Author: Marcia Smith

Spirit Still Stuck, But JPL Keeps Trying

Spirit Still Stuck, But JPL Keeps Trying

NASA’s Mars Rover, Spirit, is still stuck on Mars after two weeks of attempts by experts at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) to get it moving. In an interview on NPR, John Callas, project manager for the Mars rovers, explained the difficulty in extricating Spirit from the “slippery, sandy stuff” in which it has been stuck for the past six months. One of Spirit’s six wheels stopped functioning about three years ago, but that one is not the problem now. The rover broke through a crusty surface into loose material below and the five functioning wheels cannot get enough traction to move. Callas said that the rover still could do a lot of science from a stationary position, although JPL is a bit worried about the oncoming winter and whether sufficient sunlight will reach the rover’s solar panels to keep it alive. The rover is tilted southward now, and the Sun will be in the northern sky during the winter, which arrives in May on that part of Mars.

Events of Interest: Week of December 7-11, 2009

Events of Interest: Week of December 7-11, 2009

The following events may be of interest next week. For further information, see our calendar on the right menu or click on the links provided below. Note that congressional hearings are subject to change. Check the relevant committee’s website for up to date information.

During the Week

  • Action on the remaining FY2010 appropriations bills may come at any time.
  • The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation committee approved the nomination of Philip Coyle to be Associate Director for National Security and International Affairs at OSTP on December 3. His nomination could be brought to the Senate floor at any time. (The Senate is in session this weekend, too.)

Tuesday-Thursday, December 8-10

  • NASA-DARPA international conference on orbital debris removal, Westfields Marriott Hotel, Chantilly, VA (see NASA’s October 2009 Orbital Debris Quarterly News for more information)

Wednesday, December 9

Thursday, December 10

Friday, December 11

AIA Recommends Changes to Export Controls

AIA Recommends Changes to Export Controls

The Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) sent a letter to President Obama on Wednesday spelling out changes its members want to the export control system. The President ordered a review of expert controls in August.

The AIA letter lists five areas that are “ripe for early action” including —

  • establishing criteria to identify the most sensitive technologies in need of the most rigorous controls
  • facilitating timely flow of technologies between the United States and its closest allies and partners
  • adopting procedures so that DOD reviews “properly balance both policy and technical considerations, and are completed in a timely and consistent manner”
  • updating treatment of next-generation technologies under U.S. and multilateral export regimes, and
  • reviewing export control compliance requirements, and resource requirements

See AIA’s website for more information.

Appropriations Update

Appropriations Update

As the clock ticks down on the current Continuing Resolution, which expires on December 18, seven of the 12 appropriations bills still have not been cleared by Congress. All seven have passed the House, but only four have passed the Senate. Conference agreements on the four that have passed both houses, including the Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) bill that includes NASA, NOAA and NSF, and the Department of Defense (DOD) bill — have not been reached.

Congress continues to discuss how to get these remaining bills enacted. Congress Daily (subscription required) reports today that no definitive strategy has been agreed upon, but quotes House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) as saying that he hopes to have all of them completed in the next two weeks. One reported scenario is that all but the DOD bill will be wrapped together into an omnibus package along with jobs-related legislation, a short term extension of the PATRIOT Act, and a provision to prevent a scheduled cut to Medicare reimbursements to physicians. The DOD bill reportedly might include a debt limit increase. Such legislation would have to go back to the Senate for a vote, which is currently focused on health care legislation.

Stay tuned!

For the status of the appropriations bills, visit the Thomas website of the Library of Congress.

House Approves Must-Pass Renewal of Satellite Television Legislation

House Approves Must-Pass Renewal of Satellite Television Legislation

The House passed H.R. 3570, the Satellite Home Viewer Reauthorization Act of 2009, yesterday. (For clickable links to that and other legislation mentioned in this article, see SpacePolicyOnline.com’s Fact Sheet on Major Space-Related Legislation in the 111th Congress.)

As Representative John Conyers (D-MI) stated during floor debate on December 2, “we must have this reauthorized without delay to avoid the immediate loss of service to tens of thousands of satellite consumers.”

As passed, the bill combines H.R. 3570 as reported from the House Judiciary Committee (H. Rept. 111-319) and H.R. 2994 as reported from the House Energy and Commerce Committee (H. Rept. 111-349). Action now moves to the Senate, where S. 1670 was reported (S. Rept. 111-98) from the Senate Judiciary Committee on November 10 and S. 2764 was ordered reported from the Senate Commerce committee on November 19.

Every 5 years, Congress needs to renew (or not) legislation that regulates the reception of television programming via satellite. It is a mixture of copyright law and telecommunications law and the issues involved are very complex, all the more so this time because the original laws were written for analog signals and television is now broadcast digitally for the most part.

