Category: Civil

Senator Daniel Inouye Dies

Senator Daniel Inouye Dies

Senator Daniel Inouye (D-HI), chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, died today at the age of 88.  Although he had been ill, his death came as a surprise to Senate colleagues.

Inouye, 88, was the most senior Democrat and therefore served as president pro tempore (or pro-temp) of the Senate, third in line for the presidency (after the Vice President and the Speaker of the House).  He served nine terms in the Senate.  Democrats and Republicans alike praised him as a person and a Senator.

       

Photo credit:  Senate Appropriations Committee website 

A decorated World War II veteran who lost his right arm fighting in Italy, he became a Congressman on August 21, 1959, the day that Hawaii became a State.  Three years later he was elected to the Senate and was reelected eight times thereafter.

In 2009, he replaced Robert Byrd (D-WV) as chairman of the powerful appropriations committee.  He also chaired the defense appropriations subcommittee.  

Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) is next in line in seniority on the full committee as well as on the defense subcommittee and therefore likely to replace Inouye on both.  He is currently chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and is particularly associated with Internet issues such as privacy and freedom of speech.   Leahy also was second in seniority to Inouye in the Senate, so will become president pro tempore.

What impact the appropriations committee leadership change might have on space programs is unclear.   Subcommittee chairs hold considerable power of their own.  Senator Barbara Mikulski has been and is expected to continue to be an influential force on NASA and NOAA programs as chair of the Commerce-Justice-Science subcommittee.   Leahy likely will be the new chair of the defense subcommittee as well as the full committee.  His views on space programs are not well known.

Hawaii Governor Neil Abercrombie (D) will appoint someone to replace Inouye until a special election is held in 2014 for someone to serve the remainder of Inouye’s term, which runs until 2016.

 

 

 

Events of Interest: Week of December 17-21, 2012

Events of Interest: Week of December 17-21, 2012

The following events may be of interest in the week ahead.  The House and Senate will be in session.

During the Week

On Monday,. NASA will have commentary on the splatdown of the two GRAIL probes that have been orbiting the Moon since the beginning of the year.  There is no video coverage of the impact of the probes onto the lunar surface at approximately 2:28 pm PT (5:28 pm ET), but experts will provide commentary as the end comes for the two spacecraft that have exhausted their fuel supplies.

On Tuesday, the House will vote on a bill (H.R. 6612) to rename NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center after the late Neil Armstrong.

Sometime during the week, It is possible the Senate could act on S. 3661, a Nelson-Hutchison bill to amend the Iran-North Korea-Syria (INKSNA) act to allow NASA to purchase services from Russia for the International Space Station after July 2016, to extend third party liability indemnification for launch services companies for two years, and to make it clear that NASA should explore cis-lunar space.   It also could act on the House-passed H.R. 6586 (Palazzo) that only extends the third party liability indemnification.  The FAA’s authority to provide that indemnification ends on December 31, so that is a must-pass provision.

On Wednesday, the National Research Council will hold the first public meeting of its Committee on Human Spaceflight.  The members of the parent committee — chaired by former Secretary of Defense Bill Perry and Cornell space scientist Jonathan Lunine — were named last month.  The members of one of its two panels, on Technical Feasibility, were named last week.   The meeting is at the National Academy of Sciences building at 21st Street and Constitution Avenue, not at the Keck Building on 5th Street where NRC meetings usually are held.

Also on Wednesday, three new International Space Station crew members will launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

Meanwhile everyone is awaiting action on the fiscal cliff.

Those and other events of interest are listed below.

Monday, December 17

Tuesday, December 18

Wednesday, December 19

Wednesday-Thursday, December 19-20

 

NRC Names Members of Panel To Support Human Spaceflight Study

NRC Names Members of Panel To Support Human Spaceflight Study

As the National Research Council’s (NRC’s) Committee on Human Spaceflight prepares to begin its deliberations on December 19, the NRC has announced the members of one of the two panels that will support the committee in its work.

Two panels are planned — one with technical expertise in space exploration and another with expertise in polling. As part of the study, a national poll will be conducted to assess the nation’s attitude toward human spaceflight activities.

