Right now, the NASA plan is a no sale because there is no goal, and there is no commitment to HSF that can be demonstrated by the budget numbers and plans currently out there.
Quote from: Chris Bergin on 02/25/2010 09:15 pmLori Garver? I must have missed the memo, but when did she become the bad person in all of this? That's why I was confused about Senator Vitter's attack on her.....as much as I wouldn't understand politics even if it slapped me in the face.She's only trying to do what she thinks is right. She doesn't believe in going back to the moon, never did. And she is not a fan of any of the big defense contractors, even though they are where the wealth of experience is. She would prefer to throw the whole lot out and replace them with Space-X style small companies and foreign partnerships (recall she is one of the central figures responsible for saving Space Station Freedom by bringing in International Partners).She has been at the center of the negotiations, and while certainly not the only person in the room, she has been the main character in the evolution of these plans all the way from last year's transition team, through Augustine and to this politically explosive Budget Draft.She isn't alone. Alan Ladwig and George Whitesides are both centrally involved (transition team again).John Holdren over at OSTP has been the senior White House/OMB guy in on this.And Charlie Bolden seems to be saying all the right things to indicate he believe in this too, although reports vary as far as to say he's considering retiring from NASA already because this isn't what he signed up for. I don't know which end of that spectrum is true though. I guess we'll all see if/when he retires early.President Obama has actually had very little input into this beyond a few high-level instructions. By the accounts I've heard, he mostly wants increased education spending and to get rid of anything his predecessor started. The rest is up to his advisers (listed above) to handle as they see fit. They are the ones writing this, not the Oval.Outside of that "inner circle" it becomes less clear who is involved. One notable who I have noticed is all over this locally is Bob Cabana (KSC Director) who seems to be all-for getting rid of most of his own workforce right now. If you talk to staff down here it almost sounds like there are a couple thousand people at KSC ready to lynch him already!So no, Lori Garver isn't the only person behind this. But she is a particularly central figure who has been leading this 'cabal' and crafting these decisions, plus speaking into the President's ear, for roughly a year longer than Bolden has even been in office.There is no doubt at all that Lori was "in charge" until the Administrator was officially appointed -- she was given the authority of the President to do whatever she wanted until the time Bolden came into the picture The only remaining question is exactly how much Bolden has taken charge after that point, and how much influence she still has today. Excepting Bolden, her voice is still undoubtedly the loudest.Ross.
Lori Garver? I must have missed the memo, but when did she become the bad person in all of this? That's why I was confused about Senator Vitter's attack on her.....as much as I wouldn't understand politics even if it slapped me in the face.
Quote from: nooneofconsequence on 02/25/2010 11:12 pmWatched Bernie Schwartz bet the farm on Skynet at Loral - great financials, great management ... suicidal decision. Need I bring up VentureStar.Not sure what you mean by that...Schwartz certainly bet the farm on Globalstar, and then sold off much of the profitable Skynet business to Intelsat after Loral had amassed a hopeless amount of debt largely from Globalstar as I understood it.QuoteFWW, these guys are much better off than Kistler.I sure hope so! I was actually assigned to work on the Kistler program briefly when I was with AlliedSignal in Teterboro...barely had time to move into my new cubicle before that work ground to a halt, and I got pushed over to another program!
Watched Bernie Schwartz bet the farm on Skynet at Loral - great financials, great management ... suicidal decision. Need I bring up VentureStar.
FWW, these guys are much better off than Kistler.
Quote from: psloss on 02/25/2010 09:10 pm(There was an appropriations subcommittee hearing yesterday, but I haven't seen a webcast of that made available yet.)No webcast links yet, but there's an article about this hearing:http://www.spacenews.com/policy/100225-house-appropriators-grill-obama-science-adviser.html
(There was an appropriations subcommittee hearing yesterday, but I haven't seen a webcast of that made available yet.)
