Primary Search For Columbia Material Passes Halfway Mark
RELEASE: 03-117
As the search of more than 500,000 acres of primary recovery area for Space
Shuttle Columbia material reached its halfway mark, NASA Administrator, Sean
O'Keefe, visited key sites in east Texas to thank recovery crews for their diligence
and hard work.
"The outstanding interagency cooperation, and the hard work of all the
individuals working on recovery, has been truly gratifying and inspiring,"
Administrator O'Keefe said. "There has been an untiring, fulltime, and
dedicated effort to recover Columbia material. The great recovery work directly
supports the efforts of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board to determine
what caused the Shuttle mishap", he said. On Monday Administrator O'Keefe
and Associate Administer for Space Flight, William F. Readdy visited the Lufkin
Command Center, Nacogdoches Base Camp, and Toledo Bend Reservoir Dive Site.
Approximately 4500 ground searchers have covered approximately 56 percent of
the planned 555,000-acre search area. The air search has covered approximately
74 percent of 604, four-square nautical mile grids; and, on water, searchers
have scanned about 81 percent of a planned 14.7 square nautical mile area. The
search should be completed within four to six weeks, weather permitting. Searches
farther west, along Columbia's ground track, likely will take additional time,
because of the great area involved.
About 25 percent of the Shuttle Columbia, by weight, has been delivered to the
collection hangar at Kennedy Space Center (KSC), Fla. More is en route from
the searched area in eastern Texas and western Louisiana to KSC.
Last Wednesday's recovery of the Orbiter Experiment Support System recorder
(OEX) is potentially significant, and search coordinators hope to recover additional
critical items. "We are extremely excited with the recent discovery of
this recorder, and we want to thank the other agencies and communities for their
support," said Allen Flynt, NASA Oversight Manager at the Lufkin Command
Center. "But we remain dedicated to our goal of bringing home as much of
Columbia as possible. We remain focused on the recovery effort, which continues
at full strength, " he said.
Some of the top priorities of NASA, and its local, state and federal partners,
are to recover or clean up potentially hazardous materials and ensure the public's
safety. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has responsibility for
the overall disaster response effort. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
is tasked with collecting and delivering recovered Shuttle material to NASA
and the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB). The U.S. Forest Service
and Texas Forest Service are coordinating the land and air search. The U.S.
Navy is managing water search activities.
"We still have an obligation to the residents of Texas and Louisiana, as
well as any other state that may contain Columbia material, to recover all known
material and leave the land as it was prior to Feb. 1. Our obligation also extends
to providing all public assistance funds to eligible applicants, and we'll satisfy
all those obligations before closing down," said FEMA Federal Coordinating
Officer Scott Wells.
All of these organizations are continuing to encourage local residents to report
any possible Shuttle materials to the toll-free hotline at the Lufkin Command
Center at: 1/866/446-6603
For more information about NASA and the Space Shuttle Columbia accident investigation
on the Internet, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov.