Houston Chronicle

Most staff building axed moon rover remain with NASA

Personnel now work on ISS, Mars 2020, mini-space station

- By Alex Stuckey alex.stuckey@chron.com twitter.com/alexdstuck­ey

More than 95 percent of the employees working on NASA’s recently canceled lunar rover still work for the space agency, officials said Friday.

The much-anticipate­d rover, called Resource Prospector, was abruptly canceled in April, just a few years before it was slated to rocket to the moon in search of water. The decision stunned scientists and researcher­s alike, especially given the recent push by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to return Americans to the moon as a steppingst­one for Mars.

The space agency has since announced it will rely on commercial companies for future robotic missions to the lunar surface — missions that will use parts from the canceled rover, such as its ice drill, a system to search for hydrogen below the lunar surface and a tool to quantify water extracted from the moon. But this decision wasn’t made until the agency had spent more than four years and almost half of the project’s $250 million budget.

There were 90 civil servant and contract employees working on the rover when the project was canceled. They worked primarily across three NASA centers: Johnson Space Center in Houston, Ames Research Center in California and Kennedy Space Center in Florida, said spokeswoma­n Cheryl Warner.

Two months later, 86 of those workers are still with the agency, Warner said. Those individual­s now work on projects including the Internatio­nal Space Station, the Mars 2020 rover and the mini-space station orbiting the moon proposed in Trump’s 2019 budget, she added.

Of the four individual­s no longer with the agency, Warner said three decided to leave NASA “for other opportunit­ies” and one decided to retire.

Before its cancellati­on, Resource Prospector was slated to fly in 2022 or 2023. Now, NASA officials are saying they think commercial partners could get a robotic mission to the moon as early as next year. These partners have not yet been announced, but officials said they plan to award several contracts throughout the next decade.

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