Named Director Of Safety And Mission Assurance
Marshall Center Director David A. King announced that
Ms. Davis, an engineer-astronaut who flew three times, will
succeed Amanda Goodson, who recently left the Agency.
Dr. Davis, a former astronaut
who joined NASA in 1979, had been serving as director of the Flight
Projects Directorate at the Marshall Center. In her new position,
Davis will direct the safety, reliability and quality activities of
all Marshall Center programs, including establishing and assuring
compliance with NASA safety and mission assurance strategies,
policies, and standards and implementing methods for identifying
and assessing safety risks.
The Marshall Safety and Mission Assurance organization serves as
both a partner and a facilitator for the organizations at Marshall,
incorporating safety and mission assurance functions as an
intrinsic element in the development of new technologies, work
planning and performance, fostering employee expertise and actively
involving them in the improvement of systems, processes and
procedures to assure the success of the Agency.
"As the Marshall Center works with all of NASA to return the Space
Shuttle to flight, Dr. Davis' experience as an astronaut, working
engineer and senior manager will be a tremendous asset to
Marshall's Safety and Mission Assurance organization," said King.
"With mission areas in Space
Transportation Development, Microgravity and Space Optics
Manufacturing, safety and mission assurance are critical to the
people and work at the Marshall Center. I believe her dedication
and commitment to Marshall make her an excellent choice to
undertake the challenge at hand."
As flight projects director, Davis led a team of more than 1,400
civil service and contract workers responsible for payload and
science operations for the International Space Station, training
crews to operate Space Station science experiments and operating
the control center for those experiments.
Davis also was responsible for the Chandra X-ray Observatory
Program Office, overseeing operations of the world's most powerful
X-ray telescope.
"I look forward to leading the Safety and Mission Assurance
Organization as we enter this critical time in the Agency and
return the Space Shuttle to flight." said Davis. "I hope to
bring all of my experiences and strengths together to this very
important and challenging task."
Davis, who grew up and went to
school in Huntsville, began her career at the Marshall Center in
1979 as an aerospace engineer. She worked on several major NASA
programs and projects, including Hubble Space Telescope and its
later servicing mission; the Chandra X-ray Observatory; and the
Shuttle. She flew as a mission specialist on STS-47
(Endeavour) in 1992 and STS-60 (Discovery) in
1994, and was the payload commander on STS-85 (Discovery,
again) in 1997.
Selected to join the Astronaut Corps in 1987, she spent more
than 670 hours in space over the course of her three Shuttle
flights. In 1998, Davis became director of the Human Exploration
and Development of Space Independent Assurance Office for NASA
Headquarters, in Washington (DC), providing safety oversight for
all human space flight programs. She returned to Marshall in 1999
as deputy director of the Flight Projects Directorate and was named
director of the Flight Projects Directorate in January 2001.
A 1971 graduate of Huntsville High School, Davis earned a
bachelor's degree in applied biology in 1975 at the Georgia
Institute of Technology in Atlanta, and a bachelor's degree in
mechanical engineering in 1977 from Auburn University in Auburn
(AL). She earned her master's and doctoral
degrees in mechanical engineering in 1983 and 1985, respectively,
from the University of Alabama in Huntsville. In 2001, she was
elected to both the Alabama Aviation Hall of Fame and the Alabama
Engineering Hall of Fame. The American Association of Engineering
Societies recently presented Davis with the Norm Augustine Award
for Outstanding Achievement in Engineering Communications, citing
her as, "a rare individual who can speak with passion about
engineering so the public has a better understanding of engineering
and a better appreciation for how engineers improve our quality of
life."