Agenda 05/27/2008 Item #10C
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Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27, 2008
Page 1 of 52
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Recommendation to approve a Resolution supporting the national strategic
importance of maintaining spaceflight expertise at the Kennedy Space Center in the
State of Florida and ensuring that future crew and cargo missions to the
International Space Station use domestic capabilities.
OBJECTIVE: To approve a Resolution (attached) of the Board of County
Commissioners (BCC) of Collier County, Florida, to the Florida Congressional
Delegation supporting the national strategic importance of maintaining spaceflight
expertise at the Kennedy Space Center in the State of Florida and ensuring that future
crew and cargo missions to the International Space Station use domestic capabilities,
Once approved by the Board of County Commissioners, the Resolution will be
transmitted to members of the Congressional Delegation in Washington, D.C, including
Congressmen Connie Mack and Mario Diaz-Balart, and Senators Bill Nelson and Mel
Martinez, the county's federal lobbyist, The Ferguson Group, and the Florida Association
of Counties (FAC),
CONSIDERATION: Board of County Commissioners (BCC) Vice Chairman Donna
Fiala received correspondence (attached) dated April 21, 2008, from Brevard County
Commission Chairman Truman Scarborough requesting support through a Resolution for
continuation of the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) program administered by the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) which contributes an estimated $4 billion
to Florida's economy annually. Commissioner Fiala provided a copy of the
correspondence to the County Manager's Office on May 6, 2008, and presented to the
BCC on May 13,2008, her proposal to have the Resolution return for BCC consideration
on May 27, 2008, with additional information if available requested by Commissioners
prior to consideration,
The correspondence provided by Commissioner Scarborough also included Brevard
County Resolution 2008-053 (attached), a Washington Post news article (attached)
detailing the U.S,'s $100 billion investment in the International Space Station and
NASA's upcoming reliance on Russia for crew and cargo transport once the Space
Shuttle is retired in 2010, and a transcript of the Senate Commerce, Science and
Transportation Subcommittee on Space hearing on the Fiscal Year 2009 budget for
NASA (attached), A former astronaut, Sen, Bill Nelson is chairman of the subcommittee
that oversees NASA.
An Orlando Sentinel article (attached) reported April IS, 2008 that "Washington has
rejected recent campaigns to sharply increase NASA's budget. The agency revealed this
month that more than 8,000 workers nationwide - including up to 6,400 at KSC - could
lose their jobs after the shuttle is retired in 2010."
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Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27. 2008
Page 2 of 52
As requested by the BCC, staff placed an inquiry to The Ferguson Group representative
Amanda Wood to research if there was any additional background information regarding
the issue that Commissioners should be made aware of. Ms. Wood's advisement was that
there was no hidden agenda she could find, and in her assessment, the intent of Brevard
County was to reach out to communities statewide to rally support for their effort.
Further, she advised providing a Collier County Resolution comparable to Brevard
County's in support of the KSC to the Congressional Delegation is a good idea, Keeping
the jobs in the region makes good economic sense to the State of Florida,
FISCAL IMPACT: There is no fiscal impact associated with this executive summary.
GROWTH MANAGEMENT IMPACT: There is no growth management impact
associated with this executive summary.
LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS: This matter presents no legal issues. JAK
RECOMMENDATION: That the Board of County Commissioners approves a
Resolution supporting the national strategic importance of maintaining spaceflight
expertise at the Kennedy Space Center in the State of Florida and ensuring that future
crew and cargo missions to the International Space Station use domestic capabilities,
which will then be transmitted to the Florida Congressional Delegation, the County's
federal lobbyist, The Ferguson Group, and the Florida Association of Counties (F AC),
Prepared by Debbie Wight, Assistant to the County Manager
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Page ] of ]
Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27. 2008
Page 3 of 52
COLLIER COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Item Number:
Item Summary:
10C
Meeting Date:
Recommendation to approve a Resolution supporting the national strategic importance of
maintaining spaceflight expertise at the Kennedy Space Center In the State of Florida and
ensuring that future crew and cargo missions to the International Space Station use domestic
capabilities. (Jim Mudd, County Manager)
5/27/2008 90000 AM
Approved By
James V. Mudd
County Manager
Date
Board of County
Commissioners
County Manager's Office
5/19/20085:11 PM
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file://C:\AgendaTest\Export\] 08-May%2027,%202008\ 1 0,%20COUNTY%20MANAGER...
5/21/2008
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27,2008
Page 4 of 52
RESOLUTION NO, 2008-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
OF COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA, TO THE FLORIDA
CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION REGARDING THE
NATIONAL STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE OF
MAINTAINING SPACEFLIGHT EXPERTISE AT THE
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER AND ENSURING THAT
FUTURE CREW AND CARGO LOGISTIC MISSIONS TO
THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION USE
DOMESTIC CAPABILITIES,
\VHEREAS, the United States has a strategic interest in maintaining the nation's
preeminence in spaceflight; and
WHEREAS, the spaceflight expertise at the Kennedy Space Center is a center of
excellence that should he maintained after the discontinuance of Space Shuttle missions; and
WHEREAS, the United States has obligations to provide crew and cargo logistic
services to the International Space Station after the Shuttle is retired; and
WHEREAS, until the Constellation Program reaches operational status, the United
States currently plans to substantially fulfill those obligations by purchasing logistic services
from Russia, notably Soyuz and Progress flights; and
WHEREAS, these plans make the United States largely dependent on the Russians for a
five-year period or more in obtaining access to the International Space Station; and
WHEREAS, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has executed
Space Act Agreements under the Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) Program
to foster domestic commercial capability to provide crew and cargo logistics to the International
Space Station; and
WHEREAS, the COTS Program provides for four different cargo and crew logistic
capabilities known as Capabilities A, B, C, and D; and
\VHEREAS, the United States is the world's premier space faring nation because the
American aerospace industry has consistently provided solutions to national needs including
those of NASA; and
WHEREAS, these talents should be tasked to providing domestic solutions to America's
crew and cargo logistic needs; and
WHEREAS, resources to be spent on procuring Russian Soyuz and Progress logistic
services would best be devoted to the development and procurement of domestic crew and cargo
logistic capabilities.
Page 1 of2
Agenda Item No.1 DC
May 27, 2008
Page 5 of 52
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED THAT THE BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS OF COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA, that:
1. This resolution be forwarded to the State of Florida Congressional Delegation
with a request that the Delegation as a whole urges the Administrator of the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration to immediately explore all
possible domestic options - including COTS Program Capabilities A, B, C, and D
- to reduce or eliminate the need to procure foreign logistic services to the
International Space Station.
2. Such efforts should not be limited to cargo logistics but should aggressively target
crew logistic needs including but not limited to COTS Capability D.
3. The Delegation work to obtain funding in the Fiscal Year 2009 Federal Budget
for execution of these options.
4. The Delegation encourages the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration to fully utilize the demonstrated excellence of the Kennedy
Space Center for the integration and launch of these crew and cargo logistic
operations.
THIS RESOLUTION ADOPTED after motion, second and majority vote this 2ih day of
May, 2008,
ATTEST:
DWIGHT E BROCK, Clerk
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
COLUER COUNTY, FLORIDA
By:
By:
, Deputy Clerk
TOM HENNING, CHAIRMAN
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Page 2 of2
Agenda 1t'<i\S€tbofoc
May 27, 2008
Page 6 of 52
wight_d
From: wight_d
Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2008 3: 15 PM
To: henning_t; fiala_d; CoyleFred; HalasFrank; ColettaJim
Cc: mudd.J; ochs_l; KlatzkowJeff; TorreJohn
Subject: FW: NASA
Commissioners,
Below is response from Amanda Wood of The Ferguson Group regarding your request for additional background
information that may assist you In deciding on May 27 whether or not to support a resolution for NASA as
presented to you by Commissioner Fiala on May 13, resulting from a letter she received from Brevard County,
Thanks,
-Debbie
From: Amanda Wood [mailto:awood@tfgnet.com]
Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2008 10:48 AM
To: wight_d
Ce: Val Gelnovatch; James Nichols
Subject: RE: NASA
I've done some digging today and can't find anything to suggest that there is any sort of behind the scenes
maneuvering or hidden agenda going on with this, It is simply an effort by Brevard County to keep KSC open and
keep those jobs in their region, which makes good economic sense for the State, They are reaching out to
communities throughout the State to rally support for their effort, It's a nice sentiment, but may not ultimately
impact policy in DC, as KSC funding is always viewed in the context of the shuttle program's long term viability,
In short: resolution might be a nice thing to do for your neighbors across the State, and no hidden agenda I can
find,
5115/2008
Agenda Item NO.1 DC
May 27, 2008
Page 7 of 52
wight d
I'rom:
Sent:
To:
Cc:
Subject:
Attachments:
wight d
Wednesday, May 14, 20089;39 AM
henning_t; fiala_d; CoyleFred; HalasFrank; ColettaJim
mudd~; ochsJ; KlatzkowJeff; TorreJohn
NASA Resolution being considered
05.13.08 Brevard County letter re NASA resolution,pdf; 05.13,08 Senate Subcommittee on
Space Budget on NASApdf; 05.13.08 NASA Wary of Relying on Russia article,pdf; NASA
resolution Brevard County. doc
Commissioners,
Attached are the documents provided with, and Including, the letter regarding the NASA resolution request to
Commissioner Fiala from Brevard County, As the County Manager was directed, it will come forward on the May 27 BCC
agenda for your direction, and I am forwarding Information to you in advance so you may make an informed decision since
those documents were included with the request.
In addition, I forwarded an inquiry to our federal lobbyist, The Ferguson Group, In Washington, DC" for their advisement
and perhaps further information on what may be transpiring on this issue,
I am sure you are aware that a member of our Congressional Delegation, Sen, Bill Nelson, is a former astronaut who has
remained supportive of the space program. His dialogue is included in the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation
Subcommittee on Space hearing 34-page doc on NASA's FY09 budget.
I will forward other news articles C, Coyle may have referenced. The one attached is from the Washington Post.
This is solely for your advance information,
~
Thanks,
-Debbie
~
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05.13.08 Brevard 05,13.08 Senate 05,13,08 NASA NASA resolution
County letter... Subcommittee 0... Wary of Relying.., Brevard County...
r----
I
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
FLORIDA'S SPACE COAST
Telephone: (321) 284.6750
Fnx: (321) 264-6751
BREVAR
TRUMAN G, SCARBOROUGH, JR., commQ.\m;",ElllSl~~~~'~~~Y MANAGER
400 South Street, First Floor, Sta. 1 A ?i )
Titusville, FL 32780-7698 ./, I. ()
E~mail: truman.scarborough@brevardcounty.us~..5/Y..1I 0,
ACTION_ ~
Ap,;121, 2008 1f' lY;t- ~ ~,,.,,, M
(;fM 1h1/3 1i ~~ /
The Honorable Donna Fiala
District 1 Commissioner
Collier County
3301 E Tamiami Trail
Naples, FL 34112
( /!to)uc~ 'i;
~/7~
S/I3~)
RE: Upcoming Retirement of Space Shuttle and Suspension of
US, Human Spaceflight Program
Dear Donna:
The Brevard County Commission requested that I contact you for Collier County County's
assistance with the enclosed Resolution regarding our Nation's Space Program, The space
program contributes an estimated annual $4 Billion to Florida's economy, With the Kennedy
Space Center, Floridians hold a special pride in our State's and Nation's dominant role in the
exploration of the Universe. However, our concern reaches beyond national pride and Florida's
economy, At stake is, our national security and position as a global leader in research,
When the Space Shuttle is retired in 2010, the United States will not be able to launch
astronauts into space for at least five years. During this 'Gap,' only China and Russia will
launch humans into space, The Shuttle's replacement - the Constellation Program -- is
projected to become operational in 2015. The General Accountability Office has already
identified technical problems and budget overruns which will result in delays. 'Gaps' never get
shorter.
During the 'Gap', Americans will only be able to access the International Space Station by
purchasing seats and cargo space aboard a Russian spacecraft. This occurs when the
International Space Station, designated a 'National Laboratory' by the United States Congress,
reaches its full potential as a platform for scientific research to produce new pharmaceuticals,
materials, and energy sources. Today's crew of three astronauts is only able to perform a
"housekeeping" function aboard the Station. Serious scientific research will only begin with a six
person crew. Adding to the problem, the Russian Soyuz would be able to rescue only three
astronauts of the six astronauts,
The International Space Station was developed at a direct cost of $100 billion to the American
taxpayer, When the Shuttle stops flying, America will have to pay the Russians at least $2 billion
to access our National Laboratory in space. These costs could increase dramatically when
Russia has a monopoly on flights to the Space Station.
Starting in 2011 NASA will be prohibited by law from contracting with the Russians because of
nuclear nonproliferation issues concerning Iran and Syria, If these legal restrictions are not
PRINTED ON RECYCLED PAPER
Agenda Item No. 1 DC
May 27, 2008
Page 9 of 52
Commissioner Fiala
Collier County
Page 2
waived, Americans cannot access the International Space Station regardless of how much we
pay the Russians.
This scenario can become much worse, On February 27, 2008, Florida Senator Bill Nelson
conducted a Senate hearing where the full extent of the problem was explored. I have enclosed
a transcript of the proceeding together with a copy of a Washington Post front page story
summarizing these complex geopolitical issues. Russia will have the ability to seek concessions
from the United States on a range of issues from our relations with former Soviet Block
countries to Russia's assertion of mineral rights in the Arctic.
Fortunately, there are options that will allow Americans access to the International Space
Station without being held hostage to Russia. Launches of course would occur from Florida's
Space Coast and provide employment opportunities for the 6,400 members of the Shuttle
workforce who will lose their jobs in just over two years.
Please join us in a united Florida effort by passing a resolution similar to Brevard County's and
forwarding your resolution to:
Congressman Connie Mack
Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart
Before the Shuttle is retired, we want to extend a special invitation to you and your family to
have a VIP viewing of a Shuttle launch. Please watch the paper for dates of future launches and
give me a call. I would be pleased to take care of your arrangements at the Kennedy Space
Center.
Thank you again for taking the time to consider Brevard County's request.
additional information, please let me know,
If you need
Truman G. Scarborough
Chairman
Brevard County Commission
enc:
Brevard County Resolution 08-053
Washington Post news article
Transcript of Bill Nelson's Senate Hearing
('
, , ' Agenda Item No.l10C
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A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF BREI/4RD "l"
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main/m'ned after the discontinuance of Space Shult/e mis'siol1.t; and the United Slates has obligations to provide
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i WHEREAS, until/he Constellation Progm!n reach!:s operational siulus, the United States currently plans
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WHEREAS, th".\(~ wlems should be taskeJ to providing domestic solwwlls to America's crew alld cargo
logistic ~{'eds, amI resources to he spell! on procuring Russian Soyuz and Progress logistic services would best be
devoled /0 th(~ developmellt and procuremenl of dOilies tic crew and cargo logls/IC capabililie~
.vow THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED THAT THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF
BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA, does h<.'l"('bl' unfJnimuu.I'/y approve
71,at thi~- Resolutiun bt'furwarded to tlte State of f/orUJII CUlfgressi(//lIIl Dcl/!}!tJtioll wilh Ii /'i'IjIH'.W tlwl tlu:
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Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27, 2008
Page 11 of 52
Senate Commerce, Science and Transporation
Subcommittee on Space Holds Hearing on Fiscal Year
2009 Budget for NASA
NELSON:
Good afternoon. Thank you all for coming.
And, Dr. Griffin, thank you for the public service that you render, As you know, what I try to
do so we can get right to the meat of this stuff, I'm not going to make an opening
statement. It will be entered in the record, and we will take your lengthy testimony. It will
also be entered in the record, and it's my understanding that the STS-120 crew is on their
way, and when they get here, we will introduce them.
But let me just welcome you and thank you for the service that you render in a very difficult
time, trying to juggle innumerable balls in the air all at once. And it's a very difficult job you
have, because you don't get to decide how much that you would like. You always have
what we used to call in the South a governor over you. That was a device that you'd put on
a car that made the car not go any faster than a certain number of miles per hour. And so
it's a difficult task that you have, and thank you for what you do.
Let me ask you...
Senator Stevens, would you like to make any opening comments7
STEVENS:
No, I'm pleased with your policy. I'd like to listen to Dr. Griffin, if we could.
NELSON:
OK, Well, as a courtesy to you, Senator Stevens -- you're the man around here -- why don't
I just relinquish the time and let you start off the questions?
STEVENS:
I'd like to listen to him. He's not going to make a statement?
NELSON:
No. We put his statement in the record. It's a very lengthy statement, and we're going to
get right to the questions.
~
Agenda Item No. 1 DC
May 27, 2008
Page 12 of 52
GRIFFIN:
And I'll waive a brief oral statement in response to Senator Nelson's desire to get to the
questions.
STEVENS:
Well, my basic question would be how you're doing and what are your problems money-
wise?
GRIFFIN:
Wow. I think we're doing well, and I think we have an adequate budget to accomplish the
tasks that have been set before us. As Senator Nelson indicated, not as rapidly as most of
us would like to see them accomplished, but I think we can do it, and I'll leave it at that for
the moment.
STEVENS:
It looks to us like we're sort of dependent now upon foreign vehicles for our
launches. How long is that going to cOntinue?
GRIFFIN:
You have just asked the question that probes at my greatest concern and my greatest
regret, Yes, sir, you are correct. We are dependent for crew transport to the space
station between shuttle retirement at the end of 2010 and the expiration of our
INKSNA waiver -- the Iran, North Korea, Syria Nonproliferation Act waiver that
we have that expires at the end of 2011.
So for a year there we're actually dependent upon Russia if -- and I'll say if -- the
Congress of the United States chooses to give NASA another exemption to
purchase Russian crew transport services. We will be dependent upon such service
until either we deploy the Orion crew exploration vehicle at the beginning of 2015 or until
an independent U.s. commercial capability takes form by one or another company.
If we do not have a further exemption to the INKSNA provisions, then there will
not be U.S. crew on the space station after 2011, and we will have to abrogate our
commitments to our international partners to provide transport to them after 2011. So in
brief, sir, that is the situation as we see it.
STEVENS:
Mr, Chairman, you might want to introduce the crew. I think that's the crew of the STS-120
just came in, if I'm right.
GRIFFIN:
I would be thrilled to take a break and recognize the STS-120 crew,
In fact, we can recognize them two or three times, and that will be fine.
~
Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27. 2008
Page 13 of 52
NELSON:
No, don't worry, We'll be getting back to you, Dr. Griffin.
GRIFFIN:
Somehow I thought that might be the case.
NELSON:
The commander, Pam Melroy; the pilot, George Zamka; mission specialist, Scott Parazinski;
mission specialist, Doug Wheelock; mission specialist Stephanie Wilson; and mission
specialist from our colleagues in ESA, Paolo Nespoli.
Paulo is from Italy, and they launched an Italian built module called Harmony. It is now part
of the space station, and it is an important connector that other payloads will be connected
to. And this is the flight last fall that you remember the drama when they unfurled part of
the solar array, that something wasn't working, and they had to send -- and it was Scott.
They sent Scott up there, and if Scott made a slip, he could have been fried. But NASA in its
usual excellence pulled it off, working a problem real time.
And so we all are very proud of you all and want to welcome you to our little subcommittee
here. And this is how we try to do the people's work, and this is how we try to keep alive
America's hopes and dreams through its space program. So welcome to you all.
You all are welcome to just sit and observe and enjoy it until you have to go, so entirely on
your own schedule, Madam CER, whatever is your pleasure. Do you have a moment or two
to wait, or do you all need to run off?
NELSON:
OK. Yes, indeed.
STEVENS:
Mr. Chairman, I think we can see why they sent Scott. He cannot reach them all.
(LAUGHTER)
Great. Great job. We all watched you very carefully.
GRIFFIN:
These are the people that I'm proud to lead for the duration of my assignment as
administrator, and my primary goal was to make them proud to work with me.
So thanks for recognizing them, Mr. Chairman.
NELSON:
Yes, indeed.
r Senator Stevens, do you want to continue?
3
Agenda Item No, 10C
May 27, 2008
Page 14 of 52
STEVENS:
I'd like to ask one last question.
NELSON:
Oh, absolutely.
STEVENS:
How do you plan to pay for these foreign services, if we authorize you to use them?
GRIFFIN:
We do have money set aside in the budget to purchase crew transport services
from Russia. Whether it's enough money or not, of course, depends on the
outcome of negotiations that can't begin yet. Let me back up.
Our current contracts expires -- and is well understood -- at the end of 2011, of course, as I
just said. The Russian development history and production history for Soyuz is such that, if
we wish to fly at the beginning of 2012, we need to have a new contract in place
by the spring of 20009. They have a three-year production lead time for Soyuz
systems.
So over the course of approximately the next year, if we wish to avail ourselves of
Russian crew transportation services, as opposed to de-crewing or taking U.S.
crew off the station, if we wish to procure Russian transportation services, the
administration would have to formulate or finish the formulation of a request to Congress
for a further exemption. And then we would have to negotiate a new contract with the
Russians by roughly April of '09.
STEVENS:
Could we build our transportation in that timeframe, if we gave you the money?
GRIFFIN:
No, sir. Senator Nelson has asked me that question previously for the record, and I have
responded, and the answer Is no different today. There are always uncertainties, but with
the best analysis we have, returning to that earlier answer, the technical limit at this point
on deployment of a new system would be September or October of 2013, and to achieve
that would require an additional $2 billion over F.Y. '09, '10, and a little bit of F.Y. '11.
At the present pace, if everything goes as we expect it to go, neither better nor worse, we
will deliver new capability in March of 2015, about 18 months after that. So the technical
limit is fall of 2013. Our expected delivery date today is the spring of 2015.
STEVENS:
You've been very generous, Mr. Chairman. Thank you very much,
4
.=-
,
Agenda Item No. 1 DC
May 27, 2008
Page 15 of 52
NELSON:
Well, you are certainly welcome.
And you all can turn off the lights. We don't need any timing on it.
And, Senator Stevens, thank you for asking that question, because naturally that's of an
enormous concern to me with the Kennedy Space Center, because if there is a five-year
gap from the time that we are launching humans into space -- putting on my parochial hat
for Florida -- it affects a huge number of layoffs. Putting on my NASA hat, we become
entirely reliant on Russian vehicles, and who knows what the geopolitics of the year
2013, '14, '15 is going to be about Russia -- number one, that they produce the
Soyuz craft for us to get to the space station, or number two, what they're going
to cost us. And that's something of an uncertainty that we have.
My colleague, who has replaced Senator Hutchison as the ranking member of the
committee, Senator Vitter of Louisiana -- and Senator Vitter has really jumped into this with
a whole bunch of gusto, and we are all very appreciative. Senator Vitter?
STEVENS:
Before we go, would you...
NELSON:
Yes, sir?
STEVENS:
... permit me to put my statement in the record?
NELSON:
Absolutely. Without objection.
vmER:
Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman, And I'm very excited to join the subcommittee. And I'm very
excited to be the ranking member.
I'm very interested in the mission of NASA as a very important part of our national vision for
the future. Also, there are, of course, significant facilities in my part of the world related to
NASA -- Michoud in the New Orleans area, which has a very proud past and I think an even
more promising future, both tied to the shuttle and beyond.
And, Doctor, I certainly appreciate your personai recognition of the asset that Michaud
constitutes and how it should be utilized in the future. And also Stennis, right across the line
in Mississippi, is a very important asset, and probably about a third of their workforce
happens to live in Louisiana. So I take a great speCific interest in that as well.
,~
5
Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27, 2008
Page 16 of 52
Along with the chairman and along with many other folks, I'm very concerned about this
gap from a lot of different perspectives, not just a parochial one, but from the perspective
of the future of NASA. And I guess one of my biggest concerns is that I think we are very
good at calculating the cost of additional action like the $2 billion you're talking about -- and
that's real; I'm not trivializing that -- but I think we're not very good at calculating the costs
of inaction, because there is real cost. It's tougher to calculate. It's tougher to put a number
on, but that doesn't mean it's any less real -- the cost of inaction.
There is enormous cost in terms of loss of workforce and skills, and you just don't turn off a
switch and then turn on a switch two years later and the lights come on and nothing's been
interrupted. Those are people with skills. They leave, many of them. They just don't hang
around and wait. They can't be immediately or easily or cheaply replaced in terms of those
critical skills.
I think there is also real cost in terms of this dependence on Russia for transportation, and
not just cost of national prestige or any of that, but I'm talking about dollar cost. And I
wanted to try to explore with you some of those costs, which again are not as easy to
calculate as the $2 billion, but I think are nevertheless very real.
What has NASA done to sort of put pencil to paper and understand the costs of the gap in
terms of loss of workforce and skills and how we regain that on the other end of the gap?
And is that cost really built into the budget in terms of the training and the skills
development we're going to need, if there is this same gap as that plays out on the other
end of it?
GRIFFIN:
Well, let me take the last part first. Our budget in terms of bringing on board the people
who are needed through and at the end of the gap does contain the necessary funds for
the people we will need. What I think, of course, you appreciate is that people will be
coming off the shuttle program and will be coming on to the new Constellation program,
our Ares and Orion systems to start, that I mentioned a few moments ago,
And while our budget in constant dollars remains approximately Axed, and therefore the
number of our people remains approximately Axed, they won't necessarily be in the same
physical places, and they won't be the same people doing the same things. And since we
are ceasing for several years -- we will have a hiatus in human space flight
operations as opposed to design and development -- the kinds of people involved
are very different in terms of their skills.
And so, as you correctly point out, the operational skills will atrophy during those
years. They will atrophy. And we will undoubtedly have startup problems as we begin to
try to operate the new systems. I appreciate your point about the cost of inaction.
Opportunity cost is aiways harder to calculate than direct cost, but it is nonetheless real to
an economist. It matters.
6
Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27, 2008
Page 17 of 52
We owe the Congress, and will deliver to the Congress, a series of reports. The
first of those is due on March 24th, and every six months thereafter, we are
obliged to provide to the Congress an assessment of workforce impacts from
shuttle retirement and Constellation buildup at all of the different centers. We
will do that. That will be available from this date within less than a month.
Preliminary figures that I could give you today are very uncertain, as will be the figures I
give you in a month. And they will be updated every six months. But in your area of the
world, Senator Vitter, in Michoud we expect that the NASA employment -- now, this is not
the total government employment, but the NASA employment -- will drop from about 1,900
today to under 600 -- somewhere down around 500 -- for a time before coming back up.
At the Kennedy Space Center specifically, we will see, after the shuttle retires, a
net reduction in contractor force of at least several thousand. And that will not
'come back up, at least in terms of launch processing because of the fact that our new
systems will require, and should require, fewer people to operate than the shuttle, which is
an expensive system. We are, after all, retiring the shuttle.
Our goal is to work as carefully as possible to preserve the skills that we need. We are
dealing with that every day. And our goal also will be very specifically to move some
new roles and missions to the Kennedy Space Center to replace the specific
shuttle operations tasks, which will go away and not come back.
We do not by any means have all the answers to these problems today. I want you to know
from my heart that I take this seriously. The displacement of lives, the displacement of
skills, as we wind down the shuttle program and start a new program matters to me, and it
matters to my team, and we are working at it. We don't have all the answers today.
VffiER:
To follow up specifically on this atrophy of skills, you say the money is there at the other
end of the gap for the people, but do you think it fully takes into account the increased cost
per head, if you will, that may be involved because of the atrophy of skills and the
retraining required?
GRIFFIN:
I take your point. I think so, but I can't know that now. And that symptom will be
manifested in our ability to sustain the schedule we want to sustain. If it takes longer to get
our people back up to speed than we anticipate, then we will not be able to hold our
schedule, and that's how that symptom will show.
Let me be clear. We have a program today which is heavily focused on shuttle operations.
We are, of course, not designing and building the shuttle anymore. As we reach and pass
2010, we will be out of the operations business for a while and into the design,
development, test and evaluation side of our business. We will be developing new systems.
~
7
Agenda Item No. we
May 27, 2008
Page 18 of 52
We will be spending in total the same amount of money nationwide on our workforce, but it
will be different = people in different places. And then as we close in on 2015 and begin to
develop routine operations again, we will shift out of design, development, test and
evaluation and back into operations. So at different portions of this product Iifecycle, we will
need different kinds of people in different kinds of places.
VffiER:
The other cost of inaction specifically that I'm concerned about is what we end up paying to
the Russians. Buying transportation from them isn't like buying a plane ticket in a free
market, where you have plenty of customers going to that airline. It's a very unique
negotiation.
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir.
VffiER:
We're the only customer in sight that has the attributes that we have vis-a-vis what we're
trying to buy from them. So it is a one-of-a-kind negotiation. It's not buying something off a
shelf with a clear price fixed by the market.
And I'm afraid some of our inaction, whether it's in trying to accelerate the next generation
program or perhaps putting more money into COTS, dramatically increases their bargaining
power, dramatically increases the price we end up paying for that next contract. And we've
seen, I believe, major increases in that price we've gotten from them over several years
already,
GRIFFIN: .
We have.
VTITER:
How do you analyze that? And is there any effort within NASA to try to estimate? I realize
it's impossible to predict, because it's a very unique negotiation, but to try to estimate what
impact on that price our own additional expenditures could have, either in terms of
accelerating our program or putting more money into COTS, et cetera.
GRIFFIN:
We do have an estimate for what we expect the cost of Russian Soyuz seats, if
you will, to be after the current contract runs out. I'd rather not discuss that
estimate here. I'd be happy to do that with you in private. But based on our history with
the Russian program, we do have such an estimate, I do not have an estimate for how that
estimate might change as a result of more timely investment in our own capabilities,
whether in COTS or in accelerating our own Orion and Ares program. I don't have a
sensitivity estimate for you that you ask about.
8
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 19 of 52
vmER:
Wouldn't it be reasonable to develop that to understand the cost benefit of spending in
terms of acceleration of our program or acceleration of COTS, if there is some saving in
terms of the bill from the Russians?
GRIFFIN:
I think it would. I'd be happy to develop that. Again, it's not something I'd like to discuss
publicly.
VffiER:
No, I don't suggest we should publish it, for obvious reasons, because we have this
negotiation with the Russians. But I do suggest we should develop it on our side.
GRIFFIN:
Sure. Of course, at one extreme, if the administration seeks, and if we are granted an
exemption to INKSNA -- and Senator Nelson rightly points out that we don't know
what the political environment will be after 2012, but let us assume that it continues
stably today -- by the time we are done paying for Russian services at one extreme, we
will have expended the $2 billion I spoke of that would have been necessary to
close the gap.
Now, we can't go back and re-do that decision, because water has moved under the bridge.
But between the existing contract and our anticipated expenditures in the future, we will
spend in the neighborhood of $2 billion Russian hardware.
VffiER:
Well, again, I'd like to specifically request that sort of analysis...
GRIFFIN:
We will develop it for you.
VffiER:
.., confidential on our side, because -- I don't necessarily predict this, but -- it's possible for
me to imagine certain investments, either in accelerating the timeline of our next systems
or in COTS, that pay for themselves or almost pay for themselves in terms of savings to the
Russia ns.
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir. I understand, and we will develop that for you. One option might be to accelerate
the award of the de-phase of COTS. COTS de-phase, which is the...
VffiER:
Right.
('
9
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 20 of 52
GRIFFIN:
... human space flight capability. If we believe that the present agreements are going well,
that's always an option.
VffiER:
Right.
GRIFFIN:
So, yes, sir. I understand. We'll get back to you for the record on that.
VTITER:
Thank you.
That's all I have right now, Mr. Chairman.
NELSON:
Well, chime in anytime. We'll just keep this going as a conversation here. All right.