Quote from: Chris Bergin on 02/25/2010 09:02 pmHere's a question. Is there a danger that a political fightback against the FY2011 could result in months and months of hearings etc, which might leave us with a really bad situation of shuttle ending, CxP ending and the future plan bogged down with the lawmakers?Also, for our older members, are the current events comparable with anything in the past....I'm thinking Apollo to Shuttle, as much as I know that must have been very different?Very much so Chris.That is why it is SO dangerous to open up definitive decisions in a democracy decisions to scrutiny. Definitive decisions are so rare, that once the option space is opened up it is not only likely that our representatives may pick a worse alternative, but might posture so long as to make ANY decision irrelevant.There are those that warned of this. Policies that result in huge government acquisitions in a political world are incredibly fragile eggs ... they require support from all sides (including those that may not like eggs) or the slightest crack leads to them falling apart to nothing. Not a system I'm proud of, but one that repeats itself for NASA and other agencies.
Here's a question. Is there a danger that a political fightback against the FY2011 could result in months and months of hearings etc, which might leave us with a really bad situation of shuttle ending, CxP ending and the future plan bogged down with the lawmakers?Also, for our older members, are the current events comparable with anything in the past....I'm thinking Apollo to Shuttle, as much as I know that must have been very different?
Quote from: nooneofconsequence on 02/25/2010 07:01 pmWhat you haven't seen yet is the rivalries between senators when t settles in that they can't fund all of what they want and some get nothing. Then a different set of battles begin.I think this is the fundamental problem. Even without the commercial stuff and the R&D, there wasn't enough money being appropriated to give everyone in Congress a pony. Yeah, it would be great to live in a world where NASA could be given a budget big enough to:1-Keep shuttle flying2-Keep the shuttle workforce in a job3-Keep flying "test launches" of "Rocket-X" (whatever that actually means)4-Build an HLV5-Extend ISS and increase its utilization6-Have no job losses anywhere evar7-Fund R&D necessary to move us to a new cost vs. performance curve8-Fund commercial crew development so we're more than one single point failure away from losing our nation's HSF capability again9-Restore to the science side all the funding they've lost due to CxP10-Restore to Aeronautics all the funding it's lost to CxPThe problem is that the people on the appropriations committees (the very people dishonestly moaning about how "Obama doesn't give NASA more money" when it's their own darned job to appropriate money for NASA) have never been able to get NASA anywhere close to the resources it would need to do even a fraction of these well. Remember, the President proposes, *Congress* disposes. ~Jon
What you haven't seen yet is the rivalries between senators when t settles in that they can't fund all of what they want and some get nothing. Then a different set of battles begin.
Bolden said that Cxp is behind in developing the vehicles, said that he hopes that by 2016 they'll have commercial LEO capability (maybe more than one vehicle), 2020-30 possibly going BEO.
Trying to target imaginary villains will back fire. First Griffin was a villain. Now Garver is a villian. Who's next on the villain list? This witch hunting serves no prupose. I thought it was classy of Bolden to defend Garver.
I'm sorry, but I'm a tad appalled at people who who think they've got Lori Garver pegged as some villainous opponent of HSF because they read her Wikipedia profile and found it wanting. I want to point out that Keith Cowling thinks you're all nuts, and I'll take his first-hand knowledge over your intuition every day of the millennium.I really hope Congress calls the CCDev and COTS companies to The Hill before committing themselves. It's somewhat farcical for politicians with no direct knowledge of anything beyond talking points to claim "Commercial won't be ready for decades" without at least talking to Boeing, SpaceX, ULA, Bigelow, etc.Quote from: jkumpire on 02/25/2010 10:34 pmRight now, the NASA plan is a no sale because there is no goal, and there is no commitment to HSF that can be demonstrated by the budget numbers and plans currently out there.This sort of sentiment amazes me. Committing to extend ISS to at least 2020 and committing to multiple, redundant paths to LEO is not a commitment to HSF? Putting money into advanced propulsion, open-architecture life support, and far-BEO manned mission technologies like Rad shielding means no HSF?
