Montreal Gazette

Retired astronauts say gruelling recruitmen­t process tougher now

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

Retired Canadian spaceman Bob Thirsk asks himself a couple simple questions when sizing up people who tell him they want to become an astronaut.

The first is whether he could see himself getting along with the person for six months in orbit. The other is whether he could trust them with his life.

“Would I enjoy spending a long period of time ... with this person? If I can say yes, I will go on and consider that person as a potential candidate,” Thirsk, who was selected as an astronaut in 1983, told The Canadian Press.

The recruitmen­t process is underway as Canada looks to double its astronaut corps this summer with the addition of two new members.

The field has been reduced from 3,772 to 32, including 11 women. A further cut will be announced by Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains in Toronto on Monday.

Those still remaining include engineers, Canadian Forces personnel, doctors, university professors and pilots.

Thirsk, who holds the Canadian record for most time spent in space with more than 200 days, says some stereotypi­cal Canadian traits come in handy for potential astronauts: politeness, diplomacy and mediation.

“You can be technicall­y brilliant, but if you irritate your other five crewmates, the crew is not going to be as efficient and productive as a crew that might have less technical skills, but get along well together,” he said.

The Canadian Space Agency has chronicled the recruitmen­t process online, but the specifics remain a tightly guarded, confidenti­al process.

That hiring process has continuous­ly evolved over time, said Thirsk, who is now chancellor at the University of Calgary.

In the early ’80s, Canada was seeking payload specialist­s to fulfil science and research roles on shuttle missions.

Thirsk, a medical doctor who was inspired by Apollo missions, jumped at the opportunit­y.

There were essays, physical examinatio­ns, detailed applicatio­ns and psychologi­cal testing even before meeting with selection committee members. Then came additional technical briefings, public speaking tests and even more intense physical and psychologi­cal testing.

“We even attended cocktail receptions — we were naive, we thought we were just there to meet people, but we were actually being watched to make sure we had the social graces that were required to be a representa­tive of Canada,” Thirsk said with a laugh.

More than three decades later, Canadian astronauts hold the same functions as their NASA or internatio­nal counterpar­ts, Thirsk said. That includes taking part in spacewalks, operating robotics and taking on leadership roles, as Chris Hadfield did when he commanded the Internatio­nal Space Station in 2012 and 2013.

Dave Williams, who joined in 1992 and went to space in 1998 and 2007 before retiring the following year, said evidence suggests the current prospects have faced simulation­s of intense physical situations such as jumping into water from a helicopter, coping with flooded compartmen­ts and dealing with firefighti­ng scenarios.

“These are all things we did not do in 1992, we added them in 2009,” Williams said.

“Every time we do this, we change it, we morph it, we try to make it a more rigorous process,” added Williams, now CEO at Southlake Regional Health Centre in Newmarket, Ont.

Williams, who was involved in the 2009 hiring process, says exercises allow appraisers to see how candidates react in an operationa­l environmen­t — where time-critical decisions matter, not unlike during unforeseen circumstan­ces in space.

“We’re trying to evaluate the comfort level that candidates have with being uncomforta­ble,” Williams said. “I mean being uncomforta­ble because you’re at the edge of your performanc­e capabiliti­es and that’s just part of the nature of what we do in the space program.”

Not to say only people like test pilots or surgeons make decent astronauts, Williams added, noting sometimes people who work in remote, isolated environmen­ts develop space-worthy skills.

Both Williams and Thirsk agree getting to the final group is a huge accomplish­ment. Williams called it a humbling experience to be around talented individual­s. Those selected with him included Hadfield and Julie Payette.

Thirsk said the rigorous process tightened bonds in his group, which included current Transport Minister Marc Garneau, former CSA boss Steve MacLean and Roberta Bondar.

“We actually became friends, we were all kind of naive, we were all thrown into this together not really sure about what to expect as an outcome, all passionate about space flight,” Thirsk said.

“That actually bonded us together even though we were all competing for a small number of spots.”

The new members will begin training in Texas in August, joining Canada’s two active astronauts, Jeremy Hansen and David SaintJacqu­es, who both joined in 2009.

Saint-Jacques has been assigned a six-month mission aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station that is scheduled to begin in November 2018.

 ??  ?? Chris Hadfield
Chris Hadfield

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