Well, let me pick up right there -- COTS-D, which is developing a new vehicle that
would have human capability. The company, SpaceX, which you've already awarded
a contract to to develop a cargo carrier, just bid to also develop a human carrier. And the
extra money that you had left over, because the second bidder on the original COTS
contract left the scene and so you had extra money, but you did not give it on a COTS-D.
But now you're raising the possibility of a COTS-D, which is the human carrier to SpaceX?
GRIFFIN:
Well, let me clarify, sir, if I might. We don't have contracts. We have technically -- and I
need to be careful about this -- Space Act Agreements, whereby we now have two
purveyors, SpaceX and Orbital, whereby they can qualify for NASA payments by reaching
certain milestones in their development process. And once there is developed capability, we
may well -- we hope to -- put out RFTs for actual contracts. But these are other
transactional authority in government procurement language, and I need to be very careful
on that on".
NELSON:
And these are for cargo.
GRIFFIN:
And the milestones that we are seeking -- the A milestone is for unpressurized cargo,
the B milestone is for pressurized cargo, the C milestone is for -- equally
important -- the return of cargo from the station -- processed experiments and
such things, and finally, the D milestone is for the delivery and return of crew.
SpaceX has bid on all four milestones -- A, B, C and D -- and we, of course, do
desire to recognize and award the easier milestones first. I think that's obvious.
10
Agenda Item NO.1 DC
May 27, 2008
Page 21 of 52
Orbital, the recent winner of a COTS agreement, has proposed on only the first two
milestones. All of those are valuable things to us.
I was mentioning the point, in response to Senator Vitter's question, that it is possible, if we
are willing to take a iittle more risk -- and this may be a time to take more risk -- it is
possible to recognize progress and make an earlier award of phase D. That is
something that could be considered, which I was offering as an answer to the senator's
question, without trying to be overly specific about when and under what conditions we
couid do it.
NELSON:
Especially since your policy goal is to keep U.S. astronauts on the space station after you
shut down the space shuttle.
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir.
NELSON:
Ergo, you have to have human capability to launch into space.
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir.
NELSON:
And without the new vehicle, Orion and Ares, coming on line until 2015, unless we can
accelerate that, therefore for five years you've got to rely on a Russian vehicle -- number
one, of which you do not know what it costs; and number two, you do not know with
absolute certainty that it is available.
GRIFFIN:
That is correct, sir.
NELSON:
Weil, then, wouldn't it be wise for us to be planning for, number one, accelerating Ares and
Orion and/or trying to get an additional human capability?
GRIFFIN:
I will review with my folks the possibility of accelerating COTS within the funding that we
already have available for it. With regard to our Ares and Orion program, our government
vehicles, the president's budget contains the funding to deliver that capability in the spring
of 2015, Now, things may go better than we expect. Sometimes that happens, Or they
:-
11
Agenda Item No. 1 GC
May 27, 2008
Page 22 of 52
could go worse. But that's our nominal planning date right now at 65 percent budgetary
confidence estimate.
NELSON:
Well, let me just throw you another.
GRIFFIN:
That's what the president's budget contains.
NELSON:
I understand. OK. Now, I want to give you another realistic political monkey wrench.
GRIFFIN:
OK. Thank you.
NELSON:
That is very realistic, because current law prevents NASA from purchasing flights
because of ongoing Russian support to the Iranian nuclear and missile programs.
So here we have a gap coming up, regardless of Russia saying, "Well, I'm not
going to supply you the vehicle," or Russia saying, "I'm going to gouge you by
making it so prohibitively expensive," but now we've got another situation.
Because of current law that says that we can't do ongoing contracts with the
Russians, if they are supporting the Iranian missile and nuclear program, which
in fact they are, what we've got to do is do this kabuki dance that we've done in the past,
which is get a waiver of that. Have you had conversations with the White House and OMB
about that issue?
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir. I'm, of course, aware of the issue, and that's why I qualified my earlier statements
by saying, "If the administration seeks and we are granted a waiver of INKSNA law, then
we would be able to purchase seats," So I am aware of that. We have initiated within the
administration the discussions of which you speak with various staff offices in the White
House, and we at NASA hope to bring that to a successful conclusion in the near future.
We realize that the Congress needs an ample amount of time to consider our request. I
don't have such a formal request available for you today.
NELSON:
Have you had a discussion with Secretary Rice or her deputy?
GRIFFIN:
12
Agenda Item NO.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 23 of 52
I have not personally. I would say that I know for certain that our folks, who work
interagency and intergovernmental affairs, are working with the Department of State on
this matter.
NELSON:
Well, at the end of the day, it's going to be us in the Congress that are going to have to
bring about this waiver.
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir.
NELSON:
And in order for us to consider this in a deliberate manner, we're going to have receive a
request from the White House...
... by when -- March the 14th of this year?
Of 2008. Do you think we can have that request from the White House for a waiver?
GRIFFIN:
I can't commit to that date, because it's not within my authority to do so, but I will do
everything I can to get you such a request at the earliest possible time.
NELSON:
That's only about three weeks away.
GRIFFIN:
I know that, sir.
NELSON:
I want to go back to another line of questioning that Senator Vitter had mentioned. You
stated that Michoud workforce was going to go from 1,900 down to 600.
GRIFFIN:
Or thereabouts. I wouldn't want anyone to...
NELSON:
You said KSc...
GRIFFIN:
... decision to that.
NELSON:
,.. in 2011 was going to be a several thousand reduction. Then you made another
("" statement that we're trying to bring in additional work. Was that several thousand reduction
13
Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27, 2008
Page 24 of 52
for the Kennedy Space Center net, or was that gross -- before you brought in the additional
work?
GRIFFIN:
The reductions I speak of in all cases are before we have any consideration of what new
work might exist there. For example, the COTS operations, if they are successful, are not
factored in.
Again, we will never -- hope we will never -- use as many people to process our new launch
vehicles as we used to process the shuttle. So if we are to avoid a permanent downturn in
the contractor workforce at the Kennedy Space Center, we would need to assign some
new roles and missions to the Kennedy Space Center so that they can do other
things at that location besides process shuttles. It is my hope to do that.
Now, the budget to support those new roles and missions, of course, doesn't materialize
until after the shuttle is retired.
NELSON:
And one of those roles that is already in the works, according to the contract that you let on
Orion, was the assembling of Orion there...
GRIFFIN:
Correct.
NELSON:
... in the big high bay.
GRIFFIN:
Correct. And I hope to find other similar tasks as we develop new hardware systems to
return to the moon. As you know, Senator Nelson, better than anyone, we will need a
number of new hardware systems as we mount our campaign to return to the moon.
But here is our issue with regard to employment in Kennedy Space Center. During Apollo
we developed all of those systems in parallel, and the nation simply supplied the money to
do that. In Constellation we are developing them in series, in sequence, in order to fit the
confines of a basically fiat budget, adjusted for infiation.
So we have to develop first one thing and then the next thing and then the next thing after
that. So as these systems come online, I am very much hoping that we can do
with later systems as we are doing with Orion, that we will assemble them at
Kennedy Space Center. That is my goal. That would be my hope. But we can't know how
that will come out for a number of years, because the budget to do those new systems is
done serially rather than in parallel.
14
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 25 of 52
NELSON:
And because of that, of which I am grateful for that, is I try to look out for this finest launch
team in the world, and it has an excellent corporate memory that you would not like to lose,
and I'm grateful for that, but the key word is "serially."
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir.
NELSON:
So the moon program comes on down the line. That doesn't help us in 2011, when you're
shutting down, to use your words, several thousand.
GRIFFIN:
It does not. I've been calling attention to this matter for three years now. We have reached
the point where there is nothing that will, to use your words, fill in the gap.
We are retiring the shuttle -- by the time it's retired -- after 30 years of service. We are
retiring the shuttle. We are moving on to new systems. We are not immediately replacing
the shuttle with those new systems. And when we do, it is a policy goal to have the new
system use fewer people. So we have a gap that will open up in the contractor workforce at
the Kennedy Space Center and that will not be filled.
NELSON:
Are the other centers going to share some of the pain? For example, what's
going to be the reduction at Johnson?
GRIFFIN:
I don't have with me at the moment.
NELSON:
How about at Marshall?
GRIFFIN:
I don't have any of that. I really don't.
NELSON:
Well, last November in our hearing, I had asked for your projections of all the workforce
levels at all of the NASA centers. That was last November. When do you think that this
committee will receive that information?
GRIFFIN:
Absolutely by March 24th, which is the legislatively mandated date for the workforce report
that we owe you center by center and with updates every six months thereafter. I'm not
r-. 100 percent sure I recall, but I think that was the answer I gave you last November when
I5
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 26 of 52
we talked about it, that we were working on this report and that we'd have it for you in
March.
Broadly speaking, I don't think we're going to have significant overall employment
reductions at Marshall or Johnson.
NELSON:
How about Goddard?
GRIFFIN:
Goddard is primarily not in the manned space flight business, and so we are not looking
at any reductions at Goddard.
NELSON:
Glenn?
GRIFFIN:
Again, I think Glenn will remain healthy.
NELSON:
JPL?
GRIFFIN:
JPL will remain healthy.
NELSON:
So the ones that are getting it in the neck are, first, KSC and number two, Michaud.
GRIFFIN:
That is where our contractor workforce problems are the most severe. Yes, sir.
NELSON:
Well, the way to get around this is to get additional money so that we can accelerate Orion
and Ares from 2015 to 2013, and therefore it's only a three-year gap, but we went through
this drill last year, having gotten them $1 billion extra, which was merely to repay you for
the money that you had to spend on the recovery from the Columbia disaster.
There was a lot of shoe leather and a lot of sweat to get that in the Senate, and then we
couldn't get the support out of the White House to keep that number in the negotiations
with the House. So we lost the $1 billion. But we did get at least the president's requested
level.
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir.
16
Agenda Item No.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 27 of 52
NELSON:
But that doesn't help us with the instant problem that Senator Vitter and I have.
GRIFFIN:
That's correct, sir, because for the next few years, after the retirement of the shuttle,
NASA's human space flight budget is spent primarily on the deveiopment of new systems.
And since that was not and is not being and was not planned to be primarily in parallel with
the shuttle, we go again, as I said earlier, from a situation where today our program is
largely about space flight operations.
Then for several years our program will largely be consumed with design, development, test
and evaluation, the development of new systems, and then we will transition back to
operations. So we are doing these things serially, rather than in parallel.
NELSON:
I am a Florida native, and my home county is Brevard County. And we don't want to go
through what we went through after the shutdown of Apollo. There were about 25,000
employees in the height of the Apollo moon program, and within a short period of time,
that employment went down to something less than 10,000 -- massive economic disiocation
-- and dinks and danks to keep it going with a Skylab and then Apollo-Soyuz.