Examples of the issues that surround this quincennial debate include:

  • rural lawmakers want to ensure that satellite television is as available to their constituents as it is to people in more populated areas, while satellite TV service providers argue that it is prohibitively expensive to build satellites with sufficient capacity to provide the signals in remote areas with few potential customers;
  • local network broadcast television affiliates want to protect their advertising base by ensuring that their local signals – with local advertisements – are the ones being viewed by satellite TV subscribers in their broadcast area and not signals from affiliates in other parts of the country (“distant network signals”) unless it can be proved that the subscriber cannot get the local signal over-the-air; and
  • copyright owners object to the compulsory copyright license that Congress grants to satellite television providers arguing that they should have to negotiate copyright licenses as do most other businesses (though Congress also gives cable television companies a compulsory copyright license).

For more on these issues and what this year’s legislation would do, see CRS Report R40624, Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing Provisions in the Communications Act and the Copyright Act: Issues for Congress, by Charles B. Goldfarb, available through the OpenCRS project.

Latin American and Caribbean Countries Agree to Work Together to Facilitate International Cooperation

Latin American and Caribbean Countries Agree to Work Together to Facilitate International Cooperation

At a space policy workshop in Mexico City last month, space policy-makers from six Latin American and Caribbean countries agreed to identify common elements in their space policies to facilitate international cooperation. The workshop, Space Policy in Latin America and the Caribbean: Looking to the Future, was sponsored by the Regional Centre for Space Science and Technology Education in Latin America and the Caribbean (CRECTEALC) and the Secure World Foundation. It brought together space policy-makers from Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, Germany, Japan, South Africa, Mexico, The Netherlands, United States of America, and Venezuela, according to a SWF news release today.

SWF Executive Director Ray Williamson was quoted as saying that smaller Latin American countries are interested in space because of the benefits they can derive from space applications for health, resource management and education, and for the development of high tech industry. The Secretary General of CRECTEALC, Dr. Sergio Camacho, a former Director of the United Nations Office of Outer Space Affairs, reportedly said that international cooperation is a way for countries to develop space capabilities more quickly: “‘Such participation is facilitated when [a country’s] national space legislation is aligned with the international outer space treaties. Furthermore, cooperation is facilitated when countries have compatible space policies and goals,’ Camacho said.”

Congressional Testimony on Commercial Human Space Flight Safety

Congressional Testimony on Commercial Human Space Flight Safety

The Government Accountability Office’s (GAO’s) testimony to the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee’s Subcommittee on Aviation is available from GAO. Testimony from all the witnesses and a webcast of the hearing is available on the committee’s website.

Congressional Testimony on Ensuring Safety of Human Space Flight

Congressional Testimony on Ensuring Safety of Human Space Flight

The testimony from the House Science and Technology Committee’s subcommittee hearing on ensuring the safety of human space flight is available on the committee’s website, along with opening remarks from subcommittee Chairwoman Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ). Opening remarks from committee Ranking Member Ralph Hall (R-TX) and subcommittee Ranking Member Pete Olson (R-TX) are available on the committee’s Republican website. Neither has posted the webcast yet.

Human Space Flight Safety Hot Topic Today

Human Space Flight Safety Hot Topic Today

Two congressional hearings at 10:00 this morning will look into the safety of human space flight and related issues.

The Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee of the House Science and Technology (House S&T) Committee will look at NASA’s Constellation program and commercial space flight. Yesterday, Keith Cowing of NASAWatch asserted that NASA withheld a chart from a presentation to the Augustine committee that showed that Ares 1/Orion is not as safe as NASA claims. The allegation is that Joseph Fragola, who works for Valador, which provides consulting services to NASA, showed a chart in his presentation to the Augustine committee that was significantly different from an internal version of the chart. One can view both charts on NASAWatch by clicking on the link at the bottom of the NASAWatch story. Fragola is one of this morning’s witnesses before the House S&T subcommittee.

At literally the same time, the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee’s Aviation subcommittee, which has jurisdiction over the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), will hold a hearing on commercial space flight. According to the committee, topics will include passenger and crew safety on commercial space flights, how commercial spaceports will handle air traffic control and the safe and effective use of the national airspace system. Witnesses are George Nield, FAA Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation; Gerald Dillingham, Government Accountability Office; J.P. Stevens, Aerospace Industries Association; Jeff Greason, XCOR Aerospace, vice chairman of the Commercial Space Flight Federation, and a member of the Augustine committee; and James Testwuide, Wisconsin Aerospace Authority.

Both hearings will be webcast for those who want to multitask and watch them simultaneously. Anyone who wants to attend in person will find the House S&T hearing in 2318 Rayburn, and the House T&I hearing two floors down in 2167 Rayburn.

NASA's Brand New Inspector General to Testify Tomorrow

NASA's Brand New Inspector General to Testify Tomorrow

The House Science and Technology Committee just updated the list of witnesses for the hearing tomorrow on Independent Audit of NASA. Paul Martin, who was confirmed as NASA’s new Inspector General just a week and a half ago, will join the panel of witnesses. Thomas Howard, who was acting Inspector General and earlier slated to testify will still be there in his role as Deputy IG. NASA CFO Beth Robinson and Daniel Murrin from Ernst & Young also will be on the panel. The hearing is at 2:00 tomorrow afternoon, December 3, in 2318 Rayburn House Office Building.