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Space Shuttle Columbia

Shuttle work force concerns NASA exec

Johnson Space Center director Jefferson Howell Jr.
Johnson Space Center director Jefferson Davis Howell Jr.

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A team of investigators is piecing together thousands of pieces of evidence to try to establish the cause of the space shuttle Columbia tragedy. CNN's Miles O'Brien reports (March 6)
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HOUSTON, Texas (AP) -- The director of the Johnson Space Center opened the first public hearing of the shuttle investigation board Thursday, saying he was concerned about the mix of contractors and civil servants working on the space shuttle program.

Jefferson Davis Howell Jr. said that only 3,000 of the 10,000 people at the space center were civil servants, while the rest worked for aerospace contractors who perform many of the key tasks in the shuttle program.

That heavy dependence on contractor employees has come under criticism in some safety studies of the NASA programs.

Sparsely attended

The hearing, the first in a series planned by the Columbia Accident Investigation Board, was sparsely attended, with fewer than 100 observers seated in the 500-seat auditorium at the Clear Lake campus of the University of Houston.

Among the four witnesses also expected to testify was an engineer whose team of experts found flaws in the safety and operations of the space shuttle program.

Henry McDonald, the former head of the Ames Research Center, was expected to speak about his team's 2000 report conclusions that budget and staffing cuts had forced NASA to turn over too much of its safety oversight to outside contractors -- and that safety was being superseded by schedule and cost-cutting.

In the report by McDonald and his team, the experts said far more than half of the jobs in preparing shuttles for launch and monitoring the missions are performed by contractors.

Staff shortages reported

In Washington on Thursday, NASA's Administrator Sean O'Keefe spoke to a Senate subcommittee hearing and warned lawmakers that NASA faces dangerous staff shortages because of looming retirements and fewer college graduates with the skills NASA needs. The agency has been lobbying for employment changes, including higher pay, for more than a year.

"We lost some individuals with skills we couldn't afford to lose" during the past decade, O'Keefe said, "and now these skills need to be replaced. Through downsizing and the normal attrition process, we lost key areas of our institutional knowledge base."

start quoteWe lost some individuals with skills we couldn't afford to lose.end quote
-- Sean O'Keefe, NASA's Administrator

The public hearing in Houston was the first of a series called by retired Adm. Harold Gehman, chairman of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board. Gehman said the board would have public hearings twice a week for two out of every three weeks until the probe is concluded.

Shuttle program manager Ron Dittemore also has been called as witness before the board. Dittemore became a well-known figure while giving daily televised news conferences during the first week following the February 1 Columbia accident. His appearances stopped when the Gehman board took control of the investigation.

Foam insulation expert speaks

The board also was to hear from Keith Chong, an engineer for Boeing in Huntington Beach, California, one of the major space shuttle contractors. Chong is an expert on foam insulation used on the external fuel tank of the space shuttle.

"We're going to get a little bit of the theory of foam before we start going into who did what to whom and whether it was done correctly," Gehman said.

Shuttle program manager Ron Dittemore, foreground, testifies before the Columbia Accident Investigation Board.
Shuttle program manager Ron Dittemore, foreground, testifies before the Columbia Accident Investigation Board.

One theory of the accident is that Columbia's left wing was damaged during its Jan. 16 launch when pieces of foam insulation peeled off the external tank as the shuttle streaked toward orbit. A group of Boeing engineers later evaluated the possible damage to Columbia's thermal protection from the insulation and concluded, while the spacecraft was still in orbit, any tile damage caused by the insulation did not endanger the shuttle.

Columbia broke apart during re-entry, killing its seven crew members. Experts say it appears likely that searing plasma, air heated to more than 2,500 degrees by the friction of re-entry, somehow penetrated the wing's interior and caused aluminum supports to soften and fail. In theory, broken thermal tiles could allow re-entry heat to get inside the wing. Board officials said some recovered tiles bear sooty deposits of melted aluminum.

Open to the public

The hearing Thursday was set for a 500-seat auditorium at the University of Houston at Clear Lake, near the Johnson Space Center. It continues the board pattern of holding public events near, but not on, NASA grounds, an apparent demonstration of the board's independence of the space agency. Other hearings are expected near the Kennedy Space Center and in Washington.

Gehman's announcement about the frequency of the planned public hearings surprised even those on the board support staff.

"He wants his process to be open to the public," explained the Federal Aviation Administration's Laura Brown, the board's spokeswoman.



Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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