NASA to Realign Constellation Program Milestones

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Aug. 11, 2008

Grey Hautaluoma/Stephanie Schierholz 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0668/4997 
grey.hautaluoma-1@xxxxxxxx 
stephanie.schierholz@xxxxxxxx 


Lynnette Madison/Josh Byerly 
Johnson Space Center, Houston 
281-483-5111 
lynnette.b.madison@xxxxxxxx 
bill.j.byerly@xxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 08-205

NASA TO REALIGN CONSTELLATION PROGRAM MILESTONES

WASHINGTON -- In a news conference Monday, NASA managers discussed how 
the agency will be adjusting the budget, schedule and technical 
performance milestones for its Constellation Program to ensure the 
first crewed flight of the Ares I rocket and Orion crew capsule in 
March 2015. 

The Constellation Program is developing the spacecraft and systems, 
including the Ares I and Ares V rockets, the Orion crew exploration 
vehicle, and the Altair lunar lander, that will take astronauts to 
the International Space Station after the retirement of the space 
shuttle, and eventually return humans to the moon. 

"Since the program's inception, NASA has been working an aggressive 
plan to achieve flight capability before our March 2015 target," said 
Rick Gilbrech, associate administrator for the Exploration Systems 
Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "We are still 
confident the Constellation Program will make its first flight to the 
International Space Station on or before that date. Our new path 
forward better aligns our project schedules with our existing funds 
to ensure we can address the unplanned challenges that always arise 
when developing a complex flight system." 

NASA will retire the space shuttles in 2010 and had established a goal 
of achieving flight capability for the Constellation Program before 
2015 to narrow the gap in America's human spaceflight capability. As 
such, NASA aligned Constellation contracts and internal milestones 
against a date much earlier than March 2015 to incentivize an earlier 
flight capability. 

As part of an annual budget process that evaluates the program's 
budget, schedule and technical performance milestones, NASA will be 
working with its contractors to discuss how program plans and 
internal milestones should be adjusted -- a process that will take 
several months and require contract modifications and associated 
milestone realignments. Such adjustments are not unusual for a 
complex development program as work matures and schedules and 
resources are aligned. 

For more information about the Constellation Program, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/constellation 

	
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