Lawmakers extend the space shuttle program's retirement deadline from 2010 to 2011 in a budget vote that may or may not survive a final reconciliation vote. Neither NASA nor the White House is seeking the delay.Congress agreed April 29 to continue to keep the space shuttle flying until
2011. Originally the shuttle program was scheduled for a 2010 retirement, but lawmakers
approved the extension along with an additional $2.5 billion in operational funding
as part of the House and Senate conference agreement on the $3.4 trillion
budget resolution. A final vote on the budget is still to come and the shuttle
extension may or may not survive.
Former President Bush ordered the 2010 retirement of the shuttle fleet in
the aftermath of the 2003 Columbia
disaster. The deadline was necessary to meet the schedule of the Constellation
program that aims to develop a replacement shuttle fleet and return astronauts
to the moon. The first manned launch of the program is scheduled for March
2015.
NASA, meanwhile, is racing to complete its remaining nine missions. Eight of
the missions are to complete construction of the International Space Station
while the ninth is a scheduled May 11 launch to the Hubble Space Telescope. In
the interim between the end of the shuttle program and the first launch of the
Constellation program, a Russian Soyuz spacecraft will be used to shuttle
supplies and astronauts to the Space Station.
Click here to read
about NASA's decision to dodge naming an ISS node after comedian Stephen
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"I am glad to see that the House and Senate budget committees heeded my
call to remove the arbitrary deadline for shuttle retirement and to include
critical funding for our space program," Rep. Suzanne Kosmas (D-Fla.) said
in a statement. "This budget is a significant step towards maintaining
safety, minimizing the spaceflight gap and preserving the highly skilled work force
at Kennedy Space
Center and throughout Central
Florida. Kennedy Space
Center is an economic engine for
our community and I will not stand idly by while these jobs are at risk."
Neither NASA nor the White House requested the one-year extension of the
space shuttle program.