Republicans fully fund Bush's Space Plan

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Republicans fully fund Bush's Space Plan

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DeLay's Push Helps Deliver NASA Funds

By Guy Gugliotta
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, December 6, 2004; Page A01

Without a separate vote or even a debate, House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) has managed to deliver to a delighted NASA enough money to forge ahead on a plan that would reshape U.S. space policy for decades to come.

President Bush's "Vision for Space Exploration," which would send humans to the moon and eventually to Mars, got a skeptical reception in January and was left for dead in midsummer, but it made a stunning last-minute comeback when DeLay delivered NASA's full $16.2 billion budget request as part of the omnibus $388 billion spending bill passed Nov. 20.

DeLay, whose newly redrawn district includes the Johnson Space Center, and NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe have all but claimed a mandate; but even with the money and parts of the project already up and running, the questions that once threatened to kill the initiative still remain largely unresolved.

What will it really cost? What NASA programs will be cut to fund it? How will other science agencies be affected? Instead of a debate and vote on the merits of the president's plan, the measure was adopted largely because DeLay threatened to scuttle the entire omnibus bill unless Bush got every nickel he requested.

"I wouldn't say we're critical of the moon-Mars program, but we are critical of the lack of clarity about the scientific benefits," said physicist Michael Lubell, spokesman for the American Physical Society, the nation's largest association of research physicists. "This is bound to be an extremely costly project, so what are we going to get from it?"

The responses are many: that humankind needs challenges; that robots will never be supple enough to take full scientific advantage of visits to other worlds; that if the United States doesn't do it, some other nation -- China, quite likely -- will. DeLay, a self-described "space nut," told Johnson Space Center employees a few days after the vote that "NASA helps America fulfill the dreams of the human heart."

And at a news conference the next day, O'Keefe said the omnibus bill embodied "as strong an endorsement as anyone could have hoped for the national space policy that the president articulated."

NASA's share amounted to 4.1 percent of the omnibus bill, and the space agency ended the year as one of the few non-security scientific agencies to get a raise for 2005, says the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Funding for the others was flat or fell.

Bush announced the space "Vision" to considerable fanfare Jan. 14, promising to "extend a human presence across our solar system," starting with a return to the moon by 2020 and eventual travel to Mars.

Lawmakers of both parties welcomed a new set of goals for a human spaceflight program traumatized and seemingly adrift after last year's loss of the space shuttle Columbia. Even today, the proposal finds few congressional detractors -- as an overall concept.

But the devil, now, as then, is in the details: "I support the president's initiative -- if it's paid for," said Rep. Bart Gordon (Tenn.), the Science Committee's leading Democrat. "I'm afraid we're setting ourselves up for a future train wreck."

Early in the year, O'Keefe tried to sell the proposal as a slow, steady initiative requiring a NASA budget increase in 2005 of only $800 million. It was the beginning of "a journey," he said, quoting from the Bush speech, "not a race."

But the plan, if carried out, would be the most ambitious space enterprise ever undertaken, and lawmakers wondered whether other programs would be scaled back to make room for it: Would spectacular science missions such as the robotic Mars rovers suffer? Or Earth science, astronomy or aeronautics?

O'Keefe did not satisfy his questioners, but while Bush's plan languished in Congress, NASA was moving ahead aggressively to implement it. O'Keefe created a new Office of Exploration Systems, headed by Associate Administrator Craig E. Steidle, a retired Navy rear admiral, test pilot and military procurement specialist.

During the year, Steidle's office developed a timetable for the moon-Mars initiative, mapped its priorities and gathered experts to chop the project into contract-size pieces. By Thanksgiving, the agency had let more than 120 contracts.

The plan's early centerpiece is the next-generation "Crew Exploration Vehicle," designed to fly by 2014 and to reach the moon by 2020. NASA received about 1,000 responses to its initial request for "concepts" of what the vehicle should be.

