Hutchison Introduces Bill to Close Gap in U.S. Spaceflight
Keep Shuttle Operational or U.S. Forced to Rely on Russia, China to Reach Space Station
March 3, 2010
“We must close the gap in
Hutchison said the Obama Administration’s budget proposal was “short-sighted and represents the wrong direction for U.S. space policy.”
The Administration proposes to retire the shuttle as scheduled while discontinuing years of work on development of a new launch vehicle and provides no short term solution to deliver critical equipment and components to the International Space Station that are essential to extending the life of the station until 2020.
“Not only are we turning our backs on 40 years of American
space superiority, we are giving up vital national security and economic
interests to other nations. This must not be an ‘either or’ proposition where
we are forced to choose between continuing to fly the shuttle to service the
station and maintain our independence in reaching space, or investing in the
next generation of space vehicle. We can and must do both. By
maintaining our independence from other nations in reaching space, the
The Human Space
Flight Capability Assurance and Enhancement Act would:
- Make shuttle retirement dependent on the availability of replacement capabilities for comparable size crew and cargo delivery, whether government-owned or commercial, (assuming a rate of 2 missions a year), or until it is conclusively demonstrated that the space shuttle cargo capabilities are not needed to ensure space station viability;
- Require International Space Station (ISS) operations and full utilization through at least 2020, and further establish the ISS National Laboratory operating mechanisms and procedures;
- Provide for the acceleration of a government-owned human space flight capability to as close to 2015 as possible;
- Expand support for Commercial Orbital Space Transportation (COTS) to support ISS -- both for cargo and for eventual crew launch capability;
- Reaffirm long-term goal of moving beyond low-Earth orbit whether to the Moon, Mars or alternative destinations;
- Provide for the near-term evaluation of heavy-lift rocket launcher design options, including shuttle-derived options, to enable the expansion beyond low-earth orbit and accelerate the start of vehicle design activity; and
- Authorize top-level funding for all of NASA's mission activities, but would only address the human space flight policy issues.
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