![]() |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ed asks for support of H. R. 3245, and while I would normally not wish to
challenge anyone seeking to help open the space frontier, I have serious doubts about the wisdom and timeliness of this particular piece of legislation. The argument for and against AST is too long to go into here, and I will shortly address it in another public print forum, but setting that aside (suffice to say that I think AVR is a better choice) I would like to draw attention to the following proposed provisions of the Act: `(c) COMPLIANCE WITH SPACEFLIGHT PARTICIPANT REQUIREMENTS- The holder of a license under this chapter may launch or reenter a spaceflight participant only if-- `(1) the spaceflight participant has received training and met medical or other standards specified in the license; `(2) the spaceflight participant is informed of the safety record of the launch or reentry vehicle type; and `(3) the launch or reentry vehicle is marked in a manner specified by the Secretary of Transportation which identifies it as a launch or reentry vehicle rather than an aircraft.' I submit that this is nothing more than the "Space Precautionary Act" mentioned by Heinlein in his short story 'Requiem.' AST cannot be trusted this the power to restrict human access to space on "medical or other" grounds. I speak as someone who had supported AST for fifteen years -- I was in the East Room of the White House when President Reagan signed the Executive Order establishing the predecessor office. But I can stay that I rue the day I made the argument for their existence and I call upon our community to seriously debate the wisdom of supporting this legislation. Let me be clear that I have no problem with informed consent as provided for in (2) and (3) but (1) means the end of both the suborbital and orbital spaceflight "participant" industry before it begins. Gary C Hudson |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 09 Oct 2003 03:10:33 GMT, in a place far, far away,
(GCHudson) made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Let me be clear that I have no problem with informed consent as provided for in (2) and (3) but (1) means the end of both the suborbital and orbital spaceflight "participant" industry before it begins. It may or may not. It depends on what "received training and met medical or other standards specified in the license" means. That is, what are the training and medical standards? I agree that there is a danger that they could be overly stringent, but there's a potential upside, in that it could be a means of implementing Pat Collins' and Peter Diamandis' concept of "certified space traveler," which could obviate the liability issues, if implemented properly. And I suspect that that's the intent. The issue will be whether or not AST (or as the legislation seems to require, a newly-resurrected OCST) does it properly... -- simberg.interglobal.org * 310 372-7963 (CA) 307 739-1296 (Jackson Hole) interglobal space lines * 307 733-1715 (Fax) http://www.interglobal.org "Extraordinary launch vehicles require extraordinary markets..." Swap the first . and @ and throw out the ".trash" to email me. Here's my email address for autospammers: |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Regulation expands to fill the space available" is a physical law of
government. Regulators given a task will keep at it, until they hit a limit. If they're regulating an existing industry, either the corporations or their customers will eventually push back when the regulations reach a tipping point. For our almost nonexistent industry, we have no substantive mass to push back with, so any regulatory train set in motion will likely continue going well beyond what we'd consider to be logical limits. So we have to be *very* careful what paths we start the regulators down. The only safe task to set before FAA is disclosure (ala food labeling, or campaign contributions) so that anyone buying a flight is fully informed of the risk. What's not safe: enforceable medical standards and any "other" standard that might appear to be a good idea to the fine professionals at the FAA, whom I admire. Why not medical standards: The medical conditions of the 500 or so previous space travelers are secret. NASA is obsessive about protecting all astronauts' medical privacy. Yet, the only logical course for the FAA is to attempt to gain access to these very sensitive records, and then make its own judgments about what they mean. Rocket companies will *not* get to see them in detail and thus will *not* have any way to influence their interpretation. So what standards will the FAA adopt? Only conditions that have failed to disqualify astronauts will fail to disqualify private passengers? What about a condition that's OK for an astronaut who was 30, but the proposed private passenger is 60? Still OK? We all know that many of the private firms' initial passengers will be older because they've accumulated the most money, and their grown children aren't responsibilities anymore... yet older people take more pills and have more medical conditions. Do you want to be arguing with FAA doctors about the medical status of most of your passengers, based on a medical database you can't examine yourself... while trying to equate the strains of a Shuttle or Apollo flight with whatever stresses you believe exist for your perhaps quite different vehicle? Yikes! So consider the above for the straight-forward issue of Medical Standards. Now consider what can happen if any "other" standard can be thrown into the vetting of passengers. Full Disclosure for Informed Consent -- that's how it is done when testing risky new drugs, and it's the only sane way to approach the issue of the government's role in passenger space flight. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 9 Oct 2003 15:05:06 -0700, in a place far, far away,
(Edward Wright) made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: (Rand Simberg) wrote in message . .. The issue will be whether or not AST (or as the legislation seems to require, a newly-resurrected OCST) does it properly... Rand, can you tell me why you believe this legislation would transfer regulatory authority from AST to OCST (now the Office of Space Commerce)? That's not my reading of the bill. Is there something here I'm not seeing? Or are you perhaps mistaking remote-sensing licensing for launch licensing in the final section? Office of Space Commerce is not now, nor has it ever been OCST. It's an office in the Department of Commerce. I'm saying that OCST will be resurrected, restoring the situation prior to the Clinton administration. I'm inferring that from the fact that the language in the authorization reads: "AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR OFFICE OF COMMERCIAL SPACE TRANSPORTATION" whereas in previous years it read: "There are authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary of Transportation for the activities of the Office of the Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation" which I believe is Patti's current official title. Morover, I read this directive: "The Secretary of Transportation shall clearly distinguish the Department's regulation of air commerce from its regulation of commercial human spaceflight, and focus the Department's regulation of commercial human spaceflight activities on protecting the safety of the general public, while allowing spaceflight participants who have been trained and meet license-specific standards to assume an informed level of risk." It doesn't explicitly call for pulling it out of FAA, but that would certainly be the sensible way to do it (considering that the move to the FAA occurred under the Clinton-Gore administration for no good reason other than attempting to streamline the bureaucracy). It's clear to me that the intent is to make it very clearly not aviation related. Resurrecting the original OCST, which reported directly to the SecDOT, would give the office more clout in any potential turf wars with AVR. -- simberg.interglobal.org * 310 372-7963 (CA) 307 739-1296 (Jackson Hole) interglobal space lines * 307 733-1715 (Fax) http://www.interglobal.org "Extraordinary launch vehicles require extraordinary markets..." Swap the first . and @ and throw out the ".trash" to email me. Here's my email address for autospammers: |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 09 Oct 2003 22:18:36 GMT, in a place far, far away,
h (Rand Simberg) made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Morover, I read this directive: "The Secretary of Transportation shall clearly distinguish the Department's regulation of air commerce from its regulation of commercial human spaceflight, and focus the Department's regulation of commercial human spaceflight activities on protecting the safety of the general public, while allowing spaceflight participants who have been trained and meet license-specific standards to assume an informed level of risk." It doesn't explicitly call for pulling it out of FAA, but that would certainly be the sensible way to do it (considering that the move to the FAA occurred under the Clinton-Gore administration for no good reason other than attempting to streamline the bureaucracy). It's clear to me that the intent is to make it very clearly not aviation related. Resurrecting the original OCST, which reported directly to the SecDOT, would give the office more clout in any potential turf wars with AVR. I also note that nowhere in the legislation is the acronym "FAA" used. Based on conversations with some people involved in drafting it, I believe that this is quite deliberate. -- simberg.interglobal.org * 310 372-7963 (CA) 307 739-1296 (Jackson Hole) interglobal space lines * 307 733-1715 (Fax) http://www.interglobal.org "Extraordinary launch vehicles require extraordinary markets..." Swap the first . and @ and throw out the ".trash" to email me. Here's my email address for autospammers: |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 09 Oct 2003 04:07:39 GMT, in a place far, far away,
h (Rand Simberg) made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: On 09 Oct 2003 03:10:33 GMT, in a place far, far away, (GCHudson) made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Let me be clear that I have no problem with informed consent as provided for in (2) and (3) but (1) means the end of both the suborbital and orbital spaceflight "participant" industry before it begins. It may or may not. It depends on what "received training and met medical or other standards specified in the license" means. That is, what are the training and medical standards? I agree that there is a danger that they could be overly stringent, but there's a potential upside, in that it could be a means of implementing Pat Collins' and Peter Diamandis' concept of "certified space traveler," which could obviate the liability issues, if implemented properly. And I suspect that that's the intent. The issue will be whether or not AST (or as the legislation seems to require, a newly-resurrected OCST) does it properly... I've put up a blog post with a preliminary analysis of the proposed legislation (and taken the liberty of incorporating David's comments--I trust he'll tell me if that's a problem). http://www.interglobal.org/weblog/ar...48.html#003148 -- simberg.interglobal.org * 310 372-7963 (CA) 307 739-1296 (Jackson Hole) interglobal space lines * 307 733-1715 (Fax) http://www.interglobal.org "Extraordinary launch vehicles require extraordinary markets..." Swap the first . and @ and throw out the ".trash" to email me. Here's my email address for autospammers: |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Breakthrough in Cosmology | Kazmer Ujvarosy | Space Shuttle | 3 | May 22nd 04 09:07 AM |
Breakthrough in Cosmology | Kazmer Ujvarosy | Space Station | 0 | May 21st 04 08:02 AM |
The Non-Innovator's Dilemma | Rand Simberg | Space Shuttle | 84 | September 27th 03 03:09 AM |
Commercial spaceflight & then what? | Hop David | Policy | 32 | August 15th 03 04:54 AM |
Congress Subcommittee Hearing on Commercial Human Spaceflight | Centurion509 | Policy | 0 | July 23rd 03 01:30 AM |