investigator-initiated grants -- i.e., PIs submit an application in a topic of their choice -- a portion of our extramural dollars pays for targeted research.
Concepts May Turn Into Initiatives
NIAID plans initiatives using focus groups with the extramural research community. Planning starts two years before we award the grants responding to an initiative.
At biannual planning retreats, NIAID executives discuss potential research initiatives -- requests for applications (RFA), program announcements (PA), and requests for proposals (RFP). RFAs and PAs are published in the NIH Guide and as funding opportunity announcements in Grants.gov.
With input from the scientific community, they review opportunities and needs in promising research areas, which at this stage are called concepts.
Staff spend the next six months refining concepts for the fiscal year.
According to law, experts in the field, usually Council members, must approve a concept before we can announce an initiative.
In this way, Council acts as a "board of directors," exerting approval authority
for moving a concept forward.
Council Helps Shape Concepts
Council's lay and scientific members also review, comment on, and approve
an initiative's characteristics, such as budget
levels, mechanism (e.g., grant or contract, grant type), and other key features.
At the subcommittee meetings
that take place during the Council meeting, program staff present an outline of
a proposed concept for Council's scrutiny. (NIAID has three
Council subcommittees, one for each of its extramural program divisions.)
For each concept, the subcommittee looks deeply at its scientific merit,
relative priority, appropriate budget, and funding mechanism. Council's
regular and ad hoc members approve, disapprove, or suggest modifications
to each concept.
After fine-tuning by Council and the research community, Council-approved concepts become
published PAs, RFAs,
or RFPs depending on their Institute-wide
priority and the amount of funds we have to spend for that fiscal year.
Approved Concepts Posted Afterward
We post Council-approved Concepts: Potential Opportunities to show you which areas of science are of highest priority to NIAID.
While concepts don't always become initiatives, they highlight NIAID's research interests and are good topics for investigator-initiated applications.
For both RFAs and PAs, your chance of success depends mainly on your expertise in the subject. Read more in the Application Approach: What Are Your Choices? section of NIH Grant Cycle: Application to Renewal.
Initiatives Become RFAs, RFPs, and PAs
Concepts selected to be published as initiatives become part of NIH's budget plan, which is later incorporated into the president's budget proposal to Congress.
NIAID publishes the NIH Funding Opportunities Relevant to NIAID based on Council-approved concepts from the previous year. Both the President's Budget proposal and initiative publication occur one to two years before we award the grants or contracts.
For more information, see Concepts May Turn Into Initiatives and the Application Approach: What Are Your Choices? section of NIH Grant Cycle: Application to Renewal.
Planning and Budget Cycle
Congress Provides Direction and Funding
Public laws -- bills or resolutions passed by both houses of Congress and signed by the president -- provide NIAID with the authority and funds to carry out programs.
The are called by their popular names e.g., (USA Patriot Act) and congressional sessions and chronological law numbers (e.g., P.L. 107-56).
Congress sets limits on the purpose for which NIAID spends funds, the amount of funds we spend, and the period of time when we can use or reserve funds. At least every three years, Congress passes authorizations that enable NIAID to spend money for designated programs. Title 42, Chapter 6A of the United States Code includes NIH's authorizing legislation.
Congress funds NIH's programs and operations in annual appropriations. Each NIH appropriations bill limits how federal grant, cooperative agreement, and contract funds can be spent. See NIH Appropriations Information for annual data.
NIAID Budget and Planning
Budgets, authorizations, appropriations, continuing resolutions: what does it all mean? It's a long and winding road from planning how to spend federal tax dollars to funding research grants. Below we outline the federal government's annual budget process.
Though Congress allocates our funds, agencies get the ball rolling well before a fiscal year starts. NIAID works on three budget cycles at a time.
Figure 1. NIAID's Budget and Concept Planning Flowchart
See a PowerPoint version (34 K).
NIAID submits a budget request that moves up our chain of command for further tweaking, first to NIH and then to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The request includes an annual performance plan describing goals for the requested funds and a performance report of how last year's goals were met.
HHS forwards its request to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which reports to the president. OMB works closely with NIH and other agencies to create the budget the president proposes to Congress on the first Monday in February. After that, the President's Budget triggers the legislative side to act.
Before There's a Budget
In the beginning, there's authorization. Before a federal agency such as NIAID or NIH can spend money in any area, a congressional committee must authorize its program.
That means NIAID can't simply decide to award grants to design space vehicles! Our authorization has implications for politically sensitive areas too, such as restrictions on human embryonic stem cell research.
