Not an April's Fool Joke unfortunately.
Here is an exerpt from the Florida Today newspaper:
We need to make a noise to the people in Washington DC if we want the United States to have a continued presence in space. NASA's budget is consistently being cut.
I worked at the space center. The reason I went into that career was because I was inspired by TOS. I know many people who work out there that feel the same way. There was a clique of us that worked in the Orbiter Processing Facility. We would go around quoting Star Trek to each other.
We Trekkers are an awesome force when we want to be. The Shuttle is already out of there (even though it was a great concept and should not have been throw away out of hand) but this impacts the future of the space station, future solar system exploration and "the final frontier". I like to think Gene Roddenbery would have hated for our space program to go down the tubes. What do you say Trekkers?
Here is an exerpt from the Florida Today newspaper:
I admit, this is a little self serving because my husband works at KSC and this may impact our putting food on the table. But the bigger picture is the impact on space exploration.04/01/2008 05:48 PM
NASA details shuttle job losses
A day after news broke that up to 6,400 shuttle jobs could be lost at Kennedy Space Center by 2011, NASA today issued its first detailed projections of shuttle retirement job losses nationwide.
Top space agency managers focused on potential silver linings in the numbers, saying retirements could offset some of the losses and that as-yet undefinied moon program work also could fill in gaps.
However, the report still gave job loss estimates higher than previously expected, with the Space Coast taking the hardest hit.
NASA's report states KSC jobs projections may improve as more is known about the Ares 5 rocket, the lunar lander assembly and other work already planned for KSC.
Center director Bill Parsons, in a late afternoon meeting with reporters, said he expects the center's total employment to drop from just under 15,000 to about 10,000 by 2013.
- John Kelly
We need to make a noise to the people in Washington DC if we want the United States to have a continued presence in space. NASA's budget is consistently being cut.
I worked at the space center. The reason I went into that career was because I was inspired by TOS. I know many people who work out there that feel the same way. There was a clique of us that worked in the Orbiter Processing Facility. We would go around quoting Star Trek to each other.
We Trekkers are an awesome force when we want to be. The Shuttle is already out of there (even though it was a great concept and should not have been throw away out of hand) but this impacts the future of the space station, future solar system exploration and "the final frontier". I like to think Gene Roddenbery would have hated for our space program to go down the tubes. What do you say Trekkers?
Last edited: