NASA Administrator Visits The Kennedy Space Center

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Oct. 11, 2011

David Weaver
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1898
david.weaver@nasa.gov 

Amber Philman
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468
amber.n.philman@nasa.gov 

RELEASE: 11-344

NASA ADMINISTRATOR VISITS THE KENNEDY SPACE CENTER

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- NASA Administrator Charles Bolden met with 
Space Coast community leaders, Kennedy Space Center employees and 
news media representatives during a Tuesday visit to Florida. He 
outlined recent steps the agency has taken toward missions to deep 
space and Florida's critical role in future exploration.

"As our nation looks for ways to compete and win in the 21st century, 
NASA continues to be an engine of job growth and economic 
opportunity," Bolden said. "From California to Florida, the space 
industry is strong and growing. The next generation of explorers will 
not fly a space shuttle, but they may be able to walk on Mars. And 
those journeys are starting at the Kennedy Space Center today."

Bolden met with several hundred Space Coast community leaders, 
business executives, educators, community organizers, and state and 
local government representatives to discuss their partnership with 
NASA to keep America the world leader in space exploration. He 
discussed jobs related to the agency's new Orion multipurpose crew 
vehicle and other activities the agency is pursuing to develop new 
capabilities, including the placement of the Commercial Crew program 
office at Kennedy.

The administrator also talked with reporters while touring the 
agency's new mobile launcher for the Space Launch System (SLS), the 
heavy-lift rocket that will propel astronauts into deep space. He 
outlined NASA's plans to use the launcher from Kennedy's Launch 
Complex 39 to send astronauts in the Orion spacecraft to asteroids, 
the moon and other destinations in the solar system. The new 6.75 
million-ton mobile launcher is a tangible step on the agency's path 
forward to launching deep space missions.

Bolden met with Kennedy's work force and thanked them for their 
commitment to the American space program. He answered questions from 
workers about NASA's future and Kennedy's important role in 
implementing the bi-partisan vision for exploration agreed to by 
President Obama and Congress one year ago.

For more information about SLS, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/sls

For more information about Orion, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/orion

For more information about NASA's Kennedy Space Center, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/kennedy  

	
-end-



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