NASA Announces Plans to Lure Commercial Space Travel Businesses to Florida
NASA chief Charles Bolden has announced that he will actively try to attract commercial space operators to Cape Canaveral. The so-called "space taxis" would be able to take advantage of the processing and launch facilities already in place in Florida's Kennedy Space Center. Bolden said his pitch to the commercial enterprises would be that they could save money and time by using existing infrastructure instead of building their own. He also indicated that NASA would help commercial operators modify existing infrastructure for their needs.
Kennedy Space Center director, Robert Cabana, has already said that NASA will begin upgrading its existing facilities in order to attract a private space company. The Constellation Moon project was originally slated to use the center's vehicle assembly building, hangars, and cargo bays, but the new budget constraints have prompted NASA to cut the program, leaving those assets unused. The same budget is allowing NASA to spend two billion dollars over five years to modernize the facilities.
The announcement may be good news for Florida workers employed at the space center, who were likely to lose their jobs when the space shuttle program is retired later this year. It will also be good for Florida's economy to attract large businesses to the area. Find out more about this story at Bolden: Florida should be home of private spaceflight.
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