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NASA Administrator Accepts Columbia Accident Report



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 27th 03, 08:49 AM
Ron Baalke
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Default NASA Administrator Accepts Columbia Accident Report


Glenn Mahone/Bob Jacobs
Headquarters, Washington August 26, 2003
(Phone: 358-1898/1600)

RELEASE: 03-276

NASA ADMINISTRATOR ACCEPTS COLUMBIA ACCIDENT REPORT

This morning, NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe received
the report of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board
(CAIB) from the chairman, retired U.S. Navy Admiral Harold
Gehman. The following is a statement from the NASA
Administrator regarding the CAIB report.

"On the day of the Columbia tragedy, NASA committed to the
families of STS-107's crew that we would find the problems
that caused this horrible accident, fix them, and return to
the exploration objectives their loved ones dedicated their
lives to. Today, we have completed the first phase of that
important commitment.

"This morning, Admiral Hal Gehman presented the findings and
recommendations of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board.
The members have established what they believe to be the
probable cause of the accident and the factors that
contributed to the tragic loss of Columbia and her courageous
crew.

"I want to express NASA's appreciation for the Board's
report, which is timely, thorough, and direct. The efforts of
all concerned with the investigation will help NASA improve
the Space Shuttle program, our management processes, and our
capability to safely return to flight.

"The findings and recommendations of the Columbia Accident
Investigation Board will serve as NASA's blueprint. We have
accepted the findings and will comply with the
recommendations to the best of our ability. The Board has
provided NASA with an important road map, as we determine
when we will be 'Fit to Fly' again.

"Due to the comprehensive, timely and open public
communication displayed by the Board throughout the
investigative process, we already have begun to take action
on the earlier issued recommendations, and we intend to
comply with the full range of recommendations released today.

"Our 'Return to Flight' efforts are being led by NASA's
Associate Administrator for Space Flight, William Readdy, and
our Associate Deputy Administrator for Technical Programs,
Dr. Michael Greenfield. They will work closely with the
independent Return to Flight Task Group, led by retired U.S.
Air Force Lieutenant General and former Apollo commander
Thomas P. Stafford and former Space Shuttle commander Richard
O. Covey. The 'Stafford-Covey Task Group' will independently
assess every action NASA takes, as we return to flight
operations.

"As an important step to change the culture of the agency, we
have created the NASA Engineering Safety Center (NESC) at the
agency's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., to provide
comprehensive examination of all NASA programs and projects.
The NESC will provide a central location to coordinate and
conduct robust engineering and safety assessment across the
entire agency. The NESC will play a key role in ensuring we
return to flight safely and sustain a high level of
engineering and safety excellence for every NASA program.

"The independent Columbia Accident Investigation Board
performed an important service for the Nation, for NASA, and
for the dedicated families of Columbia's crew. The Board
members conducted a thorough and comprehensive review of the
mission and the entire Space Shuttle program. The Board's
efforts to perform a timely and a complete investigation into
the technological, engineering, managerial, and human aspects
that contributed to the accident are nothing short of heroic
in nature. We are grateful for their dedication."

For information about NASA's return to flight efforts on the
Internet, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

To review Columbia Accident Investigation Board
recommendations on the Internet, visit:

http://www.caib.us/news/report/default.html

-end-

  #2  
Old August 27th 03, 01:29 PM
David A. Scott
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Default NASA Administrator Accepts Columbia Accident Report

(Ron Baalke) wrote in
:


"The findings and recommendations of the Columbia Accident
Investigation Board will serve as NASA's blueprint. We have
accepted the findings and will comply with the
recommendations to the best of our ability. The Board has
provided NASA with an important road map, as we determine
when we will be 'Fit to Fly' again.



Are they kidding. Isn't this like before. Management never
accepts real responsiblitiy. That just flap there jaws and
go on. There will like last time be no real lasting changes.
By not pointing the finger at the managers at the top involved
they failed to correct the problem. Since management sucessfully
covered there asses this time you can beat good money on it the
same or similar thing happening again. They need to replace all
the top layers of management involved if the culture needs to
change. Why not hire those NASA fired who complained about where
NASA was headed. Those pople thet let go had good ideas.


David A. Scott
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  #3  
Old August 27th 03, 01:46 PM
Paul F. Dietz
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Default NASA Administrator Accepts Columbia Accident Report

David A. Scott wrote:

Are they kidding. Isn't this like before. Management never
accepts real responsiblitiy. That just flap there jaws and
go on. There will like last time be no real lasting changes.
By not pointing the finger at the managers at the top involved
they failed to correct the problem.


Management's response here is not the ultimate cause of the
accidents. The cause is a fundamentally flawed policy. Ask
a bureaucracy to do something impossible and that bureaucracy
will exhibit all sorts of pathological behaviors.

Now, it's quite possible that the managers who have 'grown up'
in this funhouse are irremediably damaged. If so, the solution
would be scorched earth: end government-controlled manned spaceflight
for at least a generation. This is also the solution to bad
policy (vs. the keep throwing money at it solution that's been used
for more than two decades.)

Paul

  #4  
Old August 27th 03, 04:48 PM
Doug...
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Default NASA Administrator Accepts Columbia Accident Report

In article , says...
David A. Scott wrote:

Are they kidding. Isn't this like before. Management never
accepts real responsiblitiy. That just flap there jaws and
go on. There will like last time be no real lasting changes.
By not pointing the finger at the managers at the top involved
they failed to correct the problem.


Management's response here is not the ultimate cause of the
accidents. The cause is a fundamentally flawed policy. Ask
a bureaucracy to do something impossible and that bureaucracy
will exhibit all sorts of pathological behaviors.


I completely agree, Paul. NASA has been tasked with operating a manned
space program on insufficient funds with unclear goals and make it
achieve spectacular, though undefined, results.

It's not just a NASA problem, though. I've been involved with enough
corporations to know that most managers, in response to P&L
responsibilities, try very hard to put their own people into a similar
impossible situation. It's what I call the "Get me a gold-plated Rolex,
RIGHT NOW, and if it costs me more than twenty bucks, you're fired!"
syndrome.

What do you think was the energizing factor in the recent corporate
accounting scandals? None other but this same pressure to achieve
impossible results from managers who have no understanding of the
realities of their situations, just of the P&L pressures that threaten
their own comfortably-appointed asses.

As long as this entire civilization is operated on bottom-line profit
pressure, this will continue to force most of the pathological
insititutional behaviors that we've seen over the past 100 years.

However, the fact is that the profit-driven capitalist economic system is
also responsible for the incredible wealth of Western civilization and
the almost godlike standard of living of average Americans and Europeans,
so it's not an option to simply toss it in the trashbin. What's needed
is a sane way to deal with the impossible demands it places on people in
the nooks and crannies.

--

Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for | Doug Van Dorn
thou art crunchy and taste good with ketchup |

 




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