~
And then there was a six-year gap from Apollo-Soyuz in 1975 to 1981, the first flight of the
space shuttle. And those were rough times for folks back home. Nobody wants to see that
kind of economic and professional dislocation occur again.
And so we have talked about this privately for some period of time, and we've talked about
additional items that we could bring in. And so I would like for you to be thinking about
that.
Now to pick up on the previous thing that we're talking about of being totally dependent on
the Russians, if we did have an additional capability American-wise to get humans up there,
that's certainly going to help the space launch business down at Kennedy Space Center.
And it's c1eariy going to lessen our dependence on the Russians.
And yet we're not to the point at which we're even thinking about the capability of
developing that human capability.
GRIFFIN:
On COTS, you mean.
NELSON:
On COTS.
r
] 7
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 28 of 52
GRIFFIN:
Well, sir, I have thought about it. Let me give you the other side. And if wishes were free, I
would have already done that. Let me give you the other side of the coin, if I might.
Our COTS agreements are predicated upon the demonstration of progress by
those who hold the agreements, and in exchange for progress and reaching
certain milestones, they qualify for certain payments. I could, as you are indicating
that I should, bet on the come and assume that we're going to have progress. And maybe
this is a time to do just that, because of the exigency in which we find ourselves.
But in the customary stewardship of government funds that I believe that you all here on
the Hill expect of me, I don't normally wish to put government funds in any way at
risk without a reasonable certainty that I will get a product back.
Now, when I say those words, I sound as if I'm down somehow down on Space -- I'm not --
or down on COTS -- I'm not. I'm the originator of the COTS program. It was...
NELSON:
Indeed, you are, and you should be congratulated for that. How much do you think COTS-D
would cost?
GRIFFIN:
I don't have that in my head right now. I just don't.
NELSON:
I think you'll find it to be somewhere around $300 million to move to start to develop that
capability, so...
GRIFFIN:
Well, of course, we don't have to put all that up at once.
NELSON:
That's correct. So is it worth risking that as opposed to risking $2 billion later down the road
on the Russians, that we don't even know that that's going to work for those five years?
GRIFFIN:
I completely understand the question. We have not analytically fleshed out our options for
accelerating COTS-D within the budget that we have. We have not done that, and I will do
it, and I will get back to you on what our options might be to do so.
NELSON:
And in the meantime, you have awarded another COTS contract for cargo that was about
$170 million,
]8
Agenda Item NO.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 29 of 52
GRIFFIN:
That's correct, sir. We need that, too.
NELSON:
Tell us why we need that.
GRIFFIN:
Again, the COTS agreements are for the development of commercial transportation
capability, which does not today exist. The government has never put up money to sponsor
such development. We have done that now. It is very difficult. We cannot guarantee the
success of any given provider.
If we had had more money available or thought that lesser amounts of money to anyone
potential provider would be a sufficient incentive, we would have had three or more
contracts. I would like to have as many commercial purveyors of this capability as I could
get.
What we were able to budget, starting a few years ago, we set aside in our budget $500
million for these COTS agreements, as you well know. And we had hoped to have two
providers, and so we had an earlier provider, who was not able to make his milestones. We
didn't spend the money, but they didn't make the milestones, so we still had the money
available.
We did a recompete and selected a different second provider. I didn't want to get to a place
where I was funding only one provider,
NELSON:
All right. I'm not going to beat a dead horse. You got the message.
GRIFFIN:
I understand your question.
NELSON:
And you got the message of what all we're at risk here. And oh, by the way, on top of that
is this Iranian nuclear issue.
GRIFFIN:
I don't know how to phrase this in such a way as to convince you that I totally understand
the concern and the problem, and I share it. I share the concern. I understand the problem.
NELSON:
Speaking of the award that you just made on COTS, for what lift cargo weight are we
talking about there, as compared to SpaceX? Give us a comparison of the two.
,,--.
19
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Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27, 2008
Page 30 of 52
GRIFFIN:
They're in the same payload class -- many thousands of pounds when at the end of the
development cycle -- thousands of pounds, not tens of thousands of pounds. They're in the
same general class.
NELSON:
Tens of thousands of pounds...
GRIFFIN:
Not tens of thousands.
NELSON:
Not. Just thousands of pounds.
GRIFFIN:
Thousands of pounds.
NELSON:
Both of them.
GRIFFIN:
Yes.
NELSON:
Even with the SpaceX new rocket that they're going to launch from Complex 20 at Cape
Canaveral Air Force Base?
GRIFFIN:
Well, Falcon 9, when developed, has a substantial payload capacity -- over
10,000 pounds. But that's not the first development. They have yet to develop
the Falcon 1.
NELSON:
Yes, but that's out at Kwajalein. Once they develop it, they're going to strap them together
when they launch from the Cape, aren't they?
GRIFFIN:
The Falcon 9 design is a design of clustered engines. Yes, sir.
NELSON:
And its payload is how many pounds?
GRIFFIN:
I'll give it to you for the record. It's over...
20
Agenda Item No.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 31 of 52
NELSON:
But you just said somewhere..
GRIFFIN:
Over 10,000.
NELSON:
Over 10,000 pounds.
GRIFFIN:
Yes.
NELSON:
My question, then, to get back to it, is compare the two. If that's over 10,000 pounds,
what's the payload capacity of the other one?
GRIFFIN:
I'm sorry. I'll get that for you. It's in...
NELSON:
Does anybody in that front row back there know?
GRIFFIN:
I don't.
NELSON:
You all just issued a contract to them, and you don't know what the payload capacity is?
GRIFFIN:
No, sir. We know what it is. We have it. I just don't have it in my head. I'm sorry.
NELSON:
OK.
Yes, please.
vmER:
This is related, if I could follow up. First of all, Doctor, I'd echo a thought you yourself
mentioned, which is analyzing COTS-D and analyzing that investment, particularly given all
these circumstances, I would completely encourage you to do that carefully.
GRIFFIN:
And I have committed to doing that.
~
I
21
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 32 of 52
VffiER:
Great. A few minutes ago you said if dreams were free, but they're not. Maybe in a very
limited circumstance, some of them are at least at the initial stage. And by that I mean isn't
there an option that you have to enter into certain unfounded Space Act Agreements, if a
commercial entity is willing to take up a project on the risk that they'll develop a good
product, and we'll buy it?
And as I understand it, some major entities like Boeing are willing to look at that --
for instance, for a manned capsule that could fit on a lot of these other
transportation rockets.
GRIFFIN:
Absolutely. We have a number of unfunded Space Act Agreements existing today and stand
ready to do more of them.
VffiER:
So you're already actively exploring those.
GRIFFIN:
Absolutely. And have been for the last couple of years.
VffiER:
Great. Also, coming back to the Russian negotiation, let's say for the sake of discussion that
the administration submits a request to Congress for this waiver. We give it. It's early 2009,
and so you're negotiating with the Russians. At that point what would the duration of the
next contract with the Russians likely be? What would the term likely be? Do you know?
GRIFFIN:
That's a subject for negotiation, but in my own view we would want to end that
dependence with the deployment of our own capability -- the Orion and Ares combination.
Now -- and I need to be clear on this -- let us say we make our schedules with our present
funding and fly with human crew the first Ares and Orion flight to the station in March of
2015. For the sake of argument, let's say that.
That vehicle is not at that point necessarily qualified for six months' duration on orbit to
serve as a crew rescue vehicle. I think it's a good time to point out to everyone we've been
focusing on the transportation up and back. But another service that the Russian
Soyuz provides today and will provide through at least 2015 is that of crew
rescue.
Now, this was an obligation that the United States initially signed up for for
ourselves and our partners. So until and unless we have a system -- whether
commercial or government -- and until and unless we have a system up there qualified for
~"
Agenda Item No. 10C
May 27, 2008
Page 33 of 52
six months' flight between crew rotations, we cannot say that we have crew rescue
capability, and we still will still be dependent upon the Russians.
So speaking as an engineer, if our first flight of Ares-Orion is in March of 2015,
then it would be the end of that fiscal year. We would be into fiscal 2016 before
we would know that we had a system qualified for crew rescue, as well as
transportation up and down.
So we're looking at a substantial period of dependency upon Russia in the space station
partnership.
VffiER:
Well, the point I was driving to is that the term of that next phase is open for discussion
and negotiation.
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir.
VffiER:
And therefore clearly, if we would do something in addition with either accelerating the
NASA program or funding COTS-D or accelerating COTS -- any of that -- that can clearly
have an impact on that Russian contract.
GRIFFIN:
Absolutely.
VffiER:
And so again, just to restate the obvious, I'd really like for you all to develop a comparison
of those costs and benefits, costs and savings, because it certainly seems like there could
be substantial savings in terms of payments to the Russians for certain actions we take.
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir. I agree.
VffiER:
Thank you.
NELSON:
By the way, in our last conversation about the difference between the two COTS contracts,
is there not another difference in that SpaceX has the capability of bringing down cargo in
their contract, and the most recent contract does not have that capability of bringing down
cargo?
~
I
23
Agenda Item No. 10e
May 27, 2008
Page 34 of 52
GRIFFIN:
That's correct, sir. The recent agreement that we concluded with Orbital includes up-cargo,
pressurized and unpressurized, only. And their proposal did not offer down-cargo or human
transportation.
NELSON:
And if you have an international space station, you want to bring down experiments, as well
as take them up. .
GRIFFIN:
We do.
NELSON:
I would just add as a backdrop to this whole discussion with regard to Russia that they're
just getting ready to have an election in Russia, and it's not exactly the kind of election that
we're accustomed to here, because the president is inserting his own person as the new
president in order to comply with the constitution. But it's an open secret that he is going to
be the prime minister, and therefore the real power will continue in the hands of Vladimir
Putin.
And we know also that Russia has been buying up all the pipelines that feed gas
and oil to Europe, and so he is going to be in a very significant position to yank a bunch
of chains of a bunch of people. And I just don't think that that's a good position for the
United States to be in, where he's got a major chain to yank.
Now, speaking of that, we've got a station. We've spent tens of billions of dollars. We want
to do scientific research on it. What are NASA's plans for the station beyond the year 2016?
GRIFFIN:
The administration does not currently have plans in place for the utilization of the station
after 2016. We've taken no action to preclude such operations, but we don't have specific
plans for them as yet.
NELSON:
Well, one of the reasons for having the space station was not only scientific research and
spending lots of American taxpayer money, as well as other nations' moneys, but it was
also to encourage private sector partners to make investment in research projects.
And so if they don't know that there's going to be a space station after 2016, how are we
going to give them assurance, if we don't make plans for the space station past that year?
GRIFFIN:
I understand, sir. I will say again certainly -- well, this is a personal opinion. I do not believe
that the Congress which is sitting at that time or an administration which is in place at that
24
Agenda Item No. 10e
May 27, 2008
Page 35 of 52
time would shut down a perfectly good space station. I just don't believe that. It doesn't
seem to me to be a realistic possibility.
But this is 2008, and what we are doing is planning for the next five years at most, and
most of my emphasis is on the next couple of years. We are not at the moment planning for
2016 and thereafter.
NELSON:
So you don't think there are any steps that we need to take now in order to operate beyond
2016?
GRIFFIN:
There's nothing that we need to do in a budgetary sense this year that affects what we do
in 2016. Now, as the next year or so approaches and we start to work up where our current
budget horizon, of course -- the president's submission -- goes from fiscal '09 to fiscal '13,
as we go to the next budgetary submission and the one after that, we do begin to have
items which we will need to pay attention to in order to continue sustaining the station, But
this year, that's not an issue.
NELSON:
Well, no doubt you're clear that you want the station to operate beyond 2016.
"-
GRIFFIN:
I do. And, of course, I will not be the administrator at that time, and there will be several
changes of congressional sessions and several administrations beyond now and then. The
point I was making earlier, sir, was that if the space station, after having been the result of
tens of billions of dollars worth of development, is still working fine in 2016, I personally
consider it unlikely that this Congress or any administration would shut it down.
NELSON:
Well, I do, too. I agree with you, assuming we have access...
GRIFFIN:
There is that.
NELSON:
... to the international space station. But assuming all of that, let me ask you this. Don't we
have to plan ahead of time for recertification to extend the service life? And what would
that recertification entail, and when should we start it?
GRIFFIN:
I don't know that I would call it recertification. We certainly in the next few years will have
a chance -- as we are doing now -- to observe how the individual components and pieces
~
25
Agenda Item NO.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 36 of 52
on the space station are wearing out and how they break and why they break and what
equipment needs to be put up and what equipment is longer than expected,
So we will have an opportunity to accumulate maintenance datal if you will, on the station.
And that will influence -- without question -- what we decide to do and how we decide to do
it in the out years to sustain the facility,
When it is completed, you will have here, sir, a facility that weighs almost 900,000 pounds-
- just shy of a million pounds -- on orbit.
NELSON:
And the recertifying that...
GRIFFIN:
It will need care.
NELSON:
And for the extension of its life, it's going to cost some money. So as we get around to
budgeting for that, we've got to put that in there.
GRIFFIN:
And as we get further out in our out years, we will have to include some budgeting for
maintenance of the station beyond 2016, but we don't need to do that today.
NELSON:
All right. Let me come back to this year's budget. The budget reserves for the station and
the shuttle leave such a small margin that any unforeseen circumstance would alter the
ability to meet the shuttle manifest and complete the station. So how do you account for
the slim margins and the potential program risk?
GRIFFIN:
I believe you've almost answered your own question. The margins are quite slim. We don't
have reserves in station and shuttle accounts, and the successful completion of the task
requires us to execute as we plan. If something goes badly wrong, if we have another
hurricane at the Cape or something of that ilk that causes us a lot of additional expenditure,
we will have to seek the permission of the Congress to reprogram money from other
accounts in order to finish this job.
If we had another Hurricane Katrina at Michoud or another hurricane as came through a
few years ago at the Cape and tore up the vertical assembly building, those things do
happen. And if they happen, we will have to take money from somewhere else.
NELSON:
Not even to speak of a continuing resolution.
y
.0
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 37 of 52
GRIFFIN:
If we have another continuing resolution, there will be programmatic impacts. We lost last
year, as you know, about $675 million from the manned space flight program because of
the continuing resolution. Now, that came out of exploration, rather than the shuttle and
station accounts. If that happens again, we will have more delay in the exploration
program.
NELSON:
I had occasion recently to go to the floor and kind of get it off my chest about the Alpha
Magnetic Spectrometer, of trying to find 25 percent of the cargo bay on one of the
remaining shuttle flights so that we can get that up there. You have indicated several times
that NASA has all the space manifested.
It's a major scientific experiment put together by 20 countries. I'm going to see
it in two weeks. It is virtually complete, sitting on the ground, ready to launch --
20 countries, SO universities probably inviting a couple of Nobel prizes because
of its pushing the frontiers of knowledge -- to be attached to the station, which
the purpose of the space station, and Kay Bailey Hutchison's designation of it as
a national laboratory, is for the purpose of scientific research.
,r
Now, I am still trying to figure out how we can accommodate this and what you can take
off in the way of smaller payloads that are not scientific experiments, but are supplies that
you can put in smaller packets so that if COTS -- either one of those -- works out, that you
could get it up economically with another vehicle, an expendable, that otherwise you can't
get without a big booster, since this thing weighs about 15,000 pounds.
So wouldn't it make sense what I've laid out -- to take some of the station's supplies and
hardware, put it over on an ELV, particularly since you're developing some, and fly the AMS
and let it start doing the science that it's supposed to do?
GRIFFIN:
Sir, we've looked at that over and over again. The payloads that are manifested on the
shuttle from now until its retirement are either crucial for station assembly, or they are
crucial for maintenance of the station during the gap.
Now, with the expenditure of enough money, anything can be flown on anything. But these
payloads are uniquely configured for the shuttle -- as is, I admit, the AMS, In our judgment
the cruciality of sustaining the space station appropriately, with the tens of billions of dollars
that we have invested in that, outweighs the desire to fly the AMS.
".--.
"
It's not that I don't wish to fly the AMS, it's that I have to put the space station at risk to do
it. And I don't have other good means to get the hardware up to the station that I need to
have there, I do not have the authority to add another shuttle flight to the manifest. So I'm
out of options.
27
Agenda Item NO.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 38 of 52
NELSON:
Well, I think you have."
GRIFFIN:
I'm out of options.
NELSON:
I don't think you are out of options, and this is what I want to suggest. You have some very
smart people that work for you throughout this NASA network we know as the NASA family.
And what some of these smart people have suggested is that unpressurized logistic flights
for ORUs -- what does that stand for?
GRIFFIN:
Orbit replaceable units.
NELSON:
OK. Orbit replacement units that could be launched after the AMS could be launched in 25
percent of the cargo bay. You take those off, and this is how those orbital replacement
units could be launched on STS-129 in August of 2009 with two express logistics carriers --
now, these are unpressurized logistic flights -- on STS- 131 in February of 2010 an
integrated cargo carrier vertical light deployable and a docking cargo module, and then the
third one would be on STS-133 in July of 2010 with two express logistics carriers.
Any of those flights can be reconfigured to include AMS and still carry a number of ORUs.
And the displaced ORUs could be launched on the ELVs.
Now, this is coming from your people. So would you look into that?
GRIFFIN:
Of course, and we will get you a detailed answer. I think some of my folks may be stepping
a bit out of line. When you talk about 25 percent of the cargo bay, you're talking about by
volume. And yes, the AMS uses 25 percent of a cargo bay by volume. But it uses almost
half of a cargo bay by weight.
So in order to displace a number of small components, I have to actually displace more
than -- I can't displace 25 percent by volume of ORUs and replace it with the AMS, because
I actually have to account for the weight, as well as the volume, and that's going to eat into
another one.
So the manifesting challenges for what is on the space shuttle today are not trivial, and
everything that's on there is on there as a result of a very severe winnowing process.
28
. ,; .
Agenda Item No.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 39 of 52
But I understand your question, I will not be cavalier with it. I will take it for the record, and
we will give you a detailed answer as to how we might manifest these other things, if it is
possible, on other flights. But we have looked at that.
NELSON:
Well, I'm sure you have, but again, this is coming from your very smart people. Let that
ingenuity bubble up. Let that creativity bubble up. Now, I want to give you two examples.
And this isn't my thinking -- this is folks that are these creative geniuses.
One flight would be reconfigured to include the AMS and an ICCVLD, which is the
Integrated Cargo Carrier Vertical Light Deployable. This will allow the space shuttle to
launch 8,800 pounds of ORUs plus the ICCVLD to the space station on the same flight as
the AMS. That's one example.
The second example is reconfigure one of the existing flights to include AMS and an Express
Logistics Carrier. The ELC would have to be loaded only with ORUs that do not require
power in the shuttle.
Now, if you'll take that as creativity and see if it's possible.
GRIFFIN:
.~ I, of course, will do that. I would remind you that everything is easy for those peopie that
don't have to do it. We have explored these questions throughout NASA over and over
again, and we have not been able to converge it, but I will try again.
NELSON:
My rejoinder to you is you lead the agency that is capable of miracles. It happened on
Apollo 13, and it happened to a degree just last October when that crew that we just
announced went up there and figured out how to get that solar array unfurled. And my
hat's off to the ingenuity in NASA.
GRIFFIN:
I'll give you the best answer I can get.
NELSON:
Well, I want you to do that without -- you're a good administrator, because you're
hardheaded, and that's a good quality, and I appreciate that. And I just hope that you will
look at this.
Senator Vitter?
All right. I need to ask you about earth sciences. I know that you have had a difficult time
sometimes with NOAA and also with the Department of Defense on NPOESS with the
significant cost and schedule overruns, And then the Nunn-McCurdy review came in '06,
! and the sensor ended up being delayed by another eight months.
29
Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27,2008
Page 40 of 52
How is this delay going to affect NASA's launch schedule for the replacement, which is an
NPP, before the next NPOESS? And what are the cost implications associated with the
delay?
GRIFFIN:
The sensor of which you speak is the VIIRS sensor, currentiy scheduled for delivery I think
at the end of March next year. We are now to a point where, if that sensor slips any
further, we are a day for day slip on the launch. So that sensor is the critical path for NPP,
and the VIIRS sensor, of course, is the number one priority sensor aboard NPOESS itself.
NPP is the NPOESS preparatory program.
So the VIIRS sensor is critical, is on critical path for everything that we're doing on NPP and
NPOESS. I will get for you for the record the consequential damages of the launch delay.
Again, I don't have those in my head. I'm sorry. But there will be a substantial cost increase
to the NPP program if the VIIRS instrument doesn't show up.
Now, I don't even remotely want to be seen to be making excuses, but the VIIRS
instrument is not a NASA development. We are a customer for it. We are waiting for it to
show up, but it is not an instrument over whose development we have had any influence in
the past.
NELSON:
How about NASA's Glory climate-monitoring satellite? It seems like it might be heading
toward a similar fate of NPOESS with cost overruns and delays.
GRIFFIN:
It is. There is an instrument on the Glory spacecraft that possibly not coincidentally is being
supplied by the same vendor, and that instrument is late and has caused substantial
consequential damages to the Glory schedule. About 90 percent of the Glory cost overrun is
due to this instrument or its consequential damages.
NELSON:
And that's Raytheon Space and Airborne Systems, How is NASA improving the oversight of
this contractor?
GRIFFIN:
Well, our oversight of them has been careful and consistent. Their response has been less
so. I met with the chief executive officer of Raytheon two weeks ago, and they have
pledged to remedy the disparities between their promises and deployments. We continue to
work with them, At this point I really don't have other positive options to offer you.
The progress has been slower than planned. The instruments are late. And that does have
ripple effects.
'- -
30
,. .
Agenda Item NO.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 41 of 52
NELSON:
And so since it's rippled far over budget, there's no way of getting this program back on
cost and on schedule,
GRIFFIN:
At this point, no. The best we can do is to contain the damage and make as much progress
towards launch date as we can.
NELSON:
Do you want to share with the committee about the next generation air transportation
system? What R&D projects does NASA currently have under way that will support this?
GRIFFIN:
Yes, sir. Quite a few. NGATS is, of course, is the centerpiece of FAA development of a new
air traffic management system, and NASA is a partner on that.
We are conducting research on statistical air traffic management to improve the traffic
density that we can safely fly. We are conducting research on higher efficiency engines,
lower noise, lower emission engines, aircraft configurations that are more efficient. We're
doing a host of activities in support of the FAA and in collaboration with the FAA on NGATS,
and we are meeting our budgetary commitments to the FAA for it.
NELSON:
Is this to take existing technology and apply it, or are you focused more on basic research?
GRIFFIN:
For NASA we focus more on basic research. We are not in our aeronautics program
primarily in the business of taking existing technology and applying it.
NELSON:
Has NASA completed an MOU with the joint program office that outlines the agency's role in
this next generation effort?
GRIFFIN:
I don't know that we have. I can check on that for you. We certainly have a good
reiationship with the FAA and the JPDO, but whether the MOU is signed or not I don't
know.
NELSON:
Whatever that arrangement is, is it reflected in the 2009 budget that you have?
GRIFFIN:
The 2009 budget and the out years budget for aeronautics fully supports are commitments
r to the FAA on NGATS. That has been a priority for me.
31
Agenda Item No. 10e
May 27, 2008
Page 42 of 52
NELSON:
We'll ask for the record questions about the U,S. National Wind Tunnel facilities, and we will
also ask questions about the American COMPETES program.
GRIFFIN:
OK. And I will answer as expeditiously as possible.
NELSON:
OK. I don't want any misunderstanding in the term that I used earlier -- hardheaded --
because I use that, and I explained, as an attribute of admirable quality that you as an
administrator have and have to have. So I just want to make sure that that was not in any
way meant by me as a derisive term -- rather an admirable term -- and what I am trying to
get out is that this agency has so much creativity. If there's a chance of solving this
problem with the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, it's well worth it for us to look at different
things.
GRIFFIN:
Well, sir, I took no offense, and I do agree. I think there seems to be among your staff that
I don't want to fly the AMS. In fact, that's false. I do want to fly the AMS. I yield to none in
my belief that the United States should keep its international commitments, commitments
made to international partners. I've said that on the record multiple times, and I mean it.
We have looked carefully and in detail at options to fly the AMS within the existing
manifests, and I have not found them. If people have clever ideas and they have not put
them forth, then we will investigate again, and we will listen to those clever ideas and let
them put those ideas forth.
I would like to find an option to fly AMS. Far from stiff-arming it, I would like to do it. But I
will not do it in such a way that would cause, in my judgment, harm to the station.
NELSON:
Well, I certainly understand that. But at the same time, I've got to remind everybody what's
the purpose of the space station. And what's the purpose of the expenditure of billions and
tens of billions of American taxpayers' dollars? And that was not only to have a facility
where we could iearn in the adaptation of humans to space, but that we would have a
scientific facility for experimentation. And this is just one project.
But to move that over to an expendable, it's going to be delayed five to seven years at
considerable additional cost.
GRIFFIN:
And we don't recommend that.
NELSON:
/'"~
'-
32
" ,.
Agenda Item NO.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 43 of 52
And that's what I'm trying to find a solution. This has nothing to do with the State of
Florida. In some minimal amount, it may with regard to the 50 universities that are involved
in this thing, and there may be -- as a matter of fact, I think there is one university in
Florida that's involved -- but that's beside the point.
This is an experiment that's ready on the ground to analyze these cosmic rays and to see
what's out there and what's the origin and so forth.
So thank you very much.
Senator Vitter, anything further?
VffiER:
Thank you very much, Dr. Griffin.
GRIFFIN:
Thank you both. And I will do everything in my power to answer your questions about
remanifesting cargo to fly AMS. We will look at it and give you the most honest answer that
we can give. I will spend time on it personally.
NELSON:
Thank you, Dr. Griffin.
And the meeting is adjourned.
GRIFFIN:
Thank you, sir.
CQ Transcriptions, Feb. 27, 2008
List of Panel Members and Witnesses
PANEL MEMBERS:
SEN. BILL NELSON, D-FLA. CHAIRMAN
SEN. JOHN KERRY, D-MASS.
SEN. BYRON L. DORGAN
SEN. MARK PRYOR, D-ARK.
SEN. DANIEL K. INOUYE, D-HAWAII EX OFFICIO
SEN. KAY BAILEY HUTCHISON, R-TEXAS RANKING MEMBER
SEN. JOHN E. SUNUNU, R-N.H.
SEN. TED STEVENS, R-ALASKA EX OFFICIO
WITNESSES:
NASA ADMINISTRATOR MICHAEL D. GRIFFIN
Source: CQ Transcriptions
All materials herein are protected byUnited States copyright law and may not be
reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior
('
, .
33
Agenda Item NO.1 oe
May 27, 2008
Page 44 of 52
written permission of CQ Transcriptions. You may not alter or remove any trademark,
copyright or other notice from copies of the content. @ 2008 Congressional Quarterly Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
34
,
/"'
{
\......
Agenda Item No. 10e
May 27, 2008
Page 45 of 52
NASA Wary of Relying on Russia
Moscow Soon to Be Lone Carrier of Astronauts to Space Station
By Marc Kaufman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, March 7, 2008; A01
Tomorrow night, a European spacecraft is scheduled to blast off from French Guiana on its maiden
voyage to the international space station, giving NASA and the world a new way to reach the orbiting
laboratory .
For NASA. however, the launch of the Jules Verne Automated Transfer Vehicle (A TV) also highlights
a stark reality: In 2 1/2 years, just as the station gets fully assembled, the United States will no
longer have any spacecraft of its own capable of carrying astronauts and cargo to the station,
in which roughly $100 billion is being invested. The three space shuttles will be retired by then,
because of their high cost and questionable safety, and NASA will have nothing ready to replace
them until 2015 at the earliest.
For five years or more, the United States will be dependent on the technology of others to
reach the station, which American taxpayers largely paid for. To complicate things further, the
only nation now capable of flying humans to the station is Russia, giving it a strong
(" 'Jargaining position to decide what it wants to charge for the flights at a time when U.S.-
Russian relations are becoming increasingly testy.
In addition, some fear the price will be paid not only in billions of dollars but also in lost American
prestige and lost leverage on the Russians when it comes to issues such as aiding Iran with its
nuclear program.
NASA Administrator Michael Griffin calls the situation his "greatest regret and greatest
concern." For most of the five-year gap, he said, "we will be largely dependent on the Russians,
and that is terrible place for the United States to be. I'm worried, and many others are
worried." .
Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), chairman of the subcommittee that oversees NASA, went further. "This is
a very serious betrayal of American interests," he said. "This will be the first time since
Sputnik when the United States will not have a significant space superiority. I remain
dumbfounded that we've allowed this serious threat to our national security to develop."
The White House, Congress and the space community have known for years that the gap was
looming, but there were always other priorities.
Those most involved with the issue say that its seriousness will become more glaring this summer,
when negotiations with Russia begin and Congress is likely to debate whether to grant a waiver to the
law that prohibits certain kinds of commerce with nations that support the Iranian or North Korean
f'uclear program.
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Agenda Item NO.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Griffin has testified that while the waiver is essential, it is "unseemly, simply unseeml~~f~J'i'b52
, United States -- the world's leading power and leading space power"- to be reduced to
purchasing services like this. It affects, in my view, how we are seen in the world, and not for the
better."
NASA's budget calls for spending $2.6 billion for transportation to the space station between fiscal
2009 and 2013. As it stands now, much of that would go to the Russians.
With that prospect ahead, Griffin told Nelson's committee last week that he is working with the
fledgling private rocket company SpaceX to speed its efforts to build a private spacecraft that can
take over some of the work of ferrying astronauts into space. Both Nelson and Sen. David Vitter (R-
La,) had recommended that NASA formally push ahead with that effort.
But SpaceX, whiie eager to do the work, has not successfully orbited even a cargo spacecraft, let
alone one designed to the much higher standards needed for human flight. Nonetheless, SpaceX
founder Elan Musk said in a telephone interview that his company might have a manned spacecraft
capability by the end of 2011 if NASA exercises its option under a 2006 agreement to provide cargo
service. With that go-ahead, SpaceX would put its manned rocket program into high gear, he said.
"Is there a risk that we won't succeed? Yes, there is," said Musk, co-founder of the PavPal online
payment system. "But if the United States doesn't provide any competition to the Russians, then they
have a monopoly on crew transport to the station and they can dictate their terms. Do taxpayers really
want all that money to go to Russia, rather than to an American company with American workers?"
In his testimony, Griffin said he is inclined to exercise the human spaceflight option, but he aiso said
he very much doubts that SpaceX will have a spacecraft ready for astronauts by 2012.
The gap in American capability to reach the space station is the result of factors including the 2003
breakup of the space shuttle Columbia, the subsequent decision to retire the three remaining shuttles
by September 2010 and the lack of additio[1al funds to quickly build a replacement.
NASA has let contracts to design and test a new-generation rocket and crew capsule, but it has had
to go slowly because of the high cost of operating the shuttles, which are the only spacecraft abie to
carry large components to the still-incomplete space station. Griffin has testified that the replacement
spacecraft could be ready in 2013 rather than 2015 if the agency had an additional $2 billion, but the
administration has not asked for the funding.
Last year, the White House opposed a bill passed by the Senate to give NASA an additional $1 billion
to make up for some of the costs incurred after Columbia broke apart -- a step similar to one taken
after the Challenger disaster in 1986.
"What we have here is an agency that has been given a lot to do but has been starved for funds,"
Nelson said. "I think the gap is largely due to the administration's refusal to give NASA the funds it
needs. And now we'll be forced to give billions to the Russians because we didn't spend millions
before. It's the worst of all worlds."
Griffin, a strong advocate for manned spaceflight and a loyal member of the administration, said that
past Congresses and administrations let the manned space program atrophy and that it took
President Bush's 2004 "vision" for human travel to the moon and Mars to rejuvenate the program.
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Agenda Item No. 10e
May 27, 2008
Still, many see Bush as having limited interest in space. Not only have NASA budgets feffi%iTi'e'2f light,
'but Bush never visited the Johnson Space Center in Houston during his six years as governor of
Texas, and as president he visited once, for a memorial service for the lost Columbia astronauts.
The European spacecraft scheduled for launch tomorrow night is the first of six cargo-carrying flights
by Arianespace, a public-private company, in exchange for NASA ferrying a large European lab to the
station on the shuttle. Chairman and chief executive Jean-Yves Le Gall said in an interview last week
that the company would like to playa larger role in supplying the space station, but it is waiting for its
first successful launch before pressing its case.
The European Union is scheduled to decide in November whether to enter the field of human
spaceflight, potentially joining the club that so far includes only the United States. Russia and China.
Le Gall acknowledged that the A TV -- which is the size of a London double-decker bus -- is now more
expensive to build and operate than its Russian competitors, but he said that may change if Russia
becomes the sole carrier. Nonetheless, the Europeans face a number of obstacles in selling their
space transport services to NASA, including buy-American provisions that favor homegrown
companies such as SpaceX.
"We believe we can be an important part of the solution for the space station and counterbalance to
the Russians, if we are given a chance," Le Gall said.
Despite the broad concern over NASA's future dependence on Russia, Griffin said the agency's
experience with its most important space station partner has been good. The Russians helped
astronauts stranded on the space station after the Columbia breakup, and they have continued to
r provide crew and cargo transport services -- currently as part of a $780 million, multiyear contract.
Griffin also said a new deal with the Russians has to be signed by early next year. The Russians, he
said, need a three-year lead time to build a sufficient quantity of their expendable, but very
dependable, Soyuz and Progress spacecraft.
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Agenda Item No. oe
May 27, 2 08
Page 48 0 52
wight_d
From: wight_d
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2008 9:41 AM
To: henning_t: fiala_d; CoyleFred; HalasFrank; ColettaJim
Cc: muddj; Dchs_l; KlatzkowJeff: TorreJohn
Subject: NASA opposes KSC hearing
April 29, 2006
NASA opposes KSC hearing
Nelson says agency doesn't want Brevard meeting to 'stir up' people
BY JAMES DEAN
FLORiDA TOD!! r
US. Sen. Bill Nelson wants the subcommittee overseeing NASA to have a hearing this summer in
Brevard County about the future of Kennedy Space Center, but NASA opposes the idea. Nelson said
Monday.
'Tm sad to tell you, NASA has asked me not to have a meeting, because they don't want to stir up the
people," Nelson said during a Brevard County Commission workshop on space issues
") tried to explain to them our people are stirred up," Nelson said, referring to the possibility of more
than 6,400 job losses resulting from the shuttle's 2010 retirement
His comments came during a meeting that also featured appearances by U,S. Reps. Dave Weldon
and Tom Feeney, and a brief video address from U.S, Sen. Mel Martinez,
They said they were working against budget odds to narrow the projected five-year gap in manned
space flight from KSC
And they stressed the need to frame that gap as an issue of national security importance, not just one
that affects local jobs, in order to achieve any change in policy or funding
"We cannot advocate successfully outside of our community that this is primarily a jobs program,"
said Feeney, who returned recently from a space summit in China
He said that country and others are chipping away at leadership in space, and in math and science
education, that the United States once took for granted
Weldon stressed the security and financial risks of relying on Russian launch vehicles to access the
International Space Station, and the threat to astronauts' safety if Russian rockets should be unable
to reach the station.
"It's not just a space issue. It's not Just a Space Coast issue. This is really an American issue, in my
opinion," he said.
Weldon said Brevard would weather the shuttle transition better than it did the Apollo program's end,
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but existing plans weren't good enough for Brevard or the country.
Page 2 of2
f\genda Item No.1 OC
May 27, 2008
Page 49 of 52
Nelson painted a more dire picture. saying a continuation of existing poliCies would leave KSC "on life
support."
Nelson wants the subcommittee he chairs to hold a hearing in Brevard to allow community members
to testify about the local impact of the job losses, according to a spokesman.
Asked for a response, NASA spokesman Michael Cabbage said, "If any congressional committee
schedules a hearing involving NASA, we will be there to support it and answer any questions."
Among other priorities discussed at the workshop, participants stressed the need to encourage
incentives for commercial space operators and to educate presidential candidates who will soon be
setting policy.
County commissioners also heard from several labor union representatives, who said skilled
technological labor would be difficult to replace jf it is allowed to leave Brevard during the post-shuttle
gap.
The commission will consider establishing a coalition to help make the case for KSC to various
elected officials and interest groups.
"The capacity to have different messages for different audiences is what I saw here today," County
Commission Chairman Truman Scarborough said. "Sometimes we may need the wrench, sometimes
we may need the screwdriver."
The meeting ended on a positive note, with news that state lawmakers are close to approving several
space-related initiatives promoted by Brevard representati....es.
If appropriations hold up in a final budget vote this week, they would provide $1.5 million for space
work~force transition programs, and $15 million to reconfigure a launch pad for commercial use.
Contact Dean at 242-3617 or jd~an@fIQLidatqJ;i!!y..c:om..
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Agenda~il!ffi ~&f1k
May 27, 2008
Page 50 of 52
wight_d
From: wighCd
Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2008 9:45 AM
To: henning_t; fiala_d; CoyleFred; HalasFrank; eolettaJim
Cc: mudd.J; ochs_l; KlatzkowJeff; TorreJohn
Subject: Texan's campaign champions NASA
OrlandoSentinel.com
Texan's campaign champions NASA, gives slim hope for
Kennedy Space Center jobs
Mark K. Matthews
Washington Bureau
April 15, 2008
WASHINGTON
A Texas congressman trying to keep his job could bc the best hope for Kcnnedy Space Centcr workers
trying to keep theirs.
But it's a slim hope at best.
Meet U.S. Rep. Nick Lampson, a Democrat defending a Houston-area seat once held by fonner
Republican Majority Leader Tom DeLay. Like DeLay, Lampson is an avid NASA supporter with strong
ties to nearby Jolmson Space Center.
Unlike DeLay -- nicknamed "The Hammer" for the way he kept fellow Republicans in line -- Lampson
has to work hard for votes in a district that gave President Bush 64 percent ofthc vote in 2004,
according to Congressional Quarterly,
Winning support from Johnson employees is cruciai to his re-election chances. To do that, he has
become NASA's biggest booster among House Democrats and might be able to use his campaign as
levcrage to persuade party leaders to support manned spaceflight.
If successful, the effort could mean more NASA dollars and a greater focus on developing the space
shuttle's successor. Both would benefit KSC.
But it's an uphill fight. Washington has rejected recent campaigns to sharply increase NASA's budget.
The agency revealed this month that more than 8,000 workers nationwide -- including up to 6,400 at
KSC -- could lose their jobs after the shuttle is retired in 2010.
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AgendallOOi9 N6lf we
May 27, 2008
Page 51 of 52
"Democratic leaders like and value Lampson. They understand that his is not a slam-dunk seat," said
Norman Ornstein, a congressional scholar with the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think
tank in Washington.
"They want to give him his due," he said, though that's not likely to include substantial funding for
NASA because ofrecession concerns and war expenses. "But they will come up with a creative way to
support [the space agency]."
For instance, Ornstein said, Lampson's race likely will prompt party leaders to ask Democratic critics of
manned spaceflight to remain quiet. At the very least, Congress likely won't reduce the $17.6 billion
NASA budget for 2009 proposed by the White House.
But Lampson wants more, including an extra $3 billion for NASA next year. The money would
help reduce a four- to five-year gap between the shuttle's retirement in 2010 and the planned first
mission ofits replacement -- the Constellation program -- in 2015.
Closing that gap is especially important to KSC because its primary role is preparing spacecraft
for launch, which puts its jobs in greatest jeopardy.
"You're gambling here," Lampson said. If NASA and Congress don't take steps to retain skilled
shuttle workers, years of irreplaceable space experience will be lost, he said.
"We need to convince people it's an investment," he added -- not only for workers but also for
new technologies. Eventually, Lampson wants to boost NASA funding to $30 billion.
~
Getting more money, however, will require support from a broad coalition in the House and Senate. So
Lampson has joined with a small group of NASA supporters to lobby leaders and appropriators.
He has brought together NASA Administrator Michael Griffm and the Blue Dog Coalition, a group of
fiscally conservative Democrats. He also led 18 other House members to KSC on March 11 to watch a
shuttle laLlDc11.
"He is always looking for creative ways of informing others -- Congress and the public -- on the benefits
of space exploration and the need to invest in it," said Rep. Bart Gordon, D-Tenn., House Science and
Technology Committee chairman.
Just $2 billion could close the launch gap to three years, he argues. He has teamed with Sen. Kay Bailey
Hutchison, R-Texas, to press for the money.
"You can't get anything done unless someone steps up to the plate. I think that's what Nick is trying to
do," said u.S. Rep. John Shimkus, R-lll.. who said the Lampson-led trip to KSC convinced him of
NASA's need for more money.
Lampson and his allies argue that until a shuttle replacement is flying, the U.S. will have to rely on
Russia to ferry its astronauts to the international space station. At best, they contend, this riskll the
United States losing its lead in space technology; at worst, it could allow blackmail by Russia.
c
NASA funding remains a tough sell in a budget squeezed by a shaky economy, the war in Iraq and
a huge deficit.
"Of course they [NASA] told us that they weren't getting enough money," said U.S. Rep. Mazie Hirano,
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AgendaR~8fN6o~ec
May 27, 2008
Page 52 of 52
D- Hawaii, who joined Lampson at KSC. She, however, was unimpressed, saying that NASA's "efforts
should go to efforts that could bear the most fruit," such as unmanned spaceflight.
"Most members of Congress don't consider [manned spaceflight] a critical issue. They see it as a pork
issue," said Roger Launius, curator at the National Air and Space Museum.
He called Lampson the go-to NASA guy among House Democrats but was skeptical that he could wring
more money from Congress.
"They want to help Lampson, but there are other ways to do it," Launius said.
Republicans have targeted Lampson, in part, for symbolic reasons. First elected in 1996, he lost his seat
in 2004 after a redistricting orchestrated by DeLay. Lampson rebOlUlded two years later to take DeLay's
seat after the GOP leader resigned amid an ethics scandal.
This fall, Lampson will face Pete Olson, a Republican former Senate aide. The Cook Political Report, a
nonpartisan election handicapper, recently ranked the race as a tossup.
Ifhe survives the election, Lampson said, he will attempt to become chairman of the House
subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics, which has direct oversight of NASA.
Mark K. Matthews can be reached at mmatthews@orlandosentinel.com or 202-824-8222
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