[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 111 (Friday, July 22, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4839-S4840]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE SPACE PROGRAM
Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, yesterday the space shuttle
Atlantis came back in the early morning darkness with those xenon
lights illuminating that 3-mile-long runway at the Kennedy Space
Center. That is a location that a century ago a set of grandparents of
mine had homesteaded under the old Homestead Act, worked the land for
the required 4 years. I have a copy of the deed signed by Woodrow
Wilson in 1917 to my grandparents. Over three-quarters of a century
later, the thought was not lost on me, when we went in that early
morning darkness to the launchpad, that my grandparents would have
never, ever believed that, so many years later, a grandson was going to
literally leave the face of the Earth from almost the old homestead
where they had to swat mosquitoes and fight off rattlesnakes and
alligators as they eked a living out of that Florida soil.
That was the location Atlantis came back to yesterday morning after a
13-day flawless mission after having been launched by the finest launch
team in the world. That launch team is now having to disperse in part
because we are shutting down the space shuttle program after 30
glorious years. It is an incredible flying machine, with 135
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very successful missions that allowed us to do incredible work in space
with human beings interacting and, of course, 2 tragic missions--the
destruction of Challenger on ascent 25 years ago and the destruction of
Columbia on reentry just a few years ago, in the early part of this
last decade.
There would not be as much angst in the space community if the new
rockets were ready. The problem is that the rockets are being designed,
and in some cases being built, but they then have to be human-rated;
that is, all the redundancies for safety as well as the escape systems
have to be designed and developed for the new rockets. One of those new
rockets is going to fly this fall. It will launch and rendezvous with
the International Space Station and will deliver cargo, but it is going
to take a few years to rate that for humans. That all the more adds to
the angst, the angst of people who have lost their jobs and now do not
see the American rocket that is ready to fly immediately upon the
shutdown of the space shuttle program.
I have been surprised that we have a lot of people in America who
think the space program is being shut down. We have an International
Space Station up there at about 225 miles. This thing is huge. It is
120 yards long. From one end zone to another of a football field, that
is how big it is. There are six human beings up there doing research
right now.
We have trials in the Food and Drug Administration on drugs that have
been developed on that International Space Station. The first one that
is in trials right now is a vaccine for salmonella. Another one that is
getting ready to start trials is a vaccine for MRSA, the highly
infectious bacterial disease in hospitals that we find so difficult to
control because you cannot get an antibiotic that will control it.
I wanted to say for America's space team, ``a job well done.'' A
number of us, including Senator Hutchison and myself, had introduced
and we passed last week the resolution commemorating the men and women
of NASA. Indeed, their congratulations and commendations are certainly
in order on a job well done.
The space program lives. The space program will go to greater
heights. We will go to Mars, and we will see Americans venture out into
the cosmos for even greater discoveries.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
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