The NRC named the members of the parent committee last month.  Co-chaired by former Secretary of Defense Bill Perry and Cornell space scientist Jonathan Lunine, it is an unusual blend of experts in polling, space science, national security space, communications, history and economics. Only one, former astronaut Bryan O’Connor, has a background specifically in human spaceflight.

The just-named panel on Technical Feasibility offers another interesting set of expertise.   John Sommerer, head of the space sector at the Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), part of Johns Hopkins University, will chair the panel and is also a member of the parent committee.   The panel’s vice chair is Doug Cooke who had a long career at NASA before retiring as Associate Administrator for Exploration Systems Mission Directorate in October 2011.  He was closely involved in developing the Constellation program when Mike Griffin was NASA Administrator and then in reshaping the human spaceflight program after President Obama decided to terminate it.  He is now consultant.

The other panel members are —

  • Douglas Allen, independent consultant (expert in space power technology, formerly worked for Schafer Corp.)
  • Ray Arvidson, Washington University in St. Louis (planetary scientist)
  • Richard Atkinson, University of California, San Diego (retired) (expert in cognitive science and psychology)
  • Bobby Braun, Georgia Tech (former NASA Chief Technologist)
  • Betsy Cantwell, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (she co-chaired the recent NRC Decadal Survey on Biological and Physical Sciences in Space)
  • David “Ed” Crow, University of Connecticut (retired) (former Pratt & Whitney)
  • Ravi Deo, EMBR (aerospace engineer, former Northrop Grumman)
  • Maj. Gen. Bob Dickman, USAF (retired) (also former Executive Director of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics)
  • Joe Hamaker, the Millennium Group International (former director of NASA’s Cost Analysis Division)
  • Dava Newman, MIT (an aerospace biomedical engineer with particular expertise in spacesuit design)
  • John “Row” Rogacki, Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition (formerly head of NASA’s Space Launch Initiative)
  • Guillermo Trotti, Trotti and Associates (an expert in sustainable architecture and design for extreme environments who was a co-founder of Space Industries Inc., a company that in the 1980s tried to get support to build a privately funded space station)

More information on each of the panel members is posted on the NRC website.   Note that Bobby Braun’s name is not on the main list, but he is included in the biographies section.

The parent committee’s first public meeting on Wednesday will be at the National Academy of Sciences building at 21st and Constitution Avenues (not at the Keck Building on 5th Street).  Part of the meeting is closed, but the public may attend beginning at 10:15 am ET.  Seating is limited, however, and prior online registration is highly recommended.

ISS, Aerospace Workforce and Partnerships Should Be Prominent in NASA's Strategic Planning, Say House Hearing Witnesses

ISS, Aerospace Workforce and Partnerships Should Be Prominent in NASA's Strategic Planning, Say House Hearing Witnesses

At a congressional hearing Wednesday focused on a National Research Council (NRC) report that examined NASA’s strategic plans, witnesses agreed that there is a lack of national consensus and of support of a human mission to an asteroid, but did not identify what the agency’s next destination beyond low Earth orbit (LEO) should be. Instead, they drew attention to elements that should be prominent in the agency’s future: utilization of the International Space Station (ISS), international and public-private partnerships, and support of the aerospace workforce.

In his opening remarks, Rep. Ralph Hall (R-TX), Chairman of the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology (HSS&T) agreed with the main conclusion of the NASA’s Strategic Direction and the Need for a National Consensus report and called the current agreement in the 2010 NASA authorization act “a compromise” where “no one got everything they wanted.” He expressed interest in discussions to forge a new national consensus and repeatedly expressed that ISS utilization remains the top priority. “To me, the ISS is number one,” he said.

Dr. Scott Pace, director of the George Washington University’s Space Policy Institute, said he agreed “that the space station is the most immediate and vital thing we have to be focused on,” but that thought must be given to what comes next. Of particular concern to him is the eroding perception of the United States by its international partners due to recent decisions to pull back from joint space missions, such as ExoMars. Pace argued that potential international partners would find in a mission to the Moon the opportunity for the kind of meaningful engagement that will not be open to them if the nation were to choose the much more difficult destinations of an asteroid or Mars.

