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One of the central questions for the President's Moon to Mars
commission is that of sustainability - how does a new exploration initiative sustain momentum year after year, as changes occur in congress and the executive branch? I am preparing a proposal on this, and would like to hear your thoughts on the concept of forming a "National Space Board", similar to the "National Science Board" that governs the work of the National Science Foundation - see http://www.nsf.gov/nsb/overview/about.htm The purpose of such a board would be regular review of all the proposals related to the exploration initiative (and perhaps science and astronomy initiatives as well), ranking them in priority order. On a regular basis, NASA and other agencies involved in space projects would provide budget and time estimates for selected items including the highest priority ones, and the board would approve a high-level project list (hundred-million to billion-dollar scale things) and schedule for the next few years ahead. The board would also regularly review ongoing and past projects, to assess accuracy of estimation from the different agencies, and feed into future priority assignments. Board members would be appointed by the president, approved by the Senate, similar to the National Science Board members, and intended to be representative of all the nation's space interests. The role of Congress would be to establish the budgets available and to set down purpose and structure for the board, NASA, and any other involved agencies and departments. The absolute key is avoiding year-to-year prioritization or micro-management by Congress or political appointees in the executive branch. Would this work? Is it a feasible change? Has it been proposed (in some other form perhaps) before? |
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Thank you for asking for our input on something like this.
I am generally not a fan of forming committees to solve problems. I'd rather have an elected official make a decision, get congress to approve and fund it, and make it happen. In other words, I'd have congress voting on a specific plan to go back to the moon and on to mars. However, you are right that these ideas and plans have the potential to disappear due to changes in the white house and congress. Witness the debacle of the super conducting super collider. They built a beautiful lab in Texas, bought lots of land, starting digging, then had the funding wiped out. A huge waste of money and no return for the government's investment. I think any proposal you come up with needs to have very specific goals set forth for the board. Rather than just review the plans for the initiative, it needs to help set some specific goals and timetables for those plans. In other words, the board needs to be able to tell NASA that by x date they should be ready to begin to build y program to accomplish z objective in the overall plan to go back to the moon and on to mars. That would help congress understand why NASA needs certain funds for certain projects in certain years. Those are my thoughts. I hope you find them useful. |
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Hi Tom!
Thomas Billings wrote in message ... [...] *First* you must establish and sustain a national consensus about the importance and about the direction of US government policies in Space. *Then* there will be the backing in Congress to fund them, perhaps with a NSB, or perhaps through a rework of the President's Space Council. Well, do we need a national consensus on the importance and direction of "science" in general? We seem to manage ok without that for government science programs, why not for government space programs? Part of the assumption in the Bush space plan seems to be we already have a consensus to spend roughly $15 billion/year on space, but we want something more substantive to come out of it than just jobs programs for engineers and their managers... I.e. we have a consensus on funding, and I think everybody could agree that there are many more things we would like to do in space, beyond what we do now. The purpose of an independent board such as I'm suggesting would be to sift through all the suggestions for "things we would like to do" and pick priorities for the next set period of time (5 years at a time, say). There would have to be back and forth with NASA and any other space-involved agencies on timelines and budget estimates, and general review of progress; but it would be a way to formulate a "national consensus" without having to involve 100 million voters in the detailed decision-making, which seems to be the current assumption. [...] Even more intense is the dispute between advocates of military exploitation of Space and those who desire to believe the "heavens" are a prisitne place If the US defense department has space needs, it should fund them itself (as it already does). This is intended as a strictly civilian oversight body; projects that could benefit national security could well be a factor in prioritization, but should not be the overriding concern. If that's what you were referring to. [...] Only obvious and profitable achievements will draw positive attention to Space, and only a definite and decisive demonstration on either side of any of the directional disputes will cause the needed directions to firm up in people's minds. Huh? The disputes you seem to have in mind are quasi-religious - "Mac vs. PC" type things. There's no way any "decisive demonstration" is going to decide anything there, and it's pointless to wait on such a thing, when we clearly have important new space projects we should be working on now. What I mean by a "project" here is not some enormous Apollo-style affair; rather to partition things to a smaller scale, independently justifiable, even if other things don't pan out. Examples would be lunar robotic survey missions, proof of lunar or martian water resources, demonstration of a working space fission reactor, etc. Projects requiring human spaceflight (for example, advanced lunar prospecting, Hubble servicing, etc.) need be no larger in scale than any of these other projects. Also, some "projects" may not involve spending government money, but just altering the regulatory environment to enable private ventures (for example, adopting Alan Wasser's Space Settlement Initiative, or generally renegotiating the Outer Space Treaty to explicitly encourage private space property ownership). Arthur |
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In article ,
(Arthur Smith) wrote: Hi Tom! Hi there! Thomas Billings wrote in message ... [...] *First* you must establish and sustain a national consensus about the importance and about the direction of US government policies in Space. *Then* there will be the backing in Congress to fund them, perhaps with a NSB, or perhaps through a rework of the President's Space Council. Well, do we need a national consensus on the importance and direction of "science" in general? Yes, and we've had that since August, 1945. Big Bangs get attention, and the US political community don't want to be left out on the next big advance. We seem to manage ok without that for government science programs, why not for government space programs? That's the point, we have had it for 59 years for "Science". We don't yet have it for "Spaceflight". Part of the assumption in the Bush space plan seems to be we already have a consensus to spend roughly $15 billion/year on space, but we want something more substantive to come out of it than just jobs programs for engineers and their managers... I.e. we have a consensus on funding, and I think everybody could agree that there are many more things we would like to do in space, beyond what we do now. That's the key point. Most posters and lurkers on sci.space.policy would agree with this statement, as I do. Unfortunately, there is as yet little sign that the political majority anywhere agrees with us. The purpose of an independent board such as I'm suggesting would be to sift through all the suggestions for "things we would like to do" and pick priorities for the next set period of time (5 years at a time, say). There would have to be back and forth with NASA and any other space-involved agencies on timelines and budget estimates, and general review of progress; but it would be a way to formulate a "national consensus" without having to involve 100 million voters in the detailed decision-making, which seems to be the current assumption. That would repeat an old mistake, perhaps not as disasterously, but..... There is a book I'm recommending on this general topic of national endeavors, which describes the history of a past similar endeavor. That was the turning of the British Isles to a comittment to long-range naval commerce and warfare as their primary means of interacting with the world. The book is called " The Safeguard of the Sea" by N.A.M. Rodgers. In it, he describes the follies of English and Scottish monarchs in not bothering to sustain a national naval consensus till 1560, when Elizabeth I changed that. Then he notes in his last chapters the danger that the Stuart monarchy fell into by attempting to short circuit the need to sustain a national consensus on how the Royal navy was to be used, and thus what type of Navy ships were to be built. This political mistake cost Charles I his throne and his life, ultimately. I doubt that would happen here, but such attempts to forgoe the real effort needed to build consensus on spaceflight has already cost us the last 30 years of unfocused and ill-funded and restricted access spaceflight we have had. Note that, as in England, simple political activity is *not* enough. The dolorous history of NSS as a NASA cheerleader over the last 20 or so years is example enough there. Multiple and continuing examples must be available of national benefit from Spaceflight to get support for such a policy. [...] Even more intense is the dispute between advocates of military exploitation of Space and those who desire to believe the "heavens" are a prisitne place If the US defense department has space needs, it should fund them itself (as it already does). No. The US Congress funds both civil and military government programs. They are quite jealous of their perquisites to assign spending. Causing them to bend their desires for pork to the needs of a service program requires a consensus that will both reward them for allowing a permenant "Board" to decide where most money goes, and punish them if they resist this. Today it is obvious that the military has space goals far beyond the present political consensus to sustain the military spaceflight needed to accomplish those goals. This is intended as a strictly civilian oversight body; projects that could benefit national security could well be a factor in prioritization, but should not be the overriding concern. If that's what you were referring to. Two separate groups for civil and military might be doable. Their technology matrices will be similar and often interpenetrating. [...] Only obvious and profitable achievements will draw positive attention to Space, and only a definite and decisive demonstration on either side of any of the directional disputes will cause the needed directions to firm up in people's minds. Huh? The disputes you seem to have in mind are quasi-religious - "Mac vs. PC" type things. There's no way any "decisive demonstration" is going to decide anything there, and it's pointless to wait on such a thing, when we clearly have important new space projects we should be working on now. The present disputants are quasi-religious for the most part. The political community is not, and they assign support. My point is that such demonstrations, of profit and protection and power projection, are what attract political majorities in any state. That's what's needed as a first priority before there are any new resources to allocate. What I mean by a "project" here is not some enormous Apollo-style affair; rather to partition things to a smaller scale, independently justifiable, even if other things don't pan out. Examples would be lunar robotic survey missions, proof of lunar or martian water resources, demonstration of a working space fission reactor, etc. Projects requiring human spaceflight (for example, advanced lunar prospecting, Hubble servicing, etc.) need be no larger in scale than any of these other projects. Also, some "projects" may not involve