Budget Resolutions Lay a Foundation
Action starts in Congress after the president submits a budget request. Congress examines the president's budget in detail but does not actually vote on it.
Meanwhile, House and Senate budget committees consider the President's Budget as they prepare their own budget resolution.
This legislation broadly outlines spending categories, targets, revenues, and spending estimates (also known as outlays) for the next fiscal year. It also guides the appropriations committees that set funding levels for federal agencies.
See Table 1 for the congressional committees and subcommittees with jurisdiction over NIH.
Table 1. Authorizations, Appropriations, and Oversight Committees and Subcommittees for NIH.
Type |
Senate |
House of Representatives |
Authorizations |
|
|
Appropriations |
|
|
Oversight |
|
|
Appropriations Set the Dollars
Appropriations bills provide the budget authority to make financial obligations.
Setting funding levels is the job of the appropriations committees. Both House and Senate have 13 appropriations subcommittees that draft funding legislation for NIH and other federal agencies.
After Congress passes a budget resolution, the Senate and the House hold committee and subcommittee hearings on the proposed President's budget. For example, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions authorizing committee and the Senate Committee on Appropriations hold hearings for NIH.
- At these hearings, they get analyses, information, and estimates of the budget and economy from the Congressional Budget Office.
- Agency representatives, such as the NIH director, must defend the president's budget proposal at the hearings.
With this information, the two branches of Congress create their 13 appropriations bills (they may revise authorizing bills too).
The full appropriations committees may modify the bills before sending them to the Senate for a vote. The appropriations bills must reflect the congressional budget resolution.
Appropriations start each year in the House, with the Senate beginning its work after passage of a House bill. Funds from budget committees are divvied up to the appropriations committees as 13 separate budget bills.
To resolve differences between the Senate and House, bills go to 13 conference committees. Both bodies vote on each bill, and the president either signs or vetoes each one unless the budget goes through a reconciliation process.
In that case, authorizing committees resolve differences in conference. Both the House and Senate vote on a single bill and send it to the president by October 16. The president either signs or vetoes the bill.
When We Don't Get a Budget
Though the fiscal year begins on October 1, Congress often does not pass the budget by that date.
- Congress usually passes a continuing resolution (CR) to tide us over for a few weeks or months while it irons out budget wrinkles.
- We often get a series of CRs that can last into January or later.
- A CR funds programs at the level of the previous fiscal year's appropriations or at the level of the bill either the House or the Senate passed for the current fiscal year, whichever is lower.
- While under a CR, NIAID can make only a limited number of new grant awards. NIAID may fund existing awards at a reduced level until the budget passes.
- Further, NIAID must fund its existing programs and is prohibited by law from launching new initiatives or activities outside the scope of the existing authorization while a CR is in effect.
Learn what information to expect and when at Paylines and Budget Page Changes Throughout the Year.
Finally... Funds
Working in reverse order from the budget request, OMB apportions funds to HHS, which allocates money to NIH. In turn, NIH forwards NIAID its share.
Our budget level determines our paylines and the number of awards we can make during a fiscal year. For NIAID's latest budget information, go to Budget and Funding.
An agency may receive additional funds outside of the regular budget cycle.
Congress may approve a supplemental appropriation if it determines that an existing appropriation bill is insufficient or decides to fund activities not covered by the existing bill. For example, NIAID received its initial biodefense funding from a supplemental appropriation.
Paylines and Budget Page Changes Throughout the Year
The Budget and Funding page goes through many changes during the fiscal year.
We update the page using the following cycle:
- The new fiscal year starts on October 1.
Typically we don't have a budget right away.
- NIAID sets conservative administrative (interim) paylines for R01s and some other grant types.
- This move allows us to fund the best-scoring grants.
- Keep in mind that these interim paylines are temporary; we don't send Email Alerts for them.
- After NIH gets a budget, it takes our budget office several weeks to crunch the numbers. So don't expect to see final paylines or financial management plan details for a while.
- Over the next several weeks or even months, we post paylines for all grant types.
- First we usually get the R01 payline -- or paylines if we have a separate payline for new investigators.
- The R01 paylines will remain in effect until the end of the fiscal year (so we enter "FY XX" in the Status column).
- Others paylines may change at any time (so we enter "FY XX" in the Status column).
- We send an Email Alert to subscribers whenever we set or revise paylines or our financial management plan.
- Around the end of August, we remove the paylines and financial management plan from the main Budget and Funding page. We archive the paylines at NIAID Final Paylines by Fiscal Year.
- The fiscal year ends on September 30. See step 1 above.
For more resources and advice, see the Application Tools for All About
Grants. |