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Space Government The Almighty Buck United States

Congress Decides To Delay US-Launched Astronauts, Keep Using Russian Services 173

New submitter surfdaddy writes: In order to protect the entrenched big aerospace companies, the Congress has increased NASA's budget for FY2016 but has cut funding for "commercial crew." Commercial crew is the funding used by SpaceX for the planned initial manned launches in the first half of 2017. With this cut, the launch of U.S. astronauts from U.S. soil using U.S. rockets will be delayed two years, and we will continue to send millions of dollars to Russia for launch services. "Senate appropriators suggested that NASA’s plans announced earlier this year to procure Soyuz seats for missions in 2018 indicated that the agency was not confident at even this early stage that the two companies with commercial crew contracts, Boeing and SpaceX, could remain on schedule to begin flights in 2017. ...
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Congress Decides To Delay US-Launched Astronauts, Keep Using Russian Services

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  • Sort of reminds me of what happened to Preston Tucker, just not quite to that extent yet.
    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )

      Sort of reminds me of what happened to Preston Tucker, just not quite to that extent yet.

      What about comparing Musk with that visionary automobile pioneer? There are major differences but I think much better comparison than to a fictional character of Tony Stark. At least Musk has produced usable hardware while Tucker got bogged down with prototypes (hey, Telsa almost went belly-up in 2008).

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 12, 2015 @03:35PM (#49899747)

    Being able to do military launches means SpaceX neatly outmaneuvered this attempt to cut them off at the knees.

  • by Rob Riggs ( 6418 ) on Friday June 12, 2015 @03:36PM (#49899751) Homepage Journal
    I guess that means the the overall budget will be smaller than last year?
    • by stox ( 131684 )

      Ha! They increased funding for the SLS above what was requested.

    • In Partisanspeak, that's what they want you to think. Sadly, too many idiots out there take the bait and parrot the line without a second thought.

  • Republican (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 12, 2015 @03:38PM (#49899767)

    are more anti Obama than they are pro usa

    • The vote was bipartisan, with only 3 out of 30 voting outside the consensus... 'splain that.

      • The vote to resinstate those specific funds (amendment by Barbara Mikulski, Democrat) failed along party lines.
    • Democrats are just complaining because Congress decided to defund a public project where the money went to a private company owned by a number of their big supporters. But it's not like they totally defunded anything, they just moved some money to another account because said private company wasn't going to be able to deliver the service the money is supposed to obtain. Space X will be short $344 million from what they expected because Congress had to make sure they still had transportation to the ISS to

      • Bullshit. They gave gave more money to SLS (which isn't going to fly anytime soon) than the NASA request while underfunding the Commercial Crew program. They gave more money to SLS than what they cut on Commercial Crew. They also cut the NASA science budget in the process. SLS is about as likely to fly as Constellation was.

        It's pork barrel politics nothing else. The sad thing is this only helps the Russians and their own pockets.

    • While I can't disagree with your statement. As it relates to TFA I don't think Obama has really shown terribly much favoritism for the commercial programs. These programs seem to be championed by NASA and the general public more than the White House, or in particular the Congress. COTS and CCP are in some ways a vegan alternative to the traditional bacon served.
      • The commercial transportation program started out when Bush Jr. was President. Obama just expanded it a bit because its cheaper than paying the Russians. That is all.

  • Is it cheaper to launch by Russia? Will we tax the US economy, weaken ourselves, to hoard our activities here, to hoard the illusion of physical dollars staying in the economy?

    People are so simplistic in their views. "Shop locally! Locally-produced will strengthen your local economy!" Not if your local economy expends twice as many resources as it would to import; then it only makes you twice as poor.

    • No it's going to be cheaper to launch using US launch services. Especially with SpaceX. That's the *really* interesting bit.

      • by cheesybagel ( 670288 ) on Friday June 12, 2015 @03:56PM (#49899865)

        Quoting
        http://mic.com/articles/11354/... [mic.com]
        :
        At $60 million-a-seat, the aging Russian Soyuz program will hopefully soon be eclipsed by the $20 million-a-seat Dragon.

        The Dragon is the name of the SpaceX capsule.

      • Once SpaceX gets the Dragon capsule working and proven safe, sure. They've got a great track record, but I still think it prudent to reserve launches with somebody with the proven capability, like Russia.

    • Is it cheaper to launch by Russia? Will we tax the US economy, weaken ourselves, to hoard our activities here, to hoard the illusion of physical dollars staying in the economy?

      Congress will just increase the limit for H-lB visas - Heavy launch Boosters - since no comparable US boosters are available.

    • Even if it was more expensive--which it isn't, actually about a third the price on F9/Dragon--shipping the money to Russian doesn't exactly employ the same number of Americans. Bleeding money is rarely a good thing compared to recirculating it within. In many cases the internal investment often comes with a multiplier effect. e.g. $1 generates $2 more.
      • So this is kind of like H1B visas for space.

        1. Line the pockets of the rich entrenched power brokers.

        2. Degrade the US technological base.

        3. Send money and support technology for long term rivals.

        Given the above it's a slam dunk. It's the American Way!