spending government money, but just altering the regulatory environment to enable private ventures (for example, adopting Alan Wasser's Space Settlement Initiative, or generally renegotiating the Outer Space Treaty to explicitly encourage private space property ownership). Arthur Again all of these are good ideas. Getting political capital behind them requires the belief that such capital will be replenished out of a political consensus in support of those who pay positve attention to Space, and replenished *before* the next election. We will have to do the demonstrations with the present levels of influence we have. As an example, H.R. 3752 will help a bit on the comercial side, if its Senate equivalent, S. 1260, passes as well. The flights of Spaceship One from Mojave will help as well when they become more frequent. Other examples will come to mind, and had better. We need *many* of them to build the needed consensus. Regards, Tom Billings -- Oregon L-5 Society http://www.oregonl5.org/ |
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On Sun, 14 Mar 2004 06:09:54 GMT, Thomas Billings
wrote: In article , (Arthur Smith) wrote: .... Would this work? Is it a feasible change? Has it been proposed (in some other form perhaps) before? Good idea, but it puts the cart before the horse. I think it is an excellent idea. *First* you must establish and sustain a national consensus about the importance and about the direction of US government policies in Space. *Then* there will be the backing in Congress to fund them, perhaps with a NSB, or perhaps through a rework of the President's Space Council. At present, we lack that consensus .... You're right, but waiting for the consensus to emerge is before establishing a board meant to weather things like a lack of consenus is a catch 22. I think we have to do SOMETHING to ensure that things like Moon/Mars survives a change in adminsitrations. Right now, I am convinced that Kerry would kill Moon/Mars at the first opportunity, and I doubt he would keep Constellation. There is no guaruntee such a board could prevent it, but does anybody have a better idea? Maybe having a board recomend specific goals, instead of an individual president, will decrease the risk that said president's uccessor could axe it out of spite. ..... there is great dissension, among those who do place it highly .... Until such disputes are settled, any "Board" will find itself paddling in vacuum, and free fall, with nothing to push against .... But again, waiting for those disputes to settle themselves before forming the board means that the board will probably never be formed. The Synthesis Group proposed a National Program Office that would have overseen the program, which would have involved, NASA, the DoT, and the DoE. Perhaps our board could be sold as forum for having those disputes and setting priorities. Whether it is any better at doing that than the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey was at ending the squabbling between those states over the sea and airports there -- it just gave it a new place -- remains to be seen, but again, it stands a better chance of settling things than thrashing them out on the 'net. ![]() ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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On 12 Mar 2004 14:43:51 -0800, (Arthur Smith) wrote:
Would this work? .... I don't know. But right now, there is no such mechanism to insure things like Moon/Mars survive political reversals of fortune. It should at least be given a shot. ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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(Arthur Smith) writes:
I am preparing a proposal on this, and would like to hear your thoughts on the concept of forming a "National Space Board", similar to the "National Science Board" that governs the work of the National Science Foundation - see http://www.nsf.gov/nsb/overview/about.htm If it does not have power, then it is just another committee. Possibly this can help but I am not sure. Notice that there is already quite a lot of review of US space policy, and as far as I know that review is thorough. And if the board does have power, it frankly scares me. Most especially if it has power even "under a lack of consensus". Yikes! I like democracy, thank you very much. As much as I want to see long-term plans followed, I do not want to see long-term plans that cannot be cancelled even by an act of congress plus a command from the president. So, let's find a way to sustain progress *without* needing a body of absolute power floating around. The absolute key is avoiding year-to-year prioritization or micro-management by Congress or political appointees in the executive branch. My understanding is that the issue is not micromanagement, but fund cutting. No board can help with that; new Congresses simply needs to keep funding at the levels old Congresses have decided. A way around this might be that it requires a separate act to *cancel* a space allocation for multiple years. Right now, space allocation gets bundled in with the rest of the budget and thus it's easy to cross out a little here and there. (In fact, I just experienced this exact phenomenon personally!) Such an approach does not need to be specific to space. There can be a generic mechanism for multiple-year allocations from the budget, and it can be disallowed to change these allocations in the normal budget bills. Just a thought. I don't know whether it would really work out, or whether it is even feasible to get there from our (US) current approach to the national budget. -Lex |
#10
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In article ,
Arthur Smith wrote: One of the central questions for the President's Moon to Mars commission is that of sustainability - how does a new exploration initiative sustain momentum year after year, as changes occur in congress and the executive branch? But given that Bush's "initiative" is so blatantly rear-loaded, there isn't anything to sustain. -- /\ Greg Kuperberg (UC Davis) / \ \ / Visit the Math ArXiv Front at http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/ \/ * All the math that's fit to e-print * |
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