"We selected 11 teams, and next August we're going to reduce them to two, or maybe three, who will actually build a vehicle, test and demonstrate it [without a crew] in 2008," Steidle said in an interview at NASA headquarters.

For the plan's other needs, NASA has vetted more than 3,700 proposals to provide technologies including navigation systems, tools and machinery. Caterpillar Inc. of Peoria, Ill., will provide equipment for doing construction on the moon, and Hamilton Sunstrand of Windsor Locks, Conn., will develop new techniques to reclaim water from human waste.

NASA next must pick a rocket system for launching the vehicle, and "we're looking at everything," Steidle said. In a few months, the agency will decide whether to use a single, "shuttle-derived" heavy launch rocket, a smaller spacecraft or a combination. The hybrid would put the crew exploration vehicle and a supplementary rocket into orbit separately, where they would link up for the lunar flight.

NASA projects that Bush's plan will cost $100 billion by 2020, and Steidle said, "I feel very good about" being able to deliver a crew vehicle by 2014 with "the money that's in the budget right now. What's beyond gets a little foggy."

But not excessive. "It's not like building a space station," NASA Comptroller Steven J. Isakowitz said in a telephone interview. "Costs are more manageable" because the new spaceship is the only major piece of hardware scheduled for construction in the next decade.

Some in Congress were not convinced. On June 20, the House Appropriations subcommittee charged with funding NASA trimmed Bush's 2005 budget request by $1.1 billion and eliminated all $438 million slated for the crew exploration vehicle.

"It was about the money," recalled subcommittee Chairman James T. Walsh (R-N.Y.). "I remember Sean [O'Keefe] coming in and trying to give people a comfort level, but the budget we had to work with didn't even come close."

Three days later, White House budget director Joshua B. Bolten sent a letter threatening a veto unless the bill gave the plan "adequate funding levels." DeLay had visited the White House hours earlier.

The bill never reached the House floor, but if Walsh wanted to get higher-ups to focus on it, he had succeeded. "We created the atmosphere where people could come to our rescue," Walsh said.

But it took awhile. In September the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released a report suggesting that NASA intended to fund the president's plan in part by taking $10 billion from signature science programs such as the one that produced the Mars rovers.

NASA's Isakowitz said most of the reallocations resulted from shifting control of existing programs to Steidle's office, not canceling them. For instance, he said, the Office of Explorations absorbed Project Prometheus, a $400 million-a-year program to develop nuclear power for space use.

Still, Isakowitz acknowledged that NASA has delayed start-up or funding increases for some science projects in order to fund Bush's plan. These will bring the plan $2.7 billion from 2005 to 2009.

The projects affected are mostly in two areas: "Beyond Einstein," astrophysics missions, and "Explorers," extremely competitive small missions usually focused on astronomy and the history of the universe.

Concerns about funding and priorities remained unresolved into the autumn, but Bush's reelection gave the administration a political boost. In a post-election interview, O'Keefe said he was "feeling better every day" about the plan's budget and "supremely confident" that it would be passed as written.

And so it proved. NASA was identified as a major sticking point when Senate and House conferees sat down to craft the final version of the omnibus spending bill near midnight Nov. 19, but Bolten, Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) and DeLay were holding out for more money.

The negotiators appeared to agree on $15.9 billion for NASA, but that wasn't good enough, DeLay said later at the Space Center. "The main responsibility of the majority leader is to set the agenda for the House floor. I wouldn't schedule the bill until NASA was taken care of," he said.

And it was.

"Once you get into an omnibus bill, the leadership takes over, and you need to have an advocate in that circle," Walsh said. DeLay "was getting me more allocation every time he stepped up to the plate. He made the difference."

