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Management

Paragon’s executive management is comprised of nine highly experienced personnel. Three of them founded the company over a decade ago.

   
Jane Poynter Jane Poynter
President, Co-founder
   

Ms. Poynter is a Paragon co-founder. She has served as SPACEHAB’s Chief Scientist for its Ecosystem in Space experiment on the International Space Station, and three experiments with ants, bees and fish, which flew on STS-107, the Space Shuttle Columbia. Ms. Poynter holds a patent for the Autonomous Biological System. She is Chief Scientist for Carbon Sequestration for the Seawater Foundation, a non-profit that is developing untreated seawater-based agroforestry projects in coastal deserts. She developed carbon sequestration models and ground truth methodologies for carbon credit trading, and documentation for the World Bank’s BioCarbon Fund and the United Nations. Prior to her work with Paragon, Ms. Poynter was a member of the original team to live and work inside Biosphere 2, for which she led the design and implementation of the Intensive Agriculture. Her book, The Human Experiment: Two Years and Twenty Minutes Inside Biosphere 2, is in stores now.

 
 
   
Taber MacCallum Taber MacCallum
Chief Executive Officer, Co-founder
   

Mr. MacCallum is a Paragon co-founder. Mr. MacCallum was the Principal Investigator on four microgravity experiments on the US Space Shuttle, the Russian Mir Orbital Station and International Space Station using Paragon’s Autonomous Biological Systems, and has supported numerous other biological experiments on the Space Shuttle and International Space Station. The four-month Mir experiments produced the first animals to have completed their life cycle in microgravity and the first aquatic plants to be grown in space. Mr. MacCallum is a co-designer and patent holder for the Autonomous Biological System. He was the design lead for the Jet Propulsion Lab Mars Greenhouse Experiment Module (GEM) payload, and Mars GEM payload ECLSS. He is presently involved in the design of life support and thermal control systems for commercial manned suborbital spacecraft, a novel Mars space suit portable life support system technology funded by NASA, as well as hazardous environment life support technology development for the US Navy divers in which he is the test diver.

Mr. MacCallum was a member of the first two-year mission living and working inside Biosphere 2, a three-acre materially closed ecological system, containing seven biomes, which supported the life of the eight human inhabitants. It was designed for research applicable to environmental management on Earth and the development of human life support for space.

He was responsible for the design, implementation and operation of the atmosphere and water management systems as well as the self-contained paperless analytical laboratories for Biosphere 2 and its Research and Development Center. He has been granted a patent for his design of the Biosphere 2 air sampling and analysis system. Mr. MacCallum has been involved in numerous analytic efforts including a Soviet BioSatellite project and a marine microbial sampling project. Mr. MacCallum also served as Safety Officer and Assistant Medical Officer on the Biosphere 2 Resident Research Team. He has published numerous papers resulting from his work at Biosphere 2, on space related issues, medical issues and on the experience of living and working in an Isolated Confined Environment.

Mr. MacCallum has worked at every level of command on a research vessel, sailing to over 40 ports and over 30,000 miles around the world. Training in Singapore, he became certified as a Dive Controller and Advanced Open Water Diving Instructor. He served as Dive Master for a project to reintroduce two captive dolphins to the wild, ship salvage operations, and specimen collecting expeditions in every ocean and most of the world’s seas.

 
 
   
Grant Anderson Grant Anderson, P.E.
VP of Engineering, Co-founder
   

A founder of Paragon, Mr. Anderson has 22 years experience designing power, thermal and life support systems for human rated spacecraft. He is presently the Program Manager for the Paragon Lockheed Martin Orion program. He and his team are responsible for interface control and vehicle schematics, as well as specific design responsibility for the service module radiators and overall spacecraft ECLSS tubing. For the last 7 years, Mr. Anderson has lead the Thermal Control System and Environmental Control and Life Support System design for every human rated spacecraft program undertaken by Lockheed Martin. He is currently the Principal Investigator for Diver Breathing and Isolations Systems that allow Navy divers to work in contaminated water. This new diving technology is currently undergoing full up dive testing.

He is the PI for the development of a structurally integral CEV service module radiator technology, as well as single loop thermal control system fluids. The fluids are presently being tested in Paragon’s lab. Previous experience includes being Project Design Lead and Cost Account Manager for the ISS Solar Array Program at Lockheed Martin, the largest solar arrays ever built; Cabin design and build of the first CEV mockup, now on display at Johnson Space Center; Engineering lead for experimental flight hardware on five shuttle flights, two Mir missions, a Russian Progress, and the first commercial payload on ISS; he also lead the engineering on a flight qualified Micro-gravity Cell Culture System.

As Project Manager, he was in charge of setting up and staffing the Operations Department of Cargolifter, a large German airship development, which included crew training and simulation, cockpit design, operational scenario and mission rule development. Mr. Anderson holds two degrees from Stanford University in Mechanical Engineering (BS) and Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering (MS) and is a registered Professional Engineer.

 
 
   
Lance Bush Lance Bush, Ph.D.
Chief Operating Officer
   

Dr. Bush, at NASA for almost 20 years, designed and analyzed human spaceflight systems including future space shuttles, space station rescue vehicles, aerospace planes and Moon/Mars vehicles. At NASA Langley, he was one of a handful of engineers in the highly regarded Vehicle Analysis Branch (VAB) responsible for design and analysis of human spaceflight conceptual and preliminary designs. Dr. Bush was the chief structural engineer, with responsibilities in structural analysis, material selection, subsystem layout, configuration design, optimization, cost-analysis and project management. Like all members of the VAB, Dr. Bush was also a systems engineer who understood all other aspects of space vehicle design including aerodynamics, propulsion, performance, trajectory analysis, operations, maintenance, cost, and thermal analysis. The VAB team worked in a highly integrated environment, rapidly evolving designs across these disciplines. His experience base includes almost every major human spaceflight program dating back to the mid-1980’s including the HL-20, Shuttle II, Advanced Manned Launch System, National Launch System, and National Aerospace Plane. In support of developing new capabilities for the United States, he had extensive hands-on reviews and experience with US flight hardware and programs (Shuttle, Apollo, etc.) and also analyzed many foreign concepts to better understand the advantages of different configurations. In the course of this work he developed state-of-the-art software to perform optimal designs for safety and efficiency of human spaceflight vehicles that was coordinated with major industry partners (Boeing, Lockheed Martin). This included the first structural sizing post analysis routines. Dr. Bush developed and documented the first utilization of Taguchi optimization methods for space vehicle designs demonstrating that global optimizations could significantly reduce mass and therefore costs of vehicles.

Dr. Bush also has extensive senior management experience of human spaceflight programs at NASA Headquarters. He was appointed as the Manager for International Space Station Commercial Development at NASA Headquarters. In this position, which impacted key national and international issues, he coordinated across the key organizations in NASA leading a multi-talented team, reporting to the Associate Administrators for Human Spaceflight, External Affairs, Legislative Affairs, Public Affairs, and Biological and Physical Sciences. In this position Dr. Bush also crafted and chaired the International Space Station Multi-Lateral Commercialization Group, responsible for coordination of all commercial activities aboard the station and across the 16 partner countries and reporting to the Multi-lateral Control Board chaired by NASA’s Deputy Administrator. Dr. Bush developed policy and technical reports for, and responses to the US Congress and the White House regarding the space commercialization programs he was managing. Dr. Bush was appointed to oversee a brand management effort for NASA and the International Space Station. He created a NASA advisory panel including the world’s foremost authorities including the brand managers for Starbucks, Nike and Harley-Davidson, in addition to leaders with successful brands including the US Olympic Committee, and the National Parks Foundation. He also represented NASA as a space commercialization expert to international bodies including the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, United Nations, International Astronautical Federation and the Spanish Academy of Royal Science.

Dr. Bush earned a BS in Aerospace Engineering from Penn State University and a MS in Mechanical Engineering from Old Dominion University. In addition, he earned a Ph.D. in Technology Policy and Management from Penn State University focused on the national and international level policy making and management of space issues.

