A Closer Look At The CASIS “Space Is In It” Endorsement
As readers of NASAWatch have noted by now, I have an interest in the utilization of the International Space Station.
When the amazing capabilities of ISS are used to their fullest potential we all benefit. When those resources are under-utilized our tax dollars and the finite utility of the ISS are wasted. CASIS has been given responsibility for managing the U.S. assets aboard the ISS that have been collectively proclaimed as being the ISS National Laboratory. I’ve already written a lot about CASIS. I’ll be writing much more in the weeks to come.
Let’s start with a clear-cut example of how CASIS has stumbled: its preoccupation with golf and its relationship with Cobra Puma Golf, a large and very successful golfing gear manufacturer. If you look at the LinkedIn page of Patrick O’Neill, CASIS Marketing & Communications Manager, you will see that he was an account executive for VitroRobertson. Between 2008-2009 he was “Account Executive on the Cobra Golf Account. Managed the day to day operations of all Brand Marketing efforts and assisted in the production of all Advertising efforts for Cobra Golf.” If you read CASIS President/Executive Director Greg Johnson’s astronaut bio you’ll see that he lists golf among his recreational interests. So, senior CASIS management likes golf. “Go with what you know”, so they say.
On 31 March 2016 NASA International Space Station Director Sam Scimemi sent a letter to Greg Johnson on a number of topics. One of the issues Scimemi raised had to do with how CASIS hypes/promotes the research that it takes credit for having facilitated onboard the ISS. In that letter Scimemi notes: “We would advise caution in the lending of the ISS National Lab brand (via your “Space is in it” certification) too freely; care must be taken to that research performed on the ISS has actually influenced product development in advance of awarding the certification. Failure to do so weakens the brand and may lend an air of being nonserious in our mutual quest to fully utilize the ISS as a national lab.”
The “Space Is In It” designation that CASIS calls an “endorsement” has apparently only been awarded once – to Cobra Puma Golf. As such it would be illustrative to examine how that whole process came about and what it says about the ability of CASIS to recognize the actual commercial research potential of the ISS.