WASHINGTON -
The House Science Committee's Republican chairman and
senior Democrat told NASA Administrator Mike Griffin they had little interest
in accelerating the U.S. space agency's exploration plans at the expense of
science and research.
Griffin
appeared before the House Science Committee Thursday to defend his agency's
2007 budget request of $16.792 billion, which would hold science spending to a
1.5-percent increase next year in order to fund a nearly $1 billion increase
for exploration. NASA plans to postpone or cancel several major science
missions to help free up the additional money its needs to build new spacecraft
and launchers while also operating a space shuttle fleet slated to fly 16
missions to the international space station before its retired in 2010.
"I am
extremely uneasy about this budget, and I am in a quandary at this point about
what to do about it," Boehlert told Griffin. "This budget is bad for space
science, worse for Earth science, perhaps worse still for aeronautics. It
basically cuts or de-emphasizes every forward looking, truly futuristic program
of the agency to fund operational and development programs to enable us to do
what we are already doing or have done before."
Boehert
said that while he supports the Vision for Space Exploration, he does not "see
any reason to accelerate it beyond the president's original plans" which called
for fielding the Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) by 2014 and landing astronauts
on the Moon by 2020.
Boehlert,
who said he had not made up his mind about what should be done about the NASA
budget, said he would be willing to vote for giving NASA more money than the
White House requested as long as the money went to unmanned side of the program
and did not come from other science agencies. "But
money is not exactly growing on trees around here so what to do is not clear,"
he said.
Rep. Bart
Gordon (Tenn.), the committee's ranking Democrat, who said he had not decided
his final position, raised the possibility during the hearing of slowing down
NASA's exploration effort in order to maintain a better funding balance among
the agency's other programs.
"I want to
make it clear that I don't want to see Congress signing up for another big,
underfunded hardware program, that winds up costing more, doing less and cannibalizing
other important NASA missions," Gordon said. "We have been down that road too
many times in the past, and I've got no desire to do so again."
Griffin
testified that NASA's 2007 request, which calls for a smaller increases than
the White House previously projected, already puts the exploration program on a
slower timetable than he would prefer.
"We have
already slowed down the CEV development to the 2013-2014 time frame, that is where we are currently sitting." Griffin
said.
Although 2014 is the date President George W. Bush set for fielding the
CEV when he announced the Vision for Space Exploration in January 2004, Griffin
made clear before taking his oath of office last April that he intended to
accelerate CEV development in order to close the gap between the shuttle's 2010
retirement and the first crewed flight of the new system.
The
Exploration Systems Architecture Team that Griffin chartered last spring to
plot NASA's path back to the Moon laid out a plan for fielding the CEV in 2011.
But by the time Griffin finally unveiled the
exploration architecture last September, CEV was on the calendar for 2012.
When NASA's
2007 budget request was unveiled Feb. 6, Griffin said NASA still intended to
field the CEV "as close to 2010 as possible and no later than 2014."