Houston Chronicle

NASA names its first female flight director

Texas native called a ‘proven’ leader, has 20 years with agency

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

For the first time in NASA’s 60year existence, the space agency has named a woman to lead the Mission Control flight directors at Houston’s Johnson Space Center.

Holly Ridings, a Texas native, has worked at NASA for 20 years. She was named chief flight director Thursday, the first woman to ever hold this position.

“Holly has proven herself a leader among a group of highly talented flight directors,” Brian Kelly, NASA’s director of flight operations, said in a statement. “I know she will excel in this unique and critical leadership position providing direction for the safety and success of human spacefligh­t missions.”

Ridings, 44, did not provide a comment Monday. In her new role, she will manage all 32 flight directors and flight directors-intraining.

These individual­s are in charge of keeping the astronauts and the Internatio­nal Space Station safe by leading teams of controller­s, researcher­s, engineers and support personnel at the Houston center.

If something goes wrong, flight directors have to be able to make split-second decisions while holding someone’s life in their hands. For example, in 1970 during the Apollo 13 mission, Gene Kranz was in charge of an enormous team on the ground that helped bring the three astronauts home after an oxygen tank explosion forced them to abort their trip to the moon.

Ridings — who has a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineerin­g from Texas A&M University — became a flight director in 2005. Her predecesso­r, Norm Knight, became chief flight director in 2012.

The Texas native steps into her leadership role at a time of transition for the space agency.

Since taking office last year, President Donald Trump has pushed for the U.S. to return to the moon as a stepping stone toward Mars.

Trump’s $19.9 billion proposed budget for the next fiscal year tasks NASA with launching Americans around the moon in 2023. It also would set aside $504.2 million in the coming year to begin working on the foundation on a $2.7 billion Lunar Orbital Platform-Gateway — basically a minispace station orbiting the moon where astronauts could live and work.

Officials have said the gateway should be fully functional by 2026, with human missions to the lunar surface expected soon after.

Ridings “will lead the team during exciting times as they adapt to support future missions with commercial partners and beyond low-Earth orbit,” Kelly said.

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