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News Articles
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Xavier Gallegos /
Tucson Citizen
Employees of Paragon Space Development Corp. in Tucson watch President
Bush's announcement of an expansion of the space program. |
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Aerospace Industry Here on Cloud
9
By ROMANO CEDILLOS
Tucson Citizen
TUCSON, Ariz. — Cheers erupted yesterday at a
local aerospace company as President Bush announced his vision to send
Americans "headed into the cosmos."
"It went as we anticipated," said Taber MacCallum,
chief executive officer of Paragon Space Development Corp. "The president said
all the right things."
Paragon designs and produces aerspace hardware and
life-support systems used in the space shuttles and the International Space
Station, as well as by the U.S. military. It stands to gain greatly from Bush's
space initiative, which sets a new and invigorated course for America's space
program.
"Tucson has a strong connection to the lunar-Mars
exploration community," said MacCallum. "The president's plan is going to bring
hundreds of millions of dollars to our economy."
Paragon plans to accept the space challenge by
increasing its staff of full-time aerospace engineers to 12 or more from six by
the end of the year.
Most of the excitement at the small company stemmed
from Bush's vow to retire the aged fleet of space shuttles after the
completeion of the International Space Station in 2010. He aims to increase
NASA's budget by $1 billion over the next five years, but curtail its projects
and refocus its efforts in order to establish an American colony on the moon.
The colony would be used as a launch base for a Mars expedition.
To do this, the proposed Orbital Space Vehicle, now
being designed, woud have to be reorganized into a deep-space Crew Expedition
Vehicle, MacCallum said.
"Paragon hardware will be on those missions to the
moon and Mars," he siad. "We'll begin with investing in the research needed to
improve life-support system technologies for the Crew Exploration Vehicle...
making them lighter weight and lowering the cost."
The company plans to pitch its ideas to NASA,
hoping that the space agency will see the benefits of working jointly to design
and produce the vehicle's systems, MacCallum said.
Bush's plan is "an incredibly bold move" that will
have "a tremendous impact on our economy and all six of Tucson's industry
clusters, president of Tucson's Industry and Aerospace Cluster, which
represents the views and concerns of aerospace businesses to lawmakers.
The question, Garza Fernandez said, is how quickly
the funds will be allocated by Congress.
"Federally funding a program can take two to five
years, but hopefully this will be quicker in order to keep it on Bush's
fast-track plan," she said.
"Most everyone involved in Tucson's space industry
is excited about Bush's announcement," said Gary Peterson, technology adviser
for Beault Research Organization, a Tucson optics developer.
Although the optics industry benefits primarily
from unmanned space flights, Peterson said, Breault engineers are contracted to
NASA, and the agency uses Breault-designed software in many space programs.
"This is a plus for us," Peterson said.
The article appeared in the Tucson Citizen on January 15th, 2004.
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