Escaep
Tank
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I was reading my local paper the other day and there was an article on NASA's dire requests for more budgeting money. Some of you may know that the shuttle program is ending soon and will be replaced by the new Ares rockets. However, the gap between the shuttle program and the new program is several years, time in which thousands of space center employees will be laid off. IIRC, there was talk that the new Constellation program might not have the justified cost and the White House is deliberating whether or not NASA should be given more money. I live on the Space Coast in Florida about 15 miles from the launch pads, and I can tell you, this whole community/county is dependent on the space program being operable. If it were to get shut down, thousands of people will lose their jobs, and subsequently, the economy here will go down the crapper.
Some facts:
Yet even with facts like these (which i got out of today's local newspaper,) NASA still has trouble getting the $3billion necessary to sustain the American space program. Here are some facts on other things we spend our money on: http://www.floridatoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2009909270320
Some facts:
- Average KSC employee salary: $77,235, almost double that of an average Space Coast employee.
- During the 2008 fiscal year, NASA activities generated about $4.1billion in economic impact across Florida, $2.1billion in household income, and 40,802 jobs.
Yet even with facts like these (which i got out of today's local newspaper,) NASA still has trouble getting the $3billion necessary to sustain the American space program. Here are some facts on other things we spend our money on: http://www.floridatoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2009909270320
But here in Central Florida, one of America's most accomplished and strategically important programs has been left to beg for an additional $3 billion per year. Without that money, NASA can't keep flying its shuttles, service the International Space Station and fly to the moon, Mars or killer asteroids, a presidential panel found. The Space Coast will soon begin losing more than 1,000 jobs per year from a program that has had a bigger economic impact on Florida than The Walt Disney Co.