*******************

Remember, you all voted for this 8)
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Post by Durandal »

"I wouldn't say we're critical of the moon-Mars program, but we are critical of the lack of clarity about the scientific benefits," said physicist Michael Lubell, spokesman for the American Physical Society, the nation's largest association of research physicists. "This is bound to be an extremely costly project, so what are we going to get from it?"
In other words, they're critical about something they don't like about it. I love political lingo, don't you?
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Give a bunch og geeks a 16 billion dollar budget... yeah... good will come of it. it is a law of nature.
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Post by MKSheppard »

Bring on the B-100 suborbital bombers!
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Post by Illuminatus Primus »

:shock:

I love space exploration, but...what with money?

Someone needs to put DeLay down for the good of the country.
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Post by SirNitram »

MKSheppard wrote:Bring on the B-100 suborbital bombers!
They're 'A-12 Advanced' or 'Auroras', damn you!
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Illuminatus Primus wrote::shock:

I love space exploration, but...what with money?

Someone needs to put DeLay down for the good of the country.
Well, in theory at least there are enough precious metals up there for us to exploit which could easily pay off our existing debts. The problem is getting them back down here.
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Post by RedImperator »

Usually this would make my deficit hawk soul cry for mercy but.....hell, we have to do it sometime. And frankly, it's not like if this Santa Clause Congress would just cut the budget by 16 billion if they didn't have a space program for which to pay.

You know, if we actually end up going to Mars, in 100 years, everybody's going to forget everything else Bush did except the speech at Ground Zero and that.
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SirNitram wrote:
They're 'A-12 Advanced' or 'Auroras', damn you!
The B-100 completely kicks the shit out of Aurora.
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Post by sketerpot »

Whohoo. They raised NASA's budget by 1.2 billion dollars, a 12.5% increase from fiscal year 2003. That's good, but it's not the huge increase it looks like.

I wish they would get NERVA-style NTRs, but chances are they're going to blow money on stuff like the ISS and space shuttles instead. I want my nuclear-thermal rockets, damn it!
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I thought the Republicans were for lower taxes and less government spending. Where did I go wrong?





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Post by Sea Skimmer »

Anything which includes funding for the space shuttle, and I'm sure this does, is bad.
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Post by SirNitram »

Sea Skimmer wrote:
SirNitram wrote:
They're 'A-12 Advanced' or 'Auroras', damn you!
The B-100 completely kicks the shit out of Aurora.
Unless you've somehow improved on the Polydimension Neutron Device, I am immune to your hateful lies.

If you have improved on the PND, well, I will be dancing naked for joy.
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Post by Alex Moon »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Illuminatus Primus wrote::shock:

I love space exploration, but...what with money?

Someone needs to put DeLay down for the good of the country.
Well, in theory at least there are enough precious metals up there for us to exploit which could easily pay off our existing debts. The problem is getting them back down here.
That's not a problem. All you need is a rocket, a good sized chunk of land out west, and a competent Grad Student. :twisted:
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Post by MKSheppard »

Wicked Pilot wrote:And yes, you all I'm sure are happy about my return to SD.net. I just finished moving from hot and humid Corpus Christi to cold and rainy Little Rock.
So does this mean you've finished your training and are now in the mainstream air force?
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Sea Skimmer wrote:Anything which includes funding for the space shuttle, and I'm sure this does, is bad.
Well, if they're fundng Bush's plan, Bush's plan was to drop the shuttle and just finish what we said we'd finish on the ISS. So, yay. No more money pig-shuttle. Most of the proposed concepts of the CEV are small capsule or tiny shuttle like things they stick on top of a large rocket.
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Post by JME2 »

While I'm all for space exploration, I think it is for the best that problems at home and on the ground be solved and dealt with before bringing them off-world.
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Post by Mr Bean »

JME2 wrote:While I'm all for space exploration, I think it is for the best that problems at home and on the ground be solved and dealt with before bringing them off-world.
We send only our best and brightist into space, the amount of Psy evals the astronaughts go through is crazy
Most of these folks are people who you could trust to with the keys to the mint

I personaly know(FoF) someone who used to be in the space program and was number four on the alternates list to go up with the shuttle.
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Post by Sam Or I »

JME2 wrote:While I'm all for space exploration, I think it is for the best that problems at home and on the ground be solved and dealt with before bringing them off-world.
I disagree with this, for the simple fact that all the problems on the ground will never be solved. We have already had 6000+ years, and we are still stuck with the same basic problems.
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Sam Or I wrote:
I disagree with this, for the simple fact that all the problems on the ground will never be solved. We have already had 6000+ years, and we are still stuck with the same basic problems.
Precisely. Space offers the opportunity to vastly expand our resources and provides a convenient place for civilization to expand into without further threatening this biosphere and simultaneously spreading out our population so that a single major event cannot destroy us.
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Post by Master of Ossus »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Precisely. Space offers the opportunity to vastly expand our resources and provides a convenient place for civilization to expand into without further threatening this biosphere and simultaneously spreading out our population so that a single major event cannot destroy us.
More importantly, it creates an incentive to develop technologies that have direct applications to us on Earth--things like computers and plastics that were developed specifically for the space program are now so essential to our lives that we don't even stop to think about them.
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Post by Chardok »

Right now...I mean at this particular moment in history...is not the time for space exploration. This budget is bass-ackwards and upside down, along with the rest of the treasury. I never thought I would say this, but I advocate allocating said NASA funds to other crap for the moment, and fixing the shitpile we've got on the ground. Once things have stabilized, then hear me coo about space exploration.

On the other hand, what wouldn't I give for those magical days of the 50's and 60's when every space-thing seemed magical, possibilities seemed endless, and by 1995, we would all have flying cars and houses in the clouds? I would give alot. Bring on the UFO speculation!
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Post by Gil Hamilton »

Master of Ossus wrote:More importantly, it creates an incentive to develop technologies that have direct applications to us on Earth--things like computers and plastics that were developed specifically for the space program are now so essential to our lives that we don't even stop to think about them.
Don't forget velcro. :lol:

(to the thread in general)

However, while funding NASA is something I approve of and pushing for Mars is a good thing, it won't usher us into a true Space Age, in by itself at any rate. Space will be colonized only when private concerns see space as being somewhere a profit is to be had. Companies tend to thing on the short term nowadays, what can make their pi-ac go up immediately. Space is a very long term investment which would give nothing but negative gains for years down the road, so naturally no one wants to take that path when they can make more Earth-related profits more quickly and effectively.

This is why I think that they should shelve more missions to the Moon or sending a crew to Mars and focus on figuring out a way to make companies and the venture capitalists to risk billions on Space. Missions to the moon won't do it, because, frankly, much of America doesn't care anymore and wouldn't notice all that much. What I'd do is make space popular culture again. I'm talking about a series of big stunts that will get America tuning in. For instance, I want to fire what ever popular flash-in-the-pan heartthrob band into orbit and have the first ever zero gravity performance. That would be a guaranteed money maker. Think about how many television companies would claw over each other for the rights to broadcast the show? Companies would throw millions and millions at it to get a commercial there or even get their logo up as part of the sponsers. How much would Coca-Cola pay to make it go from "Stars in Space" to "Coca-Cola Presents Stars in Space" and get the rights to make Coke the official beverage of the mission? It would be huge! Hell, I bet you could pay for the mission that way. And every single television set in America would tune in to see the spectacle. You'd have an entire generation of kids hearing from their weightless idols how cool the space program is and how everyone should be astronauts just like them. And every single major investor and business in America will look at the Neilson Ratings and the profits roll into the missions backers and say "We want a slice of that pie." A few stunts like that, and the government will practically not have to pay a dime to send seven men and women to Mars.

PT Barnum once said "Sell the sizzle, not the steak." People won't care about the great scientific ramification of findings on Mars or to see a bunch of Astronauts talk about it. They need to be sold on it with style and excitement. They'll buy the rest if you make the space program sizzle.
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