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10 years after Columbia disaster, reflections on lessons learned, remaining risks

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Rodney Rocha was an outspoken example of how the agency’s “culture” failed. The engineer repeatedly tried to persuade NASA managers to get telescopic pictures of Columbia’s wing before re-entry to better understand the damage.

Rocha was ignored by managers, who couldn’t believe a piece of insulating material — the consistency of Styrofoam — could crack open the orbiter’s wing.

Ten years later, Rocha said he still regrets not “breaking the door down” to force NASA higher-ups to get those pictures and maybe develop a last-ditch rescue plan.

But Rocha, still with NASA, said that since the disaster, the agency listens more to concerns raised by its frontline engineers.

A key example, he said, was the 2009 mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope. Because the telescope was too far from the space station for the shuttle to use it as safe haven, the only way to rescue the astronauts in case they got in trouble was to send another orbiter.

Rocha said NASA managers initially underestimated the difficulty of transferring astronauts from a stranded orbiter to a rescue orbiter — until he and other engineers stepped forward.

“I think it illustrates the change — and I hate to use the word ‘culture’ — but a (new) openness to alternate technical views,” he said.

The result, he said, was that NASA developed better plans to prepare for a rescue mission, which ultimately wasn’t necessary.

Rocha is asked to speak at NASA centers a few times a year to talk about lessons learned from Columbia. His message to managers: Listen up. And to workers: Speak out.

“So you get your hand slapped. You get chastised,” he said. “Then say: ‘Can I file (my concerns) anyway?’ ”

Dr. Jonathan Clark, grieving husband

Of all the questions asked in the aftermath of Columbia, Dr. Jonathan Clark — husband of mission specialist Laurel Clark — said it’s one from their son, Iain, that keeps ringing in his head.

Just 8 at the time of the accident, Iain wanted to know why his mom didn’t bail out of the shuttle as it broke apart.

Though investigators would conclude that crew survival was impossible — given the orbiter’s design and its speed at break-up — the question has nagged at Clark, a former NASA flight surgeon and now an associate professor of space medicine at Baylor University.

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