Quote from: Cog_in_the_machine on 02/25/2010 03:44 pmBolden said that Cxp is behind in developing the vehicles, said that he hopes that by 2016 they'll have commercial LEO capability (maybe more than one vehicle), 2020-30 possibly going BEO.I wanted to reply to this ONE statement by Bolden, because I haven't seen anyone else make any remark on it yet.He 'hopes'? that by 2016 they'll have Commercial LEO capability??The first 'hopes' were 2014. This is sounding more and more like an Ares I IOC projection...So how is this 'better'? I'm not seeing it. Maybe it is realistic. But hey, COTS looks to be getting an additional $300B for one reason or another (propping-up or acceleration, I'll let others determine that one). Who's to say Commercial crew won't fall behind or come back looking for additional funds.
That is also unfortunate, imo. I'd be a lot more confident in something like DreamChaser if NASA gave one of the "big defense contractors" the contract to build it, rather than some upstart company with a shaky financial footing and zero history or experience in building such vehicles.
Partners& SubsBoeing Draper LabULA AerojetAdamWorksMDAUniversity of ColoradoNASA LaRC
Quote from: psloss on 02/25/2010 10:18 pmQuote from: psloss on 02/25/2010 09:10 pm(There was an appropriations subcommittee hearing yesterday, but I haven't seen a webcast of that made available yet.)No webcast links yet, but there's an article about this hearing:http://www.spacenews.com/policy/100225-house-appropriators-grill-obama-science-adviser.htmlAre you sure ? http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=20634.msg551584#msg551584http://science.edgeboss.net/wmedia/science/scitech10/022410.wvx
No, we are not stuck. We have a vehicle.Commercial, at best, is 3-4 years away for crew. The current "plan" is not a plan and hopes and assumes with zero contingency. General lists, not really what I would call specific, of when maybe we would like to see technologies developed but then having no definitive plan to use them is a strategic mistake. Does Microsoft just research how to make Windows better or do they plan to actually use it in there next version? Take your pick of any company and feel free to use the same analogy.
1- Months ago, there was an article about Obama wanting DOD and NASA to cooperate more in space. A number of people criticized the article as inaccurate. But there was obviously some truth to it.
Wow, you mean the contractor proposals of HR Atlas V by 2012 were overstated? Or is the massive NASA workforce slowing things down?Contractor Advocates estimates are an ante, not their whole stake. Just enough to get you to buy in. That's why you need a third party without a stake to adjudicate.
Quote from: yg1968 on 02/25/2010 11:38 pm1- Months ago, there was an article about Obama wanting DOD and NASA to cooperate more in space. A number of people criticized the article as inaccurate. But there was obviously some truth to it. There hasn't been any new developments wrt this.
Quote from: Jim on 02/26/2010 03:02 amQuote from: yg1968 on 02/25/2010 11:38 pm1- Months ago, there was an article about Obama wanting DOD and NASA to cooperate more in space. A number of people criticized the article as inaccurate. But there was obviously some truth to it. There hasn't been any new developments wrt this. The idea of funding R&D for a US version of the RD-180 could be funded by DOD and NASA. I beleive that Bolden specifically mentionned this as a possibility.
Quote from: marsavian on 02/26/2010 12:22 amQuote from: psloss on 02/25/2010 10:18 pmQuote from: psloss on 02/25/2010 09:10 pm(There was an appropriations subcommittee hearing yesterday, but I haven't seen a webcast of that made available yet.)No webcast links yet, but there's an article about this hearing:http://www.spacenews.com/policy/100225-house-appropriators-grill-obama-science-adviser.htmlAre you sure ? http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=20634.msg551584#msg551584http://science.edgeboss.net/wmedia/science/scitech10/022410.wvxYes, I'm sure -- there were two NASA related House hearings yesterday; we only saw one. Put another way: there were three NASA related Congressional hearings yesterday, we only saw two of them. The links above point to the morning hearing that was also televised live on NASA TV. That was a hearing of the House Science and Technology committee, chaired by Representative Gordon.The House hearing in the afternoon I'm referring to occurred at the same time as the televised Senate subcommittee hearing chaired by Senator Nelson. At the same time that Mr. Bolden, et. al. testified in front of Senator Nelson's subcommittee, Dr. Holdren testified in front of the Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies of House Appropriations, chaired by Representative Alan Mollohan. I haven't seen a webcast link for that yet.
Bolden seems more and more like a puppet after these past 2 days...