Archive for the 'NRO Information' Category

NRO Chief Aims to Restore Technology Development Funding


By Turner Brinton

04/14/10 09:02 PM ET

SpaceNews

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The budget for science and technology development programs at the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) has been drastically reduced in recent years, and the spy satellite agency’s top official will push to reverse that trend starting with the 2012 federal budget request.

NRO Director Bruce Carlson, a retired Air Force general, now has nine months under his belt leading the development and operation of the nation’s classified spy satellites. In that time, he has focused on some of the agency’s toughest problems, including a relatively young and inexperienced work force and bottlenecks at the U.S. satellite launching ranges.

Though the NRO’s budget is classified, Carlson has said funding for science and technology development programs was cut in half over the last five years. The NRO’s 2012 budget request will begin down a path to fully restoring that funding, Carlson said April 14 at the National Space Symposium here. He did not say whether that correlates to requesting a top-line budget increase for the NRO.

“Over that half a decade, through a number of reductions and taxes and other things, that investment has slackened, and that’s the seed corn of the future,” Carlson said. “We just simply cannot allow that continued erosion in our science and technology base. So when I submit my 2012 budget, it will have a road map to get us up to the level we have historically been at the National Reconnaissance Office.”

Like other U.S. defense and space agencies, the NRO has struggled with cost growth on its satellite programs in recent years, which has exacerbated the budget pressures it faces.

Meanwhile, the NRO over the next 18 months will pursue its most aggressive launch campaign of the last 25 years, Carlson said. This will be a challenge because the nation’s space launch capability has been scaled back in many ways, he said.

“There are a number of very large and very critical reconnaissance satellites going to orbit in the next year, year-and-a-half,” Carlson said. “We simply have to get these off and get them off on time.

“Now we will do that at a time when the launch infrastructure is not what it used to be. Through a series of conscious decisions, this country has downsized the industrial base in the launch business. We’ve downsized the number of locations from which we can launch. We’ve downsized the number of crews to take care of and operate that equipment. We have literally no or very little backup capability in the launch business.”

Moreover, he said, the U.S. government has “made national decisions to spend very little money on the development of new facilities and the recapitalization of the ones that we have. We’re not building new engines. We’re not building new rocket cores. In fact, we’re not even spending money to upgrade the ones that we have.”

Carlson said the NRO is working with Air Force Space Command to stabilize or potentially expand U.S. launch infrastructure, but he provided no specifics.

The NRO is also making changes to how it is staffed. Established as a hybrid Defense Department-intelligence community organization, the NRO is staffed by military and intelligence personnel on loan from their respective organizations. This is sometimes troublesome for program continuity, so Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair recently approved a program that will allow for a limited number of personnel to be directly employed by the NRO, Carlson said.

In addition, the NRO has initiated a scholarship program in which it pays for university graduates with general science and engineering degrees to go back to school for space-specific degrees. In exchange, each student will owe six years of service to the NRO after graduation. The office recently selected its first class of four scholars, to be followed by six next year and eight in the years after that, Carlson said

ManTech gains rare NRO ‘non-conflict status’


The agency program seeks to ensure the integrity of the contracting acquisition process
By David Hubler
Jan 21, 2010

ManTech International Corp. recently became one of only a handful of government contractors to receive certification from the National Reconnaissance Office as a “non-conflicted” services provider, according to a company announcement.

The agency program negotiates Organizational Conflict of Interest (OCI) agreements with government contractors to ensure the integrity of their acquisition process, ManTech said.

An NRO spokeswoman told Washington Technology that a check of agency files showed that in addition to ManTech, Computer Sciences Corp. subsidiary Welkin Associates Ltd., a Chantilly, Va., provider of management tools to the intelligence community, and Elantech Inc., a Greenbelt, Md., government contractor, also have received OCI certification from the agency. More….

Cloud Expo Keynoter Undertakes New Role as CIO of NRO


By Jeremy Geelan

Jill Tummler Singer has been appointed to serve as the Chief Information Officer (CIO) for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), effective 1 January 2010. Ms. Singer previously served as the Deputy CIO (DCIO) at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), in which capacity gave the keynote address at SYS-CON’s 1st Government IT Conference & Expo (www.GovITExpo.com).

As NRO’s CIO, Ms. Singer will be responsible for ensuring the NRO Information and Information Technology Enterprise is provisioned in an effective and efficient manner. She will also be more engaged in external activities, to include serving on the Intelligence Community (IC) CIO council, fulfilling her duties as an Information Sharing Executive, and serving as the Privacy Officer.

As CIA’s DCIO, Ms. Singer’s primary responsibilities centered on leading Enterprise Information Technology initiatives, implementing strategies through strong IT governance structures, and managing several office and staff organizations. She encouraged significant participation from mission partners to set priorities and make resource allocation decisions using collaborative, accountable, and transparent approaches. More….

NGA Awards Three Contracts for Radar Satellite Data (Source: Space News)


The U.S. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) awarded contracts to three companies to provide commercial radar satellite data, each of which will rely on foreign-owned satellites because no U.S. firm operates spacecraft collecting the imagery NGA seeks. EADS North America of Arlington, Va., Lockheed Martin Space Systems of Sunnyvale, Calif., and MDA Geospatial Services of Canada were each awarded indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contracts worth as much as $85 million over five years to supply the NGA with synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data, according to a Dec. 29 NGA press release. More….

Struggling Spy Satellite Agency Tries to Right Itself


January 2010

By Stew Magnuson

SAN ANTONIO, Texas – The National Reconnaissance Office, the agency responsible for developing and launching the U.S. fleet of spy satellites, is embarking on an ambitious plan to right itself after years of cost overruns and program cancellations.

But two powerful senators have opposed the office’s plans to launch the next generation of classified spacecraft. Personnel issues, namely a shortage of qualified personnel, may also impede progress.

Nevertheless, retired Air Force Gen. Bruce Carlson, appointed last year as the director, vowed to put the NRO back on track. “We are going to turn the corner and we are going to begin to deliver things on time and on cost,” he said at the Geo-Int conference.

The NRO cancelled in 2005 an ambitious plan to upgrade the satellites that provide high-resolution photos and other imagery to the defense and intelligence communities, called the future imagery architecture. The electro-optical sensors aboard these spacecraft collect data in the electromagnetic spectrum of wavelengths — visible light, infrared and ultraviolet radiation. The FIA program, which ran into technical difficulties, cost taxpayers billions. How much is not certain since the NRO’s budget is classified.

Details of its next-generation electro-optical system are also classified. However, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, and ranking member, Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., have proposed an alternative system, one they said will be less expensive. Both also sit on the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that oversees defense spending. More….


Archive of Posts

Categories

Calendar of Posts

June 2024
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Top Rated Posts

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 5 other subscribers