Republican Richard Shelby Calls Budget Document A "Death March"
For Space Exploration
U.S. Senator Richard Shelby (R-AL)
(pictured, right), the ranking GOP member of the Commerce, Justice,
Science (CJS) and Related Agencies Appropriations Subcommittee,
Monday issued a statement sharply criticizing the Obama
Administration’s proposed NASA budget for fiscal year
2011. NASA’s budget is under the jurisdiction of the
CJS Subcommittee. Constellation is NASA’s current human
space flight program. A critical component of Constellation,
the Ares I rocket, completed a successful test flight in October of
2009. Disregarding Constellation’s progress, the Obama
Administration’s proposed fiscal year 2011 budget for NASA,
released Monday, would cancel the program and instead fund
“commercial” providers who have failed to fulfill
current contracts with NASA to deliver even cargo to the
International Space Station.
Despite an attempt to drastically cut funding for Constellation
in the House version of the fiscal year 2010 omnibus appropriations
bill, Shelby was among those who successfully restored $600 million
to the program, funded at $3.46 billion total. Shelby also
worked to include language that limits NASA’s ability to
terminate or alter the current Constellation program. This
requires the Administration to work with Congress and wait for
approval prior to changing any current human exploration plans.
The President’s annual budget
request is a proposal. Congress determines final funding
levels for departments, agencies, and programs.
Shelby’s statement on the Obama Administration’s fiscal
year 2011 NASA budget proposal is as follows:
“The President’s proposed NASA budget begins the
death march for the future of US human space flight. The
cancelation of the Constellation program and the end of human space
flight does represent change – but it is certainly not the
change I believe in. Congress cannot and will not sit back
and watch the reckless abandonment of sound principles, a proven
track record, a steady path to success, and the destruction of our
human space flight program.
“Constellation is the only path forward that maintains
America’s leadership in space. The successful test
launch of the Ares I rocket in October represented years of work
and great advancement in our Nation’s human space flight
program. To discard Ares I as the foundation of space
exploration without demonstrated capability or proven superiority
of an alternative vehicle, is irresponsible and not
cost-effective. There is no other rocket today that is as
safe, or that has successfully demonstrated it can meet the
country’s needs for the exploration of space.
“We cannot continue to coddle the dreams of rocket
hobbyists and so-called ‘commercial’ providers who
claim the future of US human space flight can be achieved faster
and cheaper than Constellation. I have consistently stated
the fallacy of believing the cure-all hype of these
‘commercial’ space companies, and my position has been
supported time and again by both the experts and the facts.
Those who believe that it is in our nation’s best interest to
rely on ‘commercial’ space companies need only examine
their current track record. Of the companies enlisted to
deliver only cargo to space, not humans, one company failed to move
beyond paper drawings, another is years behind schedule, and a
replacement company for the first failure will not even be ready
for test flights for years to come."

“As a resounding rebuke to the Augustine Commission
Report, the Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel, whose sole focus is on
ensuring lives are not needlessly lost in our space program, stated
in their 2009 report, that no commercial manufacturer ‘is
currently human-rating requirements qualified, despite some claims
and beliefs to the contrary.’ This is after their 2008
report, written in part by the current NASA Administrator, declared
that commercial vehicles ‘are not proven to be appropriate to
transport NASA personnel.’ NASA’s safety experts
agree that current commercial vehicles are untested and unworthy of
carrying our most valuable assets – our nation’s
astronauts.
“It is unfortunate that on the anniversary of the loss of
the Columbia crew this Administration is choosing to abandon our
nation’s only chance at remaining the leader in human space
flight. It is ironic that Constellation, a program borne out
of the recommendations of the Columbia Accident Investigation
Board, would be eliminated in lieu of rockets repeatedly deemed
unsafe for astronauts by NASA’s own Aerospace Safety Advisory
Panel.
“Rocket science is not simple and it is not easy.
Newcomers to this arena are continuing to learn this lesson as they
struggle with repeated delays in getting their operations off the
ground. It makes little sense for NASA to establish yet
another social welfare program for these ‘commercial’
companies. It is simply not ‘commercial’
when the development work for your company is funded by the
Government. That may be the General Motors model, but it
should certainly not be considered the commercial model."

“On Friday, India announced they will be ready for their
first manned space flight by 2016. With this
administration’s nonsensical NASA budget request, the US will
still be working on launching people on rockets that do not exist
while Russia, China, and India are actually doing it. If this
budget is enacted, NASA will no longer be an agency of innovation
and hard science; it will be the agency of pipe dreams and fairy
tales."
“I will never support a NASA budget that does not have a
robust human space exploration program grounded in reality.
New commercial space companies do have a chance at being
successful, but that time is still too far in the future. Now
is not the time to turn human space flight over to inexperience and
hopeful aspirations. Instead, it is the time to cement our
leadership in space with a program we know will keep America at the
forefront of space exploration. Constellation as envisioned
successfully delivers that objective.”