A public meeting was held June 14 in Van Horn, Texas
as part of a series of steps to gain a governmental okay for Blue Origin to
launch its rockets. Blue Origin is the Seattle-based company bankrolled by Jeff
Bezos, founder of Amazon.com, to create and launch passenger-carrying
spacecraft.
"The public
information meetings are part of the environmental assessment process required
by the FAA," said Gwen Griffin, a spokesperson for the rocket group. "The
meetings are for the public to make comments or ask questions about Blue
Origin's proposal," she told SPACE.com.
A launch operator license must be obtained from the Federal
Aviation Administration's (FAA) Office of Commercial Space Transportation in Washington, D.C.
Flights to the edge of space
According to reporter Larry Simpson of the Van Horn Advocate in Van Horn, Texas,
Blue Origin representatives were in town yesterday to detail the group's rocket
plans.
Taking part was Blue Origin
Project Manager Rob Meyerson. Also on hand was a representative of the FAA's
Office of Commercial Space Transportation.
Meyerson said that Blue
Origin intends to focus its efforts on "developing, building and operating a
series of manned launch vehicles, the first of which will take off and land
vertically, carrying three or more astronauts to the edge of space."
The newspaper also reported
that Meyerson detailed why Blue Origin has selected a site in West
Texas for its rocket operations. "Texas
has been a long-standing leader in the aerospace industry and the geography of
the West Texas site makes it an ideal place to
develop Blue Origin's launch facility."
Incremental plan
Meyerson said Blue Origin
anticipates a flight test of its vehicle in the fourth quarter of 2006. That
liftoff date, however, depends on having both the rocket and launch site ready,
he said.
Flight testing is to span
three to five years before regular commercial flights would start, Meyerson
said. "During the testing phase, we anticipate launching less than 25 times a
year," the Van Horn Advocate reported
Meyerson as saying.
Launch Operations Manager
for Blue Origin, Ed Rutkowski, also attended the public meeting. He outlined an
incremental plan to grow the launch complex - with construction to start early
next year. The facilities are to be built on privately-purchased land
in Culberson County, Texas.
The actual rockets are to
be fabricated in Seattle, Washington. After construction, they will be
hauled to the Texas
launch site for launch, Rutkowski said.
Genuine
passion for space
Blue Origin is on the search for willing-to-work rocketeers
that want to help the firm turn paper into flying vehicles.
According to the Blue Origin web site, the company says its "hiring
bar is unabashedly extreme, and we insist on keeping our team size
small...measured in the dozens. This means the person occupying each and every
spot must be among the most technically gifted in his or her field."
The web site also adds this note:
"You must have a genuine passion for space. Without passion,
you will find what we're trying to do too difficult. There are much easier
jobs. You must want to work in a small company. We are building real hardware--not
PowerPoint presentations. This must excite you. You must be a builder."
Special
thanks to Larry Simpson of the Van Horn
Advocate for assisting in this article.