A return trip to the Moon by astronauts was the focus of the Vision for Space Exploration (VSE) proposed by President George W. Bush in 2004. Included in this vision, the Constellation Program would have led to the development of a new crew capsule and heavy lift launch vehicle for human spaceflight beyond LEO. Pace was a high ranking NASA official when Constellation was being developed.

The cancellation of the Constellation program by the Obama Administration in 2010 was cited by several members and witnesses as disruptive and what led to the policy instability and lack of consensus identified in the NRC report. Constellation provided a transition both for the workforce and for national capabilities beyond the Space Shuttle, they argued, adding that, instead, current plans only added risk to the future of the ISS by forcing dependence on the Russian Soyuz rocket for access and created persisting uncertainty.  It must be noted, however, that continuation of the ISS, now agreed to be a priority by most in the human spaceflight community, was not part of the VSE. In fact, funding for the new crew transportation systems under Constellation was predicated both on the cancellation of the Space Shuttle in 2010 and U.S. termination of its role in the ISS in 2015-2016.

In her testimony, Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) President and Chief Executive Officer, Marion Blakey cautioned against disruptions that could negatively impact the workforce and industrial base if a new direction is set for the agency. “We need to think carefully,” she said,” about changing from current programs. It not only takes consensus to do so, it takes resources and capabilities, some that we’re already building today.” She added that “NASA needs stable, long term investment and stable policy goals,” and said, smiling that “more funding would be better.”

Yet even if a new national consensus is forged, the possibility of increased funding for NASA is highly unlikely. Major General (Ret.) Ronald Sega, vice-chair of the NRC Committee on NASA’s Strategic Direction that authored the report, said that this was one of the assumptions they were asked to incorporate in their analysis.  Hall, in turn, noted that “We can’t go to Mars until our people can go to the grocery story…The economy has to improve before NASA funding increases.”

For some, this restrained funding scenario means that NASA ought to pursue partnerships more aggressively, not just with its international partners, but also with the private sector. The Honorable Robert Walker, executive chairman of the lobbying firm Wexler and Walker and former chair of the HSS&T Committee, described public-private partnerships as “the best way to obtain the resources so vitally needed to make NASA’s missions achievable.” He said that NASA must expand its funding base beyond Congress and advocated for “non-traditional” and “entrepreneurial” strategies that could lead to sponsorship funds and to a future with vehicles such as  a “GoDaddy rover” (in reference to the website hosting company) one day traversing the Martian terrain.  Walker said that the HSS&T should find a way for NASA to be able to engage with the private sector in these kinds of partnerships on a routine basis.

Partnerships would also help address another key concern: the long-term sustainability of a reduced and aging aerospace workforce. Witnesses agreed that partnerships with academia and the private sector can enable valuable hands-on experience and can continue to inspire students to pursue STEM careers. University of Michigan’s Dr. Thomas H. Zurbuchen argued that NASA should actively pursue low-cost and modest-sized missions that engage universities and industries in order to ensure that “missions have access to the very best talent.”

Links to Documents from Today's House Committee Hearing

Links to Documents from Today's House Committee Hearing

We’ll have a summary of today’s hearing before the House Science, Space and Technology Committee on the future of NASA very soon, but in the meantime, here are links to press releases from the Republican and Democratic committee members as well as the webcast and written statements by the witnesses.

Press release from committee Republicans

Press release from committee Democrats

Webcast

Witness prepared statements

Lubchenco to Leave NOAA in February

Lubchenco to Leave NOAA in February

Jane Lubchenco, Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere and Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), is leaving NOAA to return to academia in February.

Lubchenco reportedly made the announcement in an email to NOAA employees.   According to a NOAA organizational chart, of the three positions directly under the Administrator — two Deputy Administrators and a Chief Scientist– two are vacant.    Only the Assistant Secretary for Enviromental Observation & Prediction and Deputy Administrator job is filled at the moment.   Former astronaut Kathy Sullivan serves in that role.

Lubchenco is a highly respected marine ecologist who was a professor at Harvard from 1975-1977 and then at Oregon State University until her appointment with the government.   Her years at NOAA, however, have been marked by controversy over the agency’s management of its satellite programs and unrelated matters such as financial misconduct by the head of the National Weather Service.  

