Space Access Society Political Action Alert
Tuesday 4/26/11
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Political Action Alert: Fight the
"Space Launch System" Earmark!
Action Requested:
- Call your Representative via the House
Switchboard at (202) 224-3121. (If you
don't already know their name, grab an old bill and look them up by your
9-digit zipcode at
http://www.house.gov/zip/ZIP2Rep.html.)
- Tell whoever answers the phone that you'd
like to speak to the person who handles NASA issues for the
Congressman/woman. (Ask for their voicemail if they're not
available.)
- Politely ask that staffer to: Ask your
Representative to tell Chairman Wolf that he/she opposes earmarking billions to
sole-source the NASA "Space Launch System". Tell the staffer that you want to see a real
competition to determine what heavy-lift booster NASA actually needs and who
can build it most affordably. (If he
wants to talk more about this, do your best to answer his questions.) Thank him for his time, and ring off.
[Clarification added 4/27/11
6:41 pm EDT. Representative Frank Wolf
is as best we know NEUTRAL on this question. We ask you to have your Representative
contact him with your concerns over this earmark because he's Chair of the key
House NASA funding subcommittee and thus the go-to person in the House on these
matters. Please do not contact
his office directly (unless you live in his district.)]
When:
Before close of business this
Friday, sooner is better, during east coast business hours if possible.
Why This Alert, Why Now:
Briefly, we've just heard
that the next big move in the FY'12 (starts October 1st) NASA Exploration
budget battle happens early next week, when NASA reports back to the Congress
(as ordered) with a plan to meet the "Space Launch System" mandate in
the FY'10 NASA Authorization bill (Shuttle-derived, 70 then 130 ton lift, fly
by 2016).
Early word is, it's an UGLY
plan (a good match for the mandate):
Have the existing contractors build a hasty 70-ton payload
Shuttle-Derived launcher using a pair of old-style 4-segment solids and three
surplus Space Shuttle Main Engines, then fly this four times starting in 2016
(using up the existing SSMEs.) Then, after spending $11.5 billion (ignoring
the near-certain overruns) for just four flights, shut this project down and
start all over, with a "competition" between several different
130-ton capacity heavy lifter concepts.
(See
http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2011/04/sls-planning-dual-phase-approach-opening-sd-hlv/
for more on the plan.)
This plan starts out as a
sole-source non-competed earmark, and it would stay that way - we simply don't
believe the second-phase "competition" it calls for would be any such
thing. Lack of real competition aside,
from where we stand this plan threatens to eat the entire NASA Exploration budget
for the forseeable future without producing any actual exploration. But the earmark aspect is where we think we
have our best shot at getting some traction this week.
Now is the time to, if not
stop "Space Launch System" entirely, at least rein it in and limit
the damage it can do to the rest of NASA.
Please - make the call!
Background:
- Chairman Wolf is
Representative Frank Wolf (R-VA), chairman of the House
Commerce-Justice-Science Appropriations subcommittee, and thus a key player in
the first round of the FY'12 NASA budget process.
- Politico.com ran a story on the SLS earmark
last week at http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0411/53495.html. Money quotes:
"Critics have said that
if the money isn’t competitively bid, it is no better than an earmark — at a
time when Congress has effectively banned the pet projects." (Article
Authors)
“Manned spaceflight is
prohibitively expensive, especially considering our budgetary woes,” said Steve
Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, a budget watchdog group.
“At one point, the administration was trying to lead NASA out of that, but
congressional politics protecting parochial interests have forced the agency to
waste money in the recent short-term continuing resolutions and are forcing a
specific approach down NASA’s throat in the yearlong spending bill.”
“Heavy lift of 130 tons is not necessary for
missions beyond Earth orbit if we develop a few key technologies,” said Rep.
Dana Rohrbacher (R-Calif.).
“But whatever Congress decides, one thing is clear: The process needs to be open
and competitive with transparency throughout the process.”
Perspective:
This is just the beginning of
another months-long Congressional funding process. Actually killing SLS, well, that's a long
shot - the only guarantee there is that if we don't try, it definitely won't
happen. More likely the fight will go
back and forth at the margins, with small changes in SLS (and the MPCV capsule,
but that's not the target this week) making a big difference in how much money
is left in FY'12 for all the things we do support at NASA: Commercial Crew & Cargo, Commercial
Reusable Suborbital, Exploration Technology, Space Technology, Propellant
Depots, etc - all the things that bear on lower cost space transportation for
the future.
We've lived through decades
when the fraction of NASA's space budget we saw as usefully spent was around 1%
- and that was in a good year. The FY'11
Exploration total ended up 79% SLS/MPCV, 21% potentially good stuff. 21% beats 1% handily... If we can improve on that 21% for next year,
we'll have done well. But if we don't
fight, if we sit back and take things for granted, that useful percentage could
easily drop to single digits, or nothing at all. One phone call from you could make the
difference.
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Space Access Society's sole
purpose is to promote radical reductions in the cost of reaching space.
You may redistribute this Alert in any medium you choose.
________________________________________________________________________
Space Access Society
space.access@space-access.org
"Reach low orbit and you're halfway to anywhere in the Solar System"
- Robert A. Heinlein