Houston Chronicle

NASA veteran demoted as agency eyes moon mandate

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William Gerstenmai­er, a NASA veteran, was removed as head of the agency’s human exploratio­n office Wednesday, a sudden move that comes as the agency is seeking to restore human spacelight to American soil and return astronauts to the moon.

Having served at the agency since 1977, Gerstenmai­er had been in charge of some of NASA’s most highprofil­e programs and is known as a steady and methodical force inside the halls of NASA’s headquarte­rs. Known as “Gerst,” he was working along side Boeing and SpaceX as they developed spacecraft capable of ferrying NASA’s astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

He was also leading the effort to return astronauts to the moon, which had become a priority for the Trump administra­tion.

In an email to employees obtained by the Washington Post, NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e said Gerstenmai­er would become a special assistant to Jim Morhard, the deputy administra­tor.

The move comes as the White House has shown frustratio­n with the pace of getting to the moon, and some of the problems that have plagued NASA’s marquee efforts, including the massive rocket it’s building, known as the Space Launch System, which is behind schedule and over budget.

Vice President Mike Pence earlier this year directed NASA to speed up its return to the moon dramatical­ly — by four years, to 2024 — a move that took many in the agency by surprise.

In a March speech, he took aim at NASA’s bureaucrac­y, saying the agency “must transform itself into a leaner, more accountabl­e and more agile organizati­on. If NASA’s not currently capable of landing American astronauts on the moon in five years, we need to change the organizati­on, not the mission.”

Pence said the United States needed a renewed sense of urgency in order to compete with other superpower­s such as China. “It’s not just competitio­n against our adversarie­s,” he said. “We’re also racing against our worst enemy: complacenc­y.”

In the email to NASA employees sent Wednesday evening, Bridenstin­e wrote: “As you know, NASA has been given a bold challenge to put the first woman and the next man on the Moon by 2024, with a focus on the ultimate goal of sending humans to Mars. In an effort to meet this challenge, I have decided to make leadership changes to the Human Exploratio­n and Operations (HEO) Mission Directorat­e.”

He said that Ken Bowersox, a former astronaut, who had served as the deputy associate administra­tor for the human exploratio­n office would take over in an acting capacity.

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