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • "Dogs flew spaceships!
      The Aztecs invented the vacation!
      Men and women are the same sex!
      Our forefathers took drugs!
      Your brain is not the boss!
      Yes! That's right! Everything you know is wrong!"

  • "a Soyuz spacecraft docked at the station unexpectedly started" yep, that would do it.
    http://www.space.com/29632-soy... [space.com]

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 12, 2015 @03:47PM (#49899833)

    This is the same congress that has specifically said that DoD payloads can't be launched using the RD-180 after a certain date to PREVENT us from spending more money buying RD-180 engines from Russia... but in order to get to the ISS we are willing to pay the Russians for a ride.

    Ugh!!!

    • This is the same congress that has specifically said that DoD payloads can't be launched using the RD-180 after a certain date to PREVENT us from spending more money buying RD-180 engines from Russia... but in order to get to the ISS we are willing to pay the Russians for a ride.

      Ugh!!!

      Congress would have GLADLY funded Space X if there was any confidence that they would actually be able to deliver a human rated capacity to get to the space station and back. The problem was that nobody thinks Space X can really do it before the currently contracted seats with the Russians run out. We really have no choice but to contract more seats with the Russians and cut Space X's funding earmarked for human transport to help make up the difference. Other programs lost funding for this reason too. Spa

      • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

        The problem was that nobody thinks Space X can really do it before the currently contracted seats with the Russians run out.

        SpaceX could fly astronauts tomorrow if Congress actually thought it was important. Just stick them in a cargo Dragon in space suits, and go.

      • It's the third time you repeat the same bullshit and lies you astroturfer. The only reason for any delays is that Congress keeps cutting the funds and increasing the requirements. Nothing else. Heck SpaceX could have launched an astronaut to the ISS in the current cargo Dragon yesterday if they really wanted to.

    • They had to pay SpaceX and Bolden back for making them look bad.
  • I was expecting this to happen at some point. Most people think of NASA as a space program, but to Congress it's just a fund to be used for political horse trading. I need a few more votes to pass the budget? Then this representative gets farm subsidies, that representative gets funding for a new highway, and the other rep gets a piece of a NASA program.

    What that means is they want Constellation, even though it's going to be waaaaaaaay more expensive than comparable SpaceX offerings. What Congress does

  • "Senate appropriators suggested that NASA’s plans announced earlier this year to procure Soyuz seats for missions in 2018 indicated that the agency was not confident at even this early stage that the two companies with commercial crew contracts, Boeing and SpaceX, could remain on schedule to begin flights in 2017."

    Clearly the correct approach is to put all your eggs in one basket at any given time.

    If you delay American crew launches until 2019, then NASA is going to procure Soyuz seats for 2019 and ma

  • by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Friday June 12, 2015 @05:13PM (#49900397)

    Congress cuts funding for a program that (at least on the SpaceX side) is well advanced in producing a man-rated booster and capsule to replace the Russian rides to the ISS and yet they INCREASE funding for a program that has yet to even produce a full-size prototype, doesn't have a proper mission yet, just some thought bubbles AND is costing far more than it would cost if you just said "this is what we want the rocket to do, who can build it for us"

    I think there are 2 things going on here.
    First is that there is an election comming up and the votes of a bunch of ATK workers in Utah who have been promised jobs in the SLS program to replace the jobs they had in the shuttle program are somehow important enough to matter (which is a reflection on just how broken the US political system is). Hence the increase in funding for SLS to get it to the "actually building stuff" phase much faster. (and to assure the workers in question that their jobs are safe)

    And second is that SpaceX has the lead in producing a crew rated capsule right now (their crew capsule and rocket are a modified version of the capsule and rocket they are launching to the ISS already whereas Boeing has to develop a capsule from scratch) so the cut in funding and the delay is a chance to give Boeing time to catch up (since Boeing is too politically and economically important to allow SpaceX to win this race on its own)

    • If you look at what is being spent on SLS and what the operational costs will be, it is clear that Congress and the Republicans are not worrying about the wise use of Tax Dollars. Which is why I am so disgusted - the Republicans used to (supposedly) stand for fiscal responsibility. Now they are feeding at the trough like all the other corrupt interests in Washington.
  • It's all about the pork, [blogspot.com] and protecting those Shuttle-era jobs. (Never mind that NASA is a relatively small budget item and there's no good reason they couldn't add to SLS while keeping Commercial Crew funded.)

    Remember those Shuttle main engines that they removed (replaced with mock-ups) before sending them off to museums? Yeah, well the test stands are still at Stennis, and the 2010 legislation ordering SLS required NASA to use existing Shuttle technology where possible, so SLS will launch with SSMEs rem [blogspot.com]

    • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

      That's right, the actual same Shuttle engines that they had to refurbish after every flight.

      But this time, they'll be cheaper, because they'll just dump them into the sea rather than refurbish them.

  • John Kerry met Sergei Lavrov and Vladimir Putin in Sotchi a few weeks ago, and since that time US and Russia seems to be able to talk together again.

    What happened? Obviously the US administration realized the Ukraine government was just impossible to control, but that kind of consideration did not prevented them from supporting weird regimes in the past.

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