Joint Hearing:
Space Shuttle Columbia Accident
Wednesday, February 12, 2003
9:30 a.m.
325 Russell Senate Office Building
1. Purpose of Hearing
On February 12, 2003, at 9:30 a.m. in the Russell Caucus Room (SR-325), the
Senate Commerce Committee and the House Science Committee's Subcommittee on
Space and Aeronautics will hold a joint hearing on the Space Shuttle Columbia
tragedy. Senator McCain and Congressman Boehlert will co-chair the hearing.
The committees will hear testimony from NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe regarding
the accident, the investigation, and any related issues.
2. Procedures
The Chairman and Ranking Members of the Senate Commerce Committee and the House
Science Committee will be given five minutes each for opening statements. NASA
Administrator Sean O'Keefe will have 20 minutes to provide his testimony. The
question and answer period will be limited to four minutes for each member and
alternate between Senate and House. Each chairman will recognize the members
of his respective committee.
3. Background
At approximately 9:00 a.m. EST on February 1, 2003, the Space Shuttle Columbia
broke apart during re-entry into the atmosphere while traveling at more than
12,500 miles per hour at an altitude of 207,000 feet. All seven astronauts were
killed. Immediately following the accident, NASA activated a contingency plan
to preserve all information related to this flight and established a Mishap
Investigation Team to coordinate the identification, retrieval, and storage
of debris and human remains. NASA also established the Columbia Accident Investigation
Board (CAIB), and appointed retired Navy Admiral Harold (Hal) Gehman chair of
the investigation Board. The Space Shuttle program is grounded indefinitely
while the Board investigates the matter.
NASA chartered the Gehman Board to determine the facts, as well as the actual and probable causes of the accident and recommend actions to preclude the recurrence of a similar mishap. The Board membership is heavily weighted toward members with military experience and has few members with significant experience with space programs. Administrator O'Keefe has stated that he is open to expanding the membership of this Board.
In contrast to the Rogers Commission that investigated the Challenger accident in 1986 which was appointed by the President, the Gehman Board was established by NASA. There is some concern that the Gehman Board is not sufficiently independent from NASA and that the President should create a commission similar to the Rogers Commission. Others believe that these are not fundamental problems as long as the membership is expanded with outside experts. Also, Administrator O'Keefe has pledged to provide Congressional staff with access to the Board and its deliberations to ensure that Congress has sufficient insight into the investigation . In addition, the NASA Inspector General will be an observer to the Board to track its deliberations.
Three crew, two Americans and one Russian, are currently aboard the International Space Station (ISS). A Russian Soyuz crew return capsule is currently docked to the ISS should the crew need to return for any reason. The grounding of the Shuttle fleet will have a significant impact on the future assembly and operation of the ISS and raises significant questions about the future of human spaceflight.
Additional background information on the Columbia accident is attached in the appendix.
4. Key Questions