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Florida's Space Industry on High Alert
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Calling President Barack Obama's NASA budget "unacceptable," U.S. Rep. Suzanne Kosmas joined Rep. Bill Posey in demanding a greater commitment for space exploration from the White House.
Kosmas, D-New Smyrna Beach, and Posey, R-Rockledge, spoke Friday at a congressional forum in Cocoa in advance of Obama's scheduled visit to Florida on Thursday.
With more than 7,000 direct jobs on the line, Florida's space industry has coalesced with state and federal officials to lobby for continued funding of human spaceflight.
"Since being elected, I have prioritized and focused on finding ways to minimize the human spaceflight gap and protect Space Coast jobs," the freshman Kosmas said at the forum sponsored by Florida Today.
"As many as 9,000 direct jobs at Kennedy Space Center are at risk due to the impending spaceflight gap. In addition, every direct NASA job translates into 2.82 jobs created statewide."
Posey, also a first-term congressman eyeing re-election this year, said the president's vision is shortsighted in 10 ways:
- "It breaks his promise to close the gap and keep America first in space. It would make the gap eternal.
- "It repeats the mistakes of the Apollo program by failing to transition the workforce.
- "It does not establish goals, destinations or timetables.
- "It does not establish a heavy lift vehicle.
- "It relies too heavily on commercial -- placing all our eggs in one basket.
- "It is vague and lacks basic details.
- "It raises national security concerns.
- "It puts Russia in the critical path by outsourcing U.S. space jobs to Russia.
- "It makes questionable claims about commercial readiness for launching in 2016.
- "It lacks redundancy for commercial flight."
"There has been no study on job losses, as required. The (administration's) decisions are being made in a vacuum," Posey charged.
While praising the president's proposed extension of the International Space Station, Kosmas said the administration should not expect to rely solely on commercial flights for access to space and to service and support the ISS.
"I also feel that the proposal lacks a defined vision for exploration beyond Earth’s orbit with identified destinations, a NASA-led vehicle architecture, and specific timelines for achieving our goals," Kosmas said.
A companion bill has been introduced by Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, in the U.S. Senate.
“Our bill takes a critical first step toward closing the (manned spaceflight) gap by extending Space Shuttle flights,” Posey said. “The Augustine Panel said this was the only way to close the gap from this end and we do that in this bill."
Florida Republican Reps. John Mica and Adam Putnam have signed onto the bill, as well as Democratic Reps. Corrine Brown, Kathy Castor, Alan Grayson, Ron Klein and Debbie Wasserman Schultz.
Posey and Wasserman Schultz also are co-sponsoring H.R. 1962, the "American Space Access Act," which would expedite the schedule of Orion and Ares 1 rockets.
The Florida delegation is pushing to salvage parts of the Constellation shuttle replacement program and to start a heavy-lift rocket test project at Kennedy Space Center as a way to save jobs.


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