![]() August 6, 2003Management Issues Looming in Inquiry on Shuttle SafetyCAPE CANAVERAL, Fla., Aug. 5 — Senior officials of NASA said today that they were making progress in addressing the five technical recommendations made so far by the independent board investigating the breakup of the shuttle Columbia. But they would not say what the agency was doing about an issue the board has called just as important a cause of the disaster as mechanical failure: the space agency's management culture. "There will be no attempt whatsoever to argue or defend a recommendation from the Columbia Accident Investigation Board," said Frederick Gregory, NASA's deputy administrator, who was visiting the Kennedy Space Center here to join the initial meeting of a new advisory panel that is supposed to critique the preparations to return to flight. But when asked about the board's inquiry into how information has
flowed within NASA, Mr. Gregory replied, "At this point we have not
received any comments officially from the accident investigation board" on
the subject of management. Mr. Gregory said NASA had always delayed its operations whenever it
found something it did not understand that could pose a safety risk. The
investigation board, however, has focused on occasions when NASA faced a
problem that it did not recognize as a risk. Last week, the investigating board recommended that NASA equip the three surviving shuttles with cameras that could take pictures of the orbiter and the external fuel tank, the part that shed the debris that was fatal to the shuttle Columbia, and transmit those images to the ground. Over the last few months, it has also recommended better photography on
liftoff, adding equipment so astronauts could repair the shuttle in orbit,
inspecting the wing panels more thoroughly between flights and getting
images from spy satellites while the shuttle is in orbit. The change would mean that little of the shuttle's descent would be over land, lowering the risk of harm to people on the ground if another shuttle broke up on approach. The advisory panel that began work here today will monitor how NASA carries out the short-term recommendations of the Gehman board, the ones required before the next shuttle flight. Mr. Gregory said that all but one of the 27 members were outsiders and
that they would spend the next three days in what he called "Shuttle 101,"
familiarizing themselves with the system. Their agenda includes a tour of
the hangar where the Columbia wreckage is laid out and a look at a sample
bipod foam ramp, the structure that shed the debris that damaged the
Columbia's wing. It also includes a look at the launching-pad structure
that was dumping flakes of zinc oxide onto the orbiter's wing, leading to
corrosion. |