The collapse of the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS) program and the need for NOAA to initiate a restructured program in which it must pay for the replacement Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS) instead of sharing costs with the Department of Defense is straining NOAA’s resources.   JPSS and its cousin, the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) system, plus a few other smaller environmental satellites, now consume approximately 40 percent of NOAA’s budget.  Congressional skepticism that NOAA learned the appropriate lessons from the NPOESS failure led the Senate Appropriations Committee to recommend that all of NOAA’s satellite programs be transferred to NASA.   Action is pending on that recommendation.

It is not at all unusual for high level political appointees like Lubchenco to depart after a President’s first term.

NASA Wins Top Spot on OPM's List of Best Places to Work in Federal Government

NASA Wins Top Spot on OPM's List of Best Places to Work in Federal Government

NASA is ranked first as the best place to work in the Federal Government in the Office of Personnel Management’s (OPM’s) annual survey.

NASA received a score of 72.8, up from 72.5 last year, putting it at the top of the list of large agencies.  The Intelligence Community came in second and the Department of State third.

OPM surveys federal employees in terms of worker satisfaction and commitment.   Agency subcomponents also were ranked.   Stennis Space Center scored highest among the NASA centers and ranked second in the government overall, just  behind the U.S. Army Audit Agency.  

Goddard Space Flight Center was ranked 14th, Marshall Space Flight Center 19th, Johnson Space Center 20th, and Langley Research Center 22nd.   Kennedy Space Center came in at number 42, NASA Headquarters at 44, Glenn Research Center at 46, Ames Research Center at 74, and Dryden Flight Research Center at 77.

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory is not a federal agency subcomponent, and thus is not in the list.  It is a federally funded research and development center operated for NASA by the California Institute of Technology.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), a subcomponent of the Department of Commerce that operates the nation’s civiil weather satellites, came in at number 127.

Republican Members of House SS&T Committee for Next Congress Named

Republican Members of House SS&T Committee for Next Congress Named

Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX), the incoming chairman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee, announced today the names of the other Republicans who will serve as members of that committee in the 113th Congress, which begins next month.

According to Smith’s press release, current committee chairman Rep. Ralph Hall (TX) will be second in seniority to Smith.  Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (WI) and Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (CA), both of whom unsuccessfully sought the chairmanship, are third and fourth in line respectively.

The other Republican members in order of seniority are:

Rep. Frank D. Lucas, Oklahoma

Rep. Randy Neugebauer, Texas

Rep. Michael McCaul, Texas

Rep. Paul Broun, Georgia

Rep. Scott Rigell, Virginia

Rep. Steven Palazzo, Mississippi

Rep. Mo Brooks, Alabama

Rep. Andy Harris, Maryland

Rep. Larry Bucshon, Indiana

Rep. Cynthia Lummis, Wyoming

Rep. Bill Posey, Florida

Rep. David Schweikert, Arizona

Rep. Steve Stockman, Texas

Rep. Thomas Massie, Kentucky

Rep. Jim Bridenstine, Oklahoma

Rep. Kevin Cramer, North Dakota

Rep. Chris Stewart, Utah

Rep. Randy Weber, Texas

Subcommittee assignments were not announced.

Democratic committee members also have not yet been identified.

 

TIME CHANGE for House Hearing This Morning

TIME CHANGE for House Hearing This Morning

The House Science, Space and Technology Committee hearing this morning on NASA’s future will start at 10:00 am ET instead of 9:30 am according to a committee press release.

Space Policy Ideas for Your Holiday Gift List

Space Policy Ideas for Your Holiday Gift List

Wondering what to ask Santa to get you?   Need help picking something for your sweetie?  Here are some good space policy gift ideas that might fit the bill.

These two books are relatively recent releases that we’ve read and highly recommend.

These are somewhat older, but also at the top of the list. 

We haven’t had a chance to read this one, but the author is a renowned space historian so we’re sure it’s terrific.

A subscription to the quarterly journal, Space Policy, would keep you or your space policy aficionado up to date on space policy analysis from the world’s leading thinkers throughout the year.

If you have other favorites you’d like to share, please let everyone know by commenting on this post using the DisQus comment feature below.