| Senate Caps Space Station Funding
The perennial topic of the cost and schedule overruns for the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA’s) largest international endeavor
rose to the surface yet again, during a recent hearing before the House
Committee on Science Subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics. In opening
remarks before a hearing on the International Space Station program, Committee
Chairman, Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner, Jr. (R-WI), compared the Space Station
to the Titanic. “The Titanic struck a single iceberg, with tragic
consequences. The Space Station seems to be careening from one to
the next, none of which has been big enough to sink the program,” he stated.
Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), Chairman of the Subcommittee, also underscored
his exasperation by stating, “I don’t know how much more of the International
Space Station program we can stand.” These were choice words for
congressional leaders who fought long and hard to support the program;
emphasizing the strain it has had to policymakers who must defend it on
Capitol Hill.
Much of the concern addressed in the March 19 hearing centered on the
station’s increasing cost overruns. During the FY 1998 budget authorization
process, NASA notified Congress that the station program would require
an additional $430 million in funding authority. The project’s cost
overruns were due to Russia’s inability to provide the station’s Service
Module on schedule, cost growth within the Boeing Company prime contract,
and additional funding to avoid “future risks and unforeseen problems.”
Of the $430 million requested, Congress approved only $230 million, through
reallocation from the Space Shuttle budget and through additional appropriations.
NASA now faces the task of convincing Congress that the remaining $200
million must still be approved.
To assist NASA in its quest for the remaining $200 million, the President
requested $173 million in transfer authority to NASA as part of his FY
1998 emergency/non-emergency supplemental appropriations. Unfortunately,
the requested transfer authority did not sit well with the members of the
Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee. As a transfer authority the $173
million would come from other NASA accounts, specifically funding within
space science, earth science, aeronautics, and mission support. The
prospect of transferring funds from scientific research programs prompted
former-Subcommittee Chairman, Ralph Hall (D-TX) to ask why appropriators
should even bother appropriating any funds to science accounts if NASA
is inevitably going to move it to another program.
With delays to Russia’s contribution to the international program, schedule
slips, and cost overruns to the prime contract, in order for the Space
Station to be completely assembled requires an additional 18 months and
$4 billion in added expense. NASA’s Associate Administrator for Space
Flight, Joseph Rothenberg testified at the subcommittee hearing that the
new price tag for the project was approximately $19.6 billion. The
new projected costs to the station only accounts for research and development
(R&D) necessary to build it, and does not take into consideration operational
costs incurred to maintain the project after it is built. Rep. Rohrabacher
asked whether the new price of the program accounted for funding since
the project’s initial inception in 1984. Rothenburg stated that it
did not, and that if one accounted for funds obligated since then the total
cost would rise an additional $10 billion. He also emphasized that
including obligated funds since 1984 would not be an accurate accounting
of the current project’s cost given the fact that NASA was required by
various Administrations to redesign the station numerous times, and also
expanded its international partners to include Russia.
On the opposite side of Capitol Hill, lawmakers sent a signal to NASA
that it will not tolerate any further slips to the schedule and increases
to the programs costs. On March 12, the Senate Commerce, Science
and Transportation Committee passed a NASA reauthorization bill (S.1250;
H.R. 1275), its first authorization bill for the agency in five years.
The Senate bill, sponsored by Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN), includes language
that limits NASA’s Space Station program costs to $21.9 billion through
the final stage of assembly. With the current estimate of $19.6 billion
so close to that cap, NASA plans to request an independent appraiser to
determine the true cost of the beleaguered project.
NASA emphasizes that the additional $4 billion burden will not be placed
squarely on the United States alone, and that a portion of that amount
will be borne by Russia. Vice President Albert Gore met earlier in
March with Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin to discuss Russia’s
pledge to support their portion of the International Space Station.
Prime Minister Chernomyrdin stated to the U.S. delegation, which included
NASA Administrator Dan Goldin, that they would honor its commitment to
the program and provide the necessary funding to the Russian Space Agency.
With the future of the International Space Station tenuous at best within
our own Congress, activities around the world seem to collide with NASA’s
efforts to maintain control of the project. As if to add insult to
injury, shortly after the March 19 hearing, Russian President Boris Yeltsin
dismissed his entire Cabinet, including Prime Minister Chernomyrdin.
This certainly raises the question of whether the Russian Space Agency
will be capable of securing the funding that Vice President Gore was promised.
NASA space station program managers plan to visit the country in May to
establish whether their Russian partners will indeed be capable of meeting
its milestones.
 
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