Press Release

U.S. Aerospace Commission Issues Third Interim Report Addressing Industrial Base, Space, and Workforce

By SpaceRef Editor
June 26, 2002
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  • This report is online in Acrobat format

    WASHINGTON- At the National Press Club today, The Commission on the Future
    of the United States Aerospace Industry issued its third interim report,
    making near-term recommendations regarding industrial base, space and
    workforce issues.

    In letters to President George W. Bush and the Congress, Chairman Robert S.
    Walker highlighted the Commission’s findings. Said Walker, “Our report
    recommends immediate steps our government can take to address issues vital
    to the health of the industry. The Commission recognizes that today’s
    challenging business environment has jeopardized the nation’s ability to
    sustain critical design and manufacturing capabilities and expertise. In
    the area of space infrastructure, the government needs to prioritize its
    infrastructure requirements and seek new ways to manage and operate them.
    In addition, our report relates the Commission’s firm belief that the
    aerospace sector is the victim of an education system that needs to be
    dramatically improved, especially in the science, math and engineering
    disciplines.”

    At its May meeting, the Commission voted to include the following
    recommendations in Interim Report #3:

    Aerospace Industrial Base Recommendations

    The Commission recommends the following actions be taken to address several
    areas of concern during Congressional deliberations in the current budget
    cycle and the Administration’s preparation for the FY2004 budget:

  • The Secretary of Defense should task the Defense Science
    Board with the following:

    • Review and recommend overall DoD policy
      toward future industrial base consolidation, including its policies toward
      mergers and acquisitions.

    • Review the long-term viability of the
      nation’s fighter aircraft and solid rocket booster design capability and
      development capabilities.

  • Congress should hold hearings to address the national
    challenges in Air Traffic Control (ATC) capacity cited in the Commission’s
    2nd Interim Report and increases to NASA and FAA R&D funding to retain our
    national leadership in aeronautics.

  • The Administration and Congress should direct NASA and DoD
    to coordinate R&D efforts in areas of common need and provide the
    appropriate funding for joint programs.

  • The President should ensure that a new FAA Administrator be
    recruited without delay to replace the currently retiring Administrator and
    assign him/her a mandate to achieve substantial long-term ATC capacity
    growth.

  • Based on the need to adequately fund and manage investment
    in modernization and transformation, the DoD and Congress should establish
    and maintain a stable, fully funded top line for DoD investment in the
    Future Year Defense Plan (FYDP); increase DoD’s financial flexibility by
    increasing reprogramming thresholds; and provide authority to move funds
    from procurement to R&D within a program.
  • Space Infrastructure Recommendations

  • NASA and DoD (USAF) should conduct a short-term
    study to investigate the feasibility and evaluate the merits of establishing
    a national spaceport structure at Kennedy Space Center/Cape Canaveral AFS
    under a single management system.

  • Congress should approve an enhanced leasing
    authority bill that allows NASA and DoD to lease real property at fair
    market value and retain lease proceeds to cover the total costs incurred in
    supporting the development and operation of the facilities.

  • Congress should grant NASA utility privatization authority. This
    legislation should grant the individual organizations the widest and most
    flexible interpretation and authority.
    Workforce Recommendations

  • The Administration and Congress should
    reaffirm the goal of stabilizing and growing the U.S. aerospace workforce.

  • The Administration should create an
    interagency Workforce Task Force from the Departments of Labor, Commerce,
    Education and other government agencies, as required, to respond to
    long-term industry workforce and training needs.

  • The Administration should develop the
    Aerospace Industry Promotion (AIP) program for schools and community
    colleges to attract public attention to the importance and opportunities
    within the aerospace industry.

  • Congress should propose tax credits for
    employers who invest in the skills and training of the workforce for
    employees enrolled in registered apprenticeship programs and other
    occupational training that meet the needs identified by industry.

  • The Administration and Congress should make
    long-term investments to keep the American aerospace workforce “pipeline”
    filled.
  • The Commission on the Future of the United States Aerospace Industry is a
    congressionally mandated commission, as established in Section 1092 of the
    Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001,
    Public Law 106-398. The Commission was formed to study the future of the
    United States aerospace industry in the global economy, particularly in
    relationship to United States national security; and to assess the future
    importance of the domestic aerospace industry for the economic and national
    security of the United States. The Commission will hold its next public
    meeting on August 22, 2002 in the Department of Commerce Auditorium. The
    Commission will release its final report in November 2002.

    www.aerospacecommission.gov

    SpaceRef staff editor.