 
 
   
Joel Johnson Joel Johnson
CFO
   

Mr. Johnson has more than 10 years experience in a wide range of professional Accounting and Finance leadership positions.  Prior to joining Paragon Mr. Johnson spent three years at Raytheon Corporation in the Raytheon Missile Systems business unit where he maintained responsibility for the $4B+ Income Statement and was the lead interface for internal Earned Value Management Systems (EVMS) reporting.  Additionally Mr. Johnson worked in the Business Office as the Financial Planner of the Kinetic Energy Interceptor Program during some of its initial development and planning stages and in the Business Office of the Lockheed Martin/Raytheon Javelin Joint Venture.  Prior to joining Raytheon Corporation, Mr. Johnson was the Assistant Controller/Finance Manager at Columbia University’s Biosphere 2 Center overseeing all the Financial Operations of the organization.  Prior to the Biosphere 2 Center, Mr. Johnson spent several years in Big 5 Public Accounting working as an auditor for both Ernst & Young LLP and Deloitte & Touche LLP.  Mr. Johnson holds a BS in Business Administration from the University of Arizona with double majors in Accounting and Finance and is also a Certified Public Accountant. 

 
 
   
Volker Kern Volker Kern, Ph.D.
Director of Programs
   

Dr. Kern is an accomplished professional with experience in large-scale program/project management, process improvement, team leadership, R&D and technology development. He played a key role in securing a 7-year, $315 million NASA contract for Lockheed Martin, led 6 payloads on 2 Space Shuttle flights with team of 100+ scientists from US, Japan, France and Canada, co-managed $170 million-per-year program, coordinating operations at NASA field centers, and led an Independent Assessment team for the NASA HQ Contract Assurance Services (NCAS) Office.

While at NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC, Dr. Kern coordinated the proposal review cycle (NASA and International Life Science Research Announcement) including technical, tactical and scientific peer reviews. In addition, he facilitated the creation of a road map for the development of safe life support systems for long-term space exploration.

Dr. Kern received $2+ million grant funding from NASA and German Space Agency and served as Principal Investigator for experiments on 4 US Space Shuttle flights. He is the author of 21 peer-reviewed papers published in scientific journals and is recipient of the NASA Public Service Medal, 2004, Lockheed Martin Space Operations "Top Flight” Award, 2002 & 2003, and the Thora W. Halstead "Young Investigators Award," American Society for Gravitational and Space Biology, 2000. Dr. Kern received a MS in Plant Physiology and a Ph.D. in Gravitational Biology.

 
 
   
Henry Konopka Henry Konopka
Director of Product Realization & SQMA
   

Mr. Konopka is the Director of SQ&MA at Paragon, he has twenty-five years of diversified work experience in quality management, quality engineering, configuration management, system safety, production, test and flight operations.  He has been involved in manned flight, expendable, and commercial space flight programs.  Mr. Konopka holds a BS from the University of Southern Mississippi.

 
 
   
Jenna Elmer Jenna Elmer
Director of Support Services
   

Jenna Elmer, SPHR is the Director of Support Services and Facility Security Officer at Paragon Space Development Corporation.  Under Ms Elmer's leadership, Support Services provides Personnel Support, Security Support, and Administrative Services Support to Paragon.  As a member of the management team, Ms. Elmer has helped grow Paragon since 2001 and has worked diligently to create an award winning corporate culture that engenders the growth of each employee.  Ms. Elmer has been certified as an SPHR since 1999 and has over 10 years experience as an HR professional in the aerospace industry.  Ms. Elmer is a graduate of Northern Arizona University. 

 
 
   
Stephen Mitchell Stephen Mitchell
Director of Management Information Systems
   

Steve Mitchell (Director of Management Information System) has over 15 years of IT experience.  His extensive hands-on experience coupled with his leadership of IT organizations and people make him invaluable within Paragon.  Mr. Mitchell conceived and built Paragon’s IT system in support of the broad interests of Paragon’s projects and departments. This includes several company-wide software systems that are accessible by all of Paragon’s sites including Tucson, Denver and Houston. Mr. Mitchell’s consistent forward planning has provided a system poised for growth and Paragon has never experienced any work stoppages due to IT issues.

Prior to joining Paragon, Mr. Mitchell founded and led Uterman Computer Consultants, a privately held consulting firm that successfully served the small business markets in the San Francisco Bay Area.  He also assisted in the growth of Certain Software of San Francisco where he was responsible for all customer-facing production networks, email systems, and security as the Senior Network Engineer.

 
 

 

 
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