Partly Cloudy
81°
Morris, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

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

  Comments (...)
Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 3)

In that room, Hale hung several posters that underlined the need for safety.

One of them, dubbed “Remember,” was a photo of the shuttle on its launchpad, nearly enveloped by low clouds, and a quote from Walt Williams, an early NASA manager: “You will never remember the many times the launch slipped, but the on-time failures are with you always.”

The posters hung until just a few months ago when Hale — now retired and a consultant to several commercial rocket companies — retrieved them after they were taken down.

He wonders what replaced them — and what that says about NASA a decade after Columbia.

“You talk about memory (of the accident) fading, and you have to wonder what are they (NASA leaders) are thinking,” Hale said.

According to NASA, pictures of the space station now adorn the walls.

Adm. Hal Gehman, investigator

When NASA flew its last shuttle mission in July 2011, the occasion was marked with reverence and even regret by some. But to retired Navy Adm. Hal Gehman, who led the Columbia Accident Investigation Board, the safe landing of Atlantis brought a sigh of relief.

“The more I think about it, the happier I am that we retired the shuttle program,” said Gehman. “We would have gotten away with 30 or 40 (more) launches, and then we would have had another accident. The system was too dangerous.”

The dangers were detailed in his board’s 248-page report: from the lack of an effective escape system to constant pressure to launch despite shrinking NASA resources. Another factor: the mistaken belief the shuttle was “operational” — like an airliner — rather than a test vehicle that required constant vigilance.

Gehman said the board’s recommendation that NASA “recertify” the shuttle before flying it beyond 2010 was — in essence — a call to mothball the shuttle as the cost of recertifying a vehicle with 2.5 million parts was prohibitively expensive.

“We knew we were effectively shutting down the program,” he said. But “we were never going to get to the next (era) of human spaceflight until we shut it down.”

Though NASA’s next vehicle configuration, the Space Launch System and Orion capsule, is being designed to include an abort system, Gehman said it’s still vulnerable to the same pressures of time and money that doomed Columbia:

Comments

Total Comments
0

View/Add Comments

There have been no comments made about this story.

Reader Poll

What is your stance on a proposed 1 percent sales tax to fund local school building projects?

I'm in favor of anything that will help improve school finances
I will support it if it helps to lower my property taxes
I oppose it because I don't believe it will impact property taxes and I will just pay twice
I'm against any additional taxes
I have not heard enough yet to form an opinion