Topic: obama's idea of getting more jobs...
mightymoe's photo
Fri 10/01/10 01:00 PM
Edited by mightymoe on Fri 10/01/10 01:01 PM
Kennedy Space Center, Florida (CNN) -- After 31 years and two months at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, John Bundy is joining the ranks of the unemployed.

He showed up for his last day at 7 a.m. Friday, turned in his employee badge and then left to go hunting.

"I'm very proud I was a part of this," he said. "There were some challenging times, but I am glad I was part of this team."

He is one of more than 1,200 United Space Alliance employees whose were laid off October 1: coincidentally, the same day NASA began operating in 1958.

Bundy, 50, started his career as a technician on the shuttle thermal protection system and then worked his way up to manager for Kennedy Space Center's orbital processing facility.

Now, he's updating his résumé and taking welding classes at Brevard Community College in hopes of finding another job.


McGinnis and the others who walked out the door of the Kennedy Space Center on Friday are some of the nearly 9,000 NASA employees whose jobs will be cut as the shuttle program nears its end.

Some of those jobs may be extended if President Obama signs the $19 billion budget for the space agency, passed by Congress this week, that authorizes an additional shuttle launch.

Congress passes NASA budget

But the extension comes too late for Bundy and the other United Space Alliance employees.

The ending came as no surprise: Six years ago, President George W. Bush announced that 2010 would be the last year for the shuttle program.

Because many NASA workers like Bundy have specialized jobs, it will be hard to transition from the space agency to other employment.

With the help of federal funding, Florida has set up a transitional program to help aerospace workers prepare for new employment.

Read more coverage from CNN affiliate WKMG

Many of the NASA employees seeking employment help are "like deer in the headlights," said Lisa Rice, president of Brevard Workforce, which runs the federally funded aerospace transitional program.

"First reaction: 'Where do I go? What do I do?' " she said, describing NASA employees' responses after being laid off.

Job loss, Rice explains, is kind of like a grieving process. With the help of the transitional program, aerospace employees are lead through the process of résumé writing, sharpening interviewing techniques and developing skills needed for new jