Category: Civil

Intelligence Auth, Bill Renaming Dryden for Armstrong, Pass House — UPDATE

Intelligence Auth, Bill Renaming Dryden for Armstrong, Pass House — UPDATE

UPDATE, January 1, 2013:   The House passed the FY2013 Intelligence Authorization bill on December 31, clearing it for the President.   It also passed the bill renaming Dryden FRC after Neil Armstrong; the Senate still must act on it.  It did not vote on the North Korea bill or the emergency supplemental.

ORIGINAL STORY, December 30, 2012:  As everyone awaits action on the fiscal cliff, the House has scheduled votes tomorrow on the FY2013 intelligence authorization act and a bill to rename NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center after Neil Armstrong.

The Senate passed the intelligence authorization act, S. 3454, on Friday after consulting with House colleagues to craft it to ensure it would pass both chambers.

The bill, H.R. 6612,  to rename Dryden after the late Neil Armstrong, who was a test pilot there before entering the history books as the first man to walk on the Moon, was scheduled for House consideration two weeks ago, but it never came up for a vote.

The House also has scheduled a vote on a House concurrent resolution, H. Con. Res. 145, condemning North Korea for what the resolution calls a missile launch on December 12.   That launch placed a satellite into orbit, the first successful space launch for that country although reports from western observers indicated the satellite was tumbling and therefore not operational.   Still, it was the first time in four attempts that North Korea succeeded in getting anything into orbit.  Nevertheless, it is widely viewed more as a test of a capability to deliver a nuclear warhead to Earth-based targets than the “peaceful” launch of an earth observing satellite as North Korea claims. 

No vote on H.R. 1, the emergency supplemental appropriations bill for victims of Hurricane Sandy, is scheduled.  That bill includes $15 million for NASA and almost $500 million for NOAA.

 

NASA and NOAA In Line for Hurricane Sandy Disaster Aid Funds

NASA and NOAA In Line for Hurricane Sandy Disaster Aid Funds

The Senate-passed version of a $60 billion appropriations bill to help victims of Hurricane Sandy includes $15 million to repair damage at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility (WFF) on the Virginia shore, while NOAA would get almost $500 million.

The bill itself says only that the NASA money is to repair facilities damaged by the hurricane that wreaked devastating havoc on the East Coast — particularly New Jersey, New York and Connecticut — in October.  Senator Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) said in a floor statement on December 17 that “Even NASA’s spaceport Wallops facility was damaged by Hurricane Sandy.”   Mikulski just ascended to chairing the Senate Appropriations Committee following the death of Senator Daniel Inouye, and remains as chair of the Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) subcommittee that funds NASA and NOAA.   She added that beaches near the NASA launch pad at WFF were washed away and workers had to stop testing Orbital Sciences Corporation’s Antares rocket, which is part of NASA’s commercial cargo program.  She said other NASA facilities also were damaged.

The Senate passed the bill, H.R. 1, reformulated as a disaster assistance bill, on Friday, December 28.   The bill provides $60.4 billion in disaster aid, including $513 million for activities under the jurisdiction of the CJS subcommittee.  The $15 million for NASA is quite small compared to NOAA, which would get $482 million — $373 million in the Operations, Research and Facilities account plus $109 million in the Procurement, Acquisition and Construction account.  The money is for repairing and replacing damaged facilities, repairing and improving weather forecasting capabilities and infrastructure, stabilizing and restoring coastal ecosystems, dealing with marine debris, expenses related to fisheries disasters, repairs to hurricane hunter airplanes, and other purposes.

Some Senate Republicans unsuccessfully offered an alternative bill that would have provided less than half of the Democratic-sponsored legislation and focused on near term needs.   The Democratic version passed 62-32, however, so some Republicans did support it.    Whether the Republican-controlled House will pass it in the remaining few days of the 112th Congress is unclear.   It is not on the list of bills to be considered by the House today.

 

Still No Deal on Fiscal Cliff, But Talks Continue After Tense Day

Still No Deal on Fiscal Cliff, But Talks Continue After Tense Day

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) told the Senate just before 6:00 pm ET that talks with Republicans would continue on how to avert the fiscal cliff. The statement came after a tense day where earlier he had said the talks were at an impasse because Republicans wanted to add a provision that would change how Social Security cost of living increases are calculated.

As the afternoon began, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) criticized Reid for taking so long to respond to a proposal Republicans made the previous evening. McConnell told the Senate that he had sent a proposal to Reid about 7:00 pm ET Saturday evening, but had received no response by 2:00 pm this afternoon.  Reid then took the floor and replied that he had no counteroffer to make.  While complimenting McConnell for negotiating in good faith, Reid said the two were simply too far apart on “some pretty big issues.”

The focus of the talks has been on tax rates and other tax breaks that will expire at midnight tomorrow.  Aides to Reid were quoted as saying that now is not the time to bring Social Security benefits into the debate.

The Senate recessed to allow each party to caucus and determine how to proceed. Republicans emerged insisting that they did not know that the proposed change — using the chained price index to calculate cost of living increases, which would reduce those increases — was a dealbreaker and they would take the issue off the table.  About two hours later, Reid returned to the floor and said he was happy to hear it, and talks would continue.  He said there is still time for a deal, but his manner did not convey optimism.

As for the automatic spending cuts that will take place on January 2 — the sequester — several media sources that closely follow Capitol Hill politics are reporting that there is virtually no chance that Congress will act to stop it.  How long it would take for the draconian cuts — 9.4 percent for defense, 8.2 percent for the rest of discretionary spending — to impact government and contractor personnel and programs is a matter of debate.  Since it begins with cuts to spending in FY2013, which is already underway, people are getting increasingly nervous.

Nothing is certain until the deadlines pass, of course, and even then the 113th Congress — which begins on Thursday — can fix problems left by the 112th.  Aphorisms like “it’s always darkest before the dawn” or “it ain’t over till the fat lady sings” may be cliches, but they also often are true.  If the stock market continues its decline tomorrow, the parties may be motivated to find a solution.

 

No Fiscal Cliff Deal Yet, Failure to Fix Sequestration "Dereliction of Duty" Says Blakey

No Fiscal Cliff Deal Yet, Failure to Fix Sequestration "Dereliction of Duty" Says Blakey

With half of the 48 hours gone already, Senate Democratic and Republican leaders still have not reached a deal to avert the fiscal cliff.   Meanwhile, Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) President Marion Blakey issued a stern warning today about the impact on the aerospace sector if sequestration goes into effect.

After a meeting at the White House yesterday,  Senator Democratic Leader Harry Reid (NV) and Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (KY) agreed to spend the weekend trying to reach an agreement that would pass the Senate and, hopefully, the House before the clock strikes midnight on Monday, December 31.  A deal is expected to be presented to their respective caucuses tomorrow afternoon.  

The Senate was in session Thursday and Friday, but not today.  The House has been in recess since before Christmas.  Both chambers are scheduled to meet tomorrow in a rare Sunday session.  House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA) alerted Members that the House could remain in session through January 2.   That is the last possible day for the 112th Congress.  The 113th Congress, with new and returning members elected on November 6, begins on Thursday.  All pending legislation dies at the end of a Congress.   Democratic Senators reportedly are drafting legislation to be introduced as soon as the 113th Congress convenes to cut tax rates if no agreement is reached before then.

Few details have been made public about what progress is being made other than that tax rates remain at the heart of the disagreement.   Republicans have insisted all along that tax rates should remain the same for all income levels while President Obama wants tax rates for the wealthiest individuals to return to levels prior to the George W. Bush Administration.  President Obama is calling for rates for those who earn over $250,000 to go up, but recently indicated he would compromise at $400,000.   House Speaker Boehner attempted to win support from his Republican caucus for the higher rates to apply only to those with incomes $1 million or more, but that was rejected.

The tax increases — not only from the expiration of the Bush-era tax cuts, but a number of other expiring provisions such as adjustments to the Alternative Minimum Tax, estate tax reductions, tax credits for college tuition, and the payroll tax holiday — are only one part of the fiscal cliff scenario.   Extended unemployment benefits will expire and Medicare reimbursements to doctors will be cut if Congress does not act. 

Another leg of the stool is sequestration — deep cuts to defense and non-defense discretionary spending.  AIA has been leading the charge all year on highlighting the dire impacts to the defense aerospace sector as well as NASA and NOAA if the spending cuts take place.  Under the Budget Control Act (BCA) of 2011, defense spending would be cut 9.4 percent and NASA and NOAA (and other government non-defense discretionary spending) would be cut 8.2 percent. 

Blakey starkly warned today that if Congress does not fix the sequestration problem it will be a “grave dereliction of duty.”  Agreeing that budget cuts are needed to deal with the deficit, she insisted that sequestration is “the wrong way to do it” and a “mindless meataxe approach that will cause immense disruption and harm our economy and national security.”

Republicans agreed to the defense cuts when the BCA was passed in August 2011, but changed their minds this year and now are seeking to exempt defense from the cuts and reduce government spending elsewhere in exchange, such as by entitlement reform or changes to the tax code (but not tax rates).  Democrats want at least some cuts to defense, for which spending mushroomed during the past decade with the Iraq and Afghan wars.

President Obama said in his weekly address today that if all else fails, he wants the Senate to vote on a modest package that would keep tax rates at their current levels for people with incomes under $250,000, extend unemployment insurance, and set the stage for future progress on the other issues.  He said he believes such a package could pass both the House and Senate if it is allowed to come to a vote.  “That’s the way this is supposed to work,” he said, adding that “We just can’t afford a politically self-inflicted wound to our economy.”

In the Republican response, Senator Roy Blunt (R-MO) criticized Democrats on a broad range of issues ending with his own warning against going over the fiscal cliff.  He gave no hint of what compromise might be in the works, reiterating Republican assertions that it is up to the President to lead.

In essence, today seems like politics as usual.  For those who want to avoid falling off the fiscal cliff, one can only hope that the behind-the-scenes deliberations are more productive.

NASA's Jesco von Puttkamer Dies

NASA's Jesco von Puttkamer Dies

Jesco von Puttkamer, whose 50-year career at NASA began with building rockets with Wernher von Braun at Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), has died following a brief illness.  He was 79.

As Bill Gerstenmaier, Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations, said, von Puttkamer was an “institution” at NASA and an “outspoken advocate” for a bold human spaceflight program beyond low Earth orbit.  

Image credit:  NASA

Von Braun recruited von Puttkamer to come to work at MSFC in 1962.  In 1974, von Puttkamer moved to NASA Headquarters where he filled a variety of positions over the ensuing decades.  Most recently, he was best known as author of the daily reports on the activities aboard the International Space Station.  In a March 23, 2012 interview for NASA TV, von Puttkamer spoke glowingly about the importance of von Braun’s leadership in convincing the nation that sending people to the Moon and back in the 1960s was possible and led to U.S. preeminence in space.

Von Puttkamer’s distinguished career at NASA was recognized by many awards, including an Exceptional Service Medal in 2004 and a 2007 NASA Honor Award for advancing U.S.-Russian space cooperation.

Progress Reported on Fiscal Cliff Deal After White House Meeting

Progress Reported on Fiscal Cliff Deal After White House Meeting

The top Democrat and the top Republican in the Senate reportedly are jointly working on a plan to avoid the fiscal cliff after a meeting at the White House this afterrnoon of top congressional leaders and the President.

Details are sketchy, but multiple news sources are reporting that Senator Harry Reid (D-NV) and Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) agreed to spend the weekend trying to come up with a deal that will pass muster with both parties on both sides of Capitol Hill.  The Senate returned to work yesterday; the House will meet for legislative business on Sunday.

The news came after a one-hour meeting among top House and Senate Democratic and Republican leaders and President Obama, Vice President Biden, and top advisors.   The President said at a press conference after the meeting that if Reid and McConnell are unable to reach a bipartisan agreement, he will press for a Democratic proposal to be put forward instead for an up and down vote that would protect the middle class from tax increases, extend unemployment benefits, and lay the “groundwork for future cooperation on more economic growth and deficit reduction.”  He said he believed such a measure would pass both chambers if the leaders would allow it to come to a vote.  He called the meeting today “constructive.”

Russia Plans To Spend $70 Billion On Space as ILS Stresses Independent Review of Proton Anomaly

Russia Plans To Spend $70 Billion On Space as ILS Stresses Independent Review of Proton Anomaly

Despite a very recent malfunction that added to Russia’s growing list of launch vehicle anomalies, high level Russian government officials are touting the future of the country’s space program and a return to the capabilities under the Soviet-era.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev told Russia’s news agency RIA Novosti that Russia will spend 2.1 trillion rubles, about $70 billion, for development of its space industry over the 2013-2020 time period. The total will enable Russia to “effectively participate in forward-looking projects, such as the ISS, the study of the Moon, Mars, and other celestial bodies in the solar system,” he said.

Separately, Russian space agency director Vladimir Popovkin told Russia’s Itar-Tass news agency that “By 2015 we shall restore the capabilities we had back in the Soviet era, and in 2015-2020 we are to create conditions for a breakthrough on the basis of new technologies.”

These bold statements were not accompanied by many details. For example, it is not clear exactly what is included in the 2.1 trillion ruble ($70 billion) figure. That funding spans eight years, so is on average $8.75 billion per year. Medvedev said it includes “extrabudgetary” sources implying it is more than what the Russian government budget will fund. Presumably it includes payments the United States makes to Russia for crew transportation and other services related to the International Space Station (ISS) — about $450 million per year according to NASA.

It might also include money the Russian space industry earns through commercial launches. According to The Space Report 2012, published by the Space Foundation, in 2011 Russia conducted 10 commercial launches, or 56 percent of the global commercial space launch market. How much it earned from those launches is not public, and whether it will retain that percentage of the market — and thereby contribute to the overall total of how much Russia invests in its space program — may depend on restoring confidence in Russia’s launch vehicle fleet.

Russia has endured an unusual two years of launch vehicle failures that may give prospective customers second thoughts. The most recent anomaly, of a Proton rocket’s Briz upper stage, placed Russia’s Yamal 402 communications satellite into the wrong orbit. Although ground controllers were able to use the satellite’s own propulsion system to eventually boost the satellite into the correct position, the fuel usage will reduce the satellite’s operational lifetime from 15 years to 11 years.

The incident underscored continuing concerns about the health of the Russian space industry. The launch was conducted by International Launch Services (ILS).  It issued a statement today that various root causes of the failure are still being evaluated. RIA Novosti reported yesterday that Roscosmos has concluded a bad bearing in a turbopump was the problem, but the ILS statement stresses that it formed its own independent failure review oversight board to look at the Russian government’s findings.  It will not issue its own final report until its independent review is completed. 

The Russian government has been conducting an intensive review of the space sector, led by Medvedev and Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin. The statements to the Russian press today signal that the government plans to shore up its support of the space program, building on a substantial increase in government space spending last year. The Space Report 2012 states that the Russian government’s calendar year 2011 planned spending was $4.12 billion, a 21.2 percent increase over the previous year. By comparison, it calculated total U.S. government space spending (military and civil) in 2011 at $47.25 billion, a 0.4 percent decrease.

Precisely where Russia’s $70 billion announced today will go over the next eight years is unclear. RIA Novosti quotes Dmitry Paison, director of development for the Skolkovo space cluster, as saying the money is for “the Federal Space Program, the Federal Special Program for the Development of the Glonass system, the program for the development of space launch centers and the non-classified part of the program for the technical modernization of the industry.” Paison’s omission of classified programs is understandable, but leaves open the question of what other space spending the Russian government plans that is not public.

Glonass is Russia’s navigation satellite system, analogous to the U.S. GPS system, and a high priority of the Putin government. The head of the company that builds and manages the program recently left his job — some say he was fired, others say he left due to illness — after an investigation found the company embezzled $200 million of government funding.

Popovkin also said today that the current Russian share of the “world market of space services” will rise from 10 percent today to 16 percent, though he did not say over what time period. By comparison, he said the United States has 60 percent of that market “including production and the services provided” and that the United States controls “about 70 percent of the television and radio market.”   The source of his data was not mentioned.   As already noted, in 2011 Russia had 56 percent of the commercial launch services market, while the United States conducted no commercial launches. The Space Report 2012 further states that the United States had 38 percent of the world market for commercial satellite manufacturing, down from 51 percent the prior year (no figure was provided for Russia). Country-by-country breakdowns of other market segments, such as commercial space products and services, including satellite communications and broadcasting, also are not provided in that report.

The bottom line is that although many details are missing, the statements by Medvedev and Popovkin convey that the Russian government plans to step up its investment in space activities.

Indeed, during the past year Russia has announced plans for additional space-based telescopes and robotic lunar probes, joined in Europe’s ExoMars program, announced progress in developing a replacement for the venerable Soyuz spaceship that takes crews to the ISS, and expressed continued interest in building a new launch site at Vostochny in the far eastern region of the country. Some of these plans have been in the works for many years, making claims of progress only mildly credible, but at a time of duress in the Russian space program, the vote of confidence from top government leaders undoubtedly comes as welcome news to the Russian space industry and, presumably, its customers.

House Will Return to Work on Sunday, December 30

House Will Return to Work on Sunday, December 30

The House will return to work on Sunday, December 30, as everyone anxiously wonders whether at least a partial solution can be found to the fiscal cliff before tax breaks and extended unemployment benefits expire on December 31 and spending cuts take effect on January 2.

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor tweeted today that the House will resume legislative business on Sunday, with the first votes expected at 6:30 pm ET.  Later he added that the 112th Congress may continue to be in session through Wednesday, January 2. 

The 113th Congress, comprised of the new and returning members elected on November 6, convenes at noon on January 3.  (Congresses last two years.)

The Senate returned to work and President Obama returned to the White House today.  Yesterday, Cantor and other House Republican leaders said the Senate would have to act first before the House would be called back into legislative session.   The Senate has not acted on fiscal cliff legislation, but negotiations are ongoing.   Earlier the House Republican leadership told House members to be ready to return to Washington on 48 hours notice. The announcement today gives them a day more than that.

What will happen is anyone’s guess. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) sounded pessimistic today about reaching any agreement in time, but as the saying goes “it ain’t over till the fat lady sings.”

At least Senator Reid will still have 51 Democrats in his caucus.  Brian Schatz (D) was sworn in as Hawaii’s newest Senator today, succeeding Daniel Inouye (D), who died last week.  Schatz, 40, was Hawaii’s Lt. Governor.  Governor Neil Abercrombie chose him yesterday to replace Inouye.  Schatz hitched a ride to Washington with President Obama on Air Force One and was sworn this afternoon.

  

NASA Publishes Oral Histories of NASA's Leadership When the Agency Turned 50

NASA Publishes Oral Histories of NASA's Leadership When the Agency Turned 50

Four years have passed since NASA celebrated its 50th anniversary and the NASA History Office is just now publishing a compendium of oral histories from NASA’s leaders at that time.

NASA at 50:  Interviews with NASA’s Senior Leadership, available free as an e-book, includes interviews with the top NASA officials at Headquarters, NASA’s field centers, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

NASA turned 50 on October 1, 2008, which seems much longer ago than four years.   Mike Griffin was Administrator and the agency was embarked on the Constellation program to return astronauts to the Moon by 2020.  Shana Dale was his deputy, Scott Pace was in charge of program analysis and evaluation, Scott “Doc” Horowitz ran the exploration program, and Alan Stern was in charge of science.  The only faces from that era still in charge of major units at NASA Headquarters today are Bill Gerstenmaier — then head of Space Operations, now in charge of Human Exploration and Operations — and Jaiwon Shin, then and now the man in charge of aeronautics.

Most of the interviews took place in 2007 and a few in early 2008.  They reflect the NASA program of the George W. Bush Administration.  The 350 page book provides transcripts of interviews with the following NASA leaders at that time.  The titles below reflect their positions when they were interviewed.  Some retired, some took on new responsibilities in NASA, and some moved on to other jobs.

  • Mike Griffin, Administrator
  • Shana Dale, Deputy Administrator
  • Rex Gevenden, Associate Administrator (AA)
  • Charles Scales, Associate Deputy Administrator
  • Bryan O’Connor, Chief, Office of Safety and Mission Assurance
  • Chris Scolese, AA, former Chief Engineer
  • Scott Pace, AA for Program Analysis and Evaluation
  • Bill Gerstenmaier, AA for Space Operations
  • Scott “Doc” Horowitz, AA for Exploration Systems
  • Alan Stern, AA for Science
  • Jaiwon Shin, AA for Aeronautics
  • Michael “OB” O’Brien, Assistant Administrator for External Relations
  • Robert Cobb, Inspector General
  • J.T. Jezierski, Deputy Chief of Staff and White House Liaison
  • Pete Worden, Ames Center Director
  • Kevin Petersen, Dryden Center Director
  • Woodwow Whitlow, Glenn Center Director
  • Ed Weiler, Goddard Center Director
  • Charles Elachi, Director, Jet Propulsion Laboratory (operated by CalTech for NASA)
  • Mike Coats, Johnson Space Center Director
  • Bill Parsons, Kennedy Space Center Director
  • Lesa Roe, Langley Research Center Director
  • David King, Marshall Center Director
  • Richard Gilbrech, Stennis Center Director

The interviewers asked soft-ball questions, but skimming through it provides some interesting glimpses into the thinking at that time.

Editor’s Note:   From a space policy standpoint if you only have time to read one, look at Bill Gerstenmaier’s where he describes the challenges of needing to have “the split personality of dealing with the extreme technical side to the extreme lawyer, political side, and figure out how to make sure that as the interface between those groups, all is clear.”  He’s a superstar at doing just that, IMHO.  The interviews with Pete Worden and Ed Weiler are also particularly good.

U.S. Will Reach Debt Limit on December 31, Adds to Fiscal Cliff Uncertainty

U.S. Will Reach Debt Limit on December 31, Adds to Fiscal Cliff Uncertainty

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner informed Congress today that the U.S. Government will hit the debt limit on December 31 and will take “extraordinary measures” to fund the government’s obligations.  Those measures are estimated to provide $200 billion in “headroom” to keep the United States solvent for about two months.

In his letter, however, Geithner said that the impending fiscal cliff makes it impossible to determine exactly how long the $200 billion temporarily made available by those measures — like delaying payments into the federal retirement system — will last:  “Under normal circumstances, that amount of headroom would last approximately two months.  However, given the significant uncertainty that now exists with regard to unresolved tax and spending policies for 2013, it is not possible to predict the effective duration of these measures.” 

The debt limit — how much of debt the government is legally allowed to encumber — currently stands at $16.4 trillion.  Congress and the White House have been trying to negotiate a solution to the impending fiscal cliff of tax increases and spending cuts that will occur automatically next week.  The debt limit issue was added to the mix a few weeks ago and at one time the negotiations were about a comprehensive plan that dealt with taxes, spending, and the debt limit in one big package.   Those hopes have faded as the issues themselves take on added urgency.

Agreement is required among the President, the House and the Senate.   The President is currently on his way back to Washington and the Senate is scheduled to meet in legislative session tomorrow beginning at 10:00 am ET.  However, no meeting of the House is scheduled.  House Speaker John Boehner and others in the House Republican leadership issued a press release today saying the Senate must act first.  The Senate is scheduled to debate an unrelated measure — the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Amendments Reauthorization — but, of course, other legislation could be brought up at any time if at least 60 Senators agree.