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Paige Amormino
NIH T32 Postdoctoral Fellow

amormino (at) psu.edu


Department of Psychology

Pennsylvania State University



Saving SBE starts before the bill is written.


Right now, NSF SBE does not have its own separate line of funding in the FY2027 budget structure.

This matters because if SBE is not specifically protected or reinforced through funding levels or bill/report language, it can be easier for support for social, behavioral, and economic research to be reduced, deprioritized, or squeezed inside broader NSF allocations. 

We can ask for an SBE specific line of funding !

The House and Senate Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies (CJS) Appropriations Subcommittees have jurisdiction over the National Science Foundation. For FY2027, both chambers are explicitly accepting programmatic and language requests, and House guidance says members may request funding for a specific program or activity and may also request bill or report language directing or encouraging agency action. In practice, that means members of the relevant subcommittee are exactly the people who can push to secure funding levels or protective language for agencies, departments, offices, and programs within CJS jurisdiction, including NSF and SBE.
That is why it is so important for researchers, professors, and universities to contact members of these subcommittees and ask them to support SBE to get a distinct appropriation for FY 27 !

What is NSF SBE?

 NSF SBE stands for the National Science Foundation’s Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences. It funds research on people, behavior, society, and the economy, including fields like psychology, sociology, political science, and economics. This research matters because it helps us understand how people make decisions, how communities function, and how to solve real-world social problems.

Ok, I'm in!   What next? 

If you see your school listed below, organize a small group of researchers from your university to contact the relevant office together. The strongest outreach usually comes from constituents with institutional credibility: ideally at least two faculty members, center directors, department chairs, or other researchers who can explain why SBE funding matters to their campus, trainees, and local community. Professional societies can help amplify the message, but the core point is simple: congressional offices need to hear that constituents at universities and research centers in their state or district care about SBE funding now.

It is especially important to help get Republican members on board, since support for SBE may be less likely to happen automatically without clear constituent outreach. If you are in a Republican member’s state or district, your voice may be especially valuable. 
If your university has a government relations or government affairs office, reach out to them too. They may be able to help identify the right staffer, coordinate a meeting request, advise on the message, or even attend the meeting with you or for you. They may also already have relationships with the relevant congressional office, which can make your outreach stronger. 
I have more resources below.

Email Templates

Eligible Schools

Is your school or research center listed below? Ask to meet with your Representative on the House or Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies. If your school has a government relations or government affairs office, contact them too — they may be able to help set up the meeting, advise on messaging, or join you. They're linked below.

Submit edits or progress updates here
Schools in House CJS districts
 
North Alabama / AL-5

University of Alabama in Huntsville [gov affairs]
Alabama A&M University [gov affairs]
Rep. Dale Strong (R-AL-5) — Vice Chair
 
Northwest Indiana / IN-1
Indiana University Northwest
Purdue University Northwest
Rep. Frank Mrvan (D-IN-1) — Member
 
Southern and Eastern Kentucky / KY-5
University of the Cumberlands
Hazard Community and Technical College
Rep. Hal Rogers (R-KY-5) — Chair
 
Maryland’s 4th District / MD-4
University of Maryland, College Park [gov affairs]
Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-MD-4) — Member
 
Central Missouri / MO-4
University of Missouri
University of Central Missouri
Missouri Innovation Center
Rep. Mark Alford (R-MO-4) — Member
 
Queens / NY-6
Queens College (CUNY) [gov affairs]
CUNY School of Law
St. John’s University [gov affairs]
LaGuardia Community College
Rep. Grace Meng (D-NY-6) — Ranking Member
 
Rochester area / NY-25
University of Rochester [gov affairs]
Rochester Institute of Technology [gov affairs]
Rep. Joe Morelle (D-NY-25) — Member
 
Montgomery County and nearby / PA-4
Arcadia University
Salus University
Temple University Ambler [gov affairs]
Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-PA-4) — Member
 
Central Texas / TX-31
Texas A&M University–Central Texas
University of Mary Hardin-Baylor
Rep. John Carter (R-TX-31) — Member
 
Southwest Texas / TX-23
University of Texas at San Antonio
Texas A&M University–San Antonio
Sul Ross State University
Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-TX-23) — Member
 
Virginia’s 6th District / VA-6
James Madison University
Washington and Lee University
Virginia Military Institute
Roanoke College
Rep. Ben Cline (R-VA-6) — Member
 
West Virginia’s 2nd District / WV-2
West Virginia University [gov affairs]
WVU Medicine
Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute
Rep. Riley Moore (R-WV-2) — Member
Schools in Senate CJS districts

Alabama
Auburn University [gov affairs]
University of Alabama
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Sen. Katie Britt (R-AL) — Member
 
Alaska
University of Alaska Anchorage [gov affairs]
University of Alaska Fairbanks [gov affairs]
University of Alaska Southeast [gov affairs]
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) — Member
 
Delaware
University of Delaware [gov affairs]
Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) — Member
 
Hawaii
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa [gov affairs]
Sen. Brian Schatz (D-HI) — Member
 
Kansas
University of Kansas [gov affairs]
Kansas State University [gov affairs]
Sen. Jerry Moran (R-KS) — Chair
 
Louisiana
Louisiana State University [gov affairs]
Tulane University [gov affairs]
Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) — Member
 
Michigan
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor [gov affairs]
Michigan State University
Michigan Technological University
Wayne State University
Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI) — Member
 
Nebraska
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Sen. Deb Fischer (R-NE) — Member
 
New Hampshire
University of New Hampshire
Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) — Member
 
New York
Columbia University [gov affairs]
New York University [gov affairs]
Stony Brook University [gov affairs]
Binghamton University [gov affairs]
University of Rochester [gov affairs]
University at Buffalo
Weill Cornell Medicine
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) — Member
 
Oregon
Oregon State University
University of Oregon [gov affairs]
Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR) — Member
 
Rhode Island
Brown University [gov affairs]
Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI) — Member
 
South Carolina
Clemson University [gov affairs]
University of South Carolina [gov affairs]
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) — Member
 
Tennessee
Vanderbilt University [gov affairs]
University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-TN) — Member
 
West Virginia
West Virginia University [gov affairs]
Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) — Member

My school isn't on the list but I still want to help

Thanks for your help! Action items include:

Reaching out to colleagues with Republican senators or representatives on these subcommittees and offering encouragement, awareness, and support. Republican buy-in is especially important because support for SBE may be less likely to happen automatically without clear constituent outreach. 
 Spreading the word about these efforts on your own socials. Let’s go viral. 
 Contacting your own department, center, lab, or professional network and asking who has collaborators, former advisors, coauthors, or institutional ties at schools on the list. 
 Encouraging faculty at listed schools to contact their university government affairs/government relations office, since those offices may be able to help arrange meetings or coordinate advocacy. 
 Sharing sample emails, phone scripts, and meeting asks with researchers who are willing to organize locally. 
 If you belong to a society like APS, SPSP, APA, ASA, or a related field organization, encouraging them to amplify the issue and point members toward constituent outreach.
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