Part Of The Team That Will Transition To Orion Program
NASA has selected three new flight
directors who will manage and carry out shuttle flights and
International Space Station expeditions. Dina Contella, Scott
Stover and Ed Van Cise will join a select group of individuals who
lead human spaceflights from Mission Control at NASA's Johnson
Space Center in Houston.
"Since the first flight director, Chris Kraft, was selected
during the Mercury era, 77 men and women have served as flight
directors. One of the new flight directors will be the 80th in the
history of U.S. human spaceflight," said John McCullough, chief of
the Flight Director Office at Johnson. "Dina, Scott and Ed are
senior flight controllers who have lead management experience and
an average of 10 years of flight control experience."
A flight director leads and orchestrates planning and
integration activities with flight controllers, payload customers,
international partners, and technical and program support across
the agency. Flight directors also are involved in developing plans
and reviewing systems for future Constellation Program exploration
missions. All of the recently selected individuals will begin
training as space station flight directors.
"This group will help us transition the knowledge and experience
from the existing human spaceflight programs into the development
and execution of our exploration program with the new Orion
spacecraft in the years to come," McCullough said.

Since 1995, Contella has served as a space shuttle and space
station flight controller and astronaut instructor responsible for
planning, training and executing spacewalks. She served as the lead
spacewalk, or Extravehicular Activity Officer, liaison to Russia
during early station construction. After the Columbia accident, she
was instrumental in the development of repair tools and techniques
for the space shuttle's thermal protection system. From 1993 to
1995, Contella was an astronaut instructor in the Shuttle Data
Processing System Navigation group.
Since 2000, Stover has supported six space shuttle assembly
flights to the station as a member of the Power, Heating,
Articulation, Lighting and Control, or Phalcon team that manages
the space station's electrical power system. He has led the group
since 2008. He was group leader during a space station expedition
mission and two shuttle missions, including the STS-120 mission,
supporting the relocation and reactivation of the Port 6 power
module and the Harmony node.
Van Cise joined NASA as a member of the Operations Support
Officer, or OSO, which coordinates station repair, maintenance and
assembly operations in 2000. Most recently, he has served as
special assistant to the director of Mission Operations in a
leadership development assignment. Prior to that, he had been lead
of the Mechanisms and Maintenance Training Group since 2007,
responsible for the training of astronauts and flight controllers
in skills and techniques needed to repair, maintain and assemble
the station. In 2006, he was on staff in the Flight Director
Program Integration Office, and worked as a space station flight
controller for the OSO and Telemetry, Information, Transfer and
Attitude Navigation, or Titan, groups. The Titan discipline
oversees attitude control, communications and command, and data
handling systems of the station during Houston nighttime and
weekend hours.