[FPSPACE] Some Congressional reactions to Augustine Panel recommendations
Peter Pesavento
pjp961 at svol.net
Wed Sep 16 20:51:09 EDT 2009
>From Agency France Presse
http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Lawmakers_slam_experts_report_on_US_09162009.ht
ml
Lawmakers slam experts' report on US human space flight
Published: Wednesday September 16, 2009
A group of US lawmakers on Tuesday slammed a report by aerospace experts
tasked to review NASA's human space flight program that proposed ditching
plans to return to the Moon.
"When it was announced that you were going to be leading an independent
review of the human space flight program, I thought you were going to take a
hard, cold, sobering look at the Constellation program," Democratic
Representative Gabrielle Giffords told Norman Augustine, head of the review
panel that bears his name.
The Arizona Congresswoman said she had expected the group to "tell us
exactly what we need to do here in Congress with our budget in order to
maximize the chances of success."
Former president George W. Bush launched in 2004 the Constellation program,
which aimed to return to the Moon by 2020 and then establish a lunar
launchpad for a first trip to Mars.
"Instead of focusing on how to strengthen the exploration program on which
we've spent so much time -- four years -- and billions of dollars, we have a
glancing attention to Constellation," said Giffords, who chairs of the House
Science and Technology Committee.
"Instead, the bulk of the time is spent crafting alternative options."
The alternatives proposed in the report were "almost like cartoons, lacking
detailed costs, schedule, technical, safety, other specifics," she said.
Augustine, a former president of aerospace giant Lockheed Martin who also
served as undersecretary of the US Army
<http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Lawmakers_slam_experts_report_on_US_09162009.h
tml##> , denied writing off Constellation.
On the contrary, he said, the summary report outlined several proposals --
including Constellation -- for keeping the United States in space.
The summary report, which was submitted to Congress last week, warned that
NASA was hugely underfunded and on an "unsustainable trajectory."
"Space operations are among the most complex and unforgiving pursuits ever
undertaken by humans," said the Augustine Commission in its summary.
"Space operations become all the more difficult when means do not match
aspirations. Such is the case today."
Giffords and other lawmakers, including Donna Edwards of Maryland, said
legislators didn't need a report to tell them NASA was in financial
<http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Lawmakers_slam_experts_report_on_US_09162009.h
tml##> straits.
If NASA's dire funding situation continues, the United States would see a
gap of at least seven years in human space flight -- the longest since the
US human space program began -- starting in 2011, when the space shuttle
program is retired, the report said.
The shuttle fleet, which has flown since 1981, has suffered two major
disasters: the 1986 Challenger explosion and the 2003 in-flight Columbia
breakup, which claimed the lives of 14 astronauts.
Bush decided to end shuttle flights, amid concerns about the aging fleet.
The Augustine Commission is due to testify Wednesday before a Senate
committee.
The panel's full report on US human space flight, which was commissioned by
President Barack Obama early this year, is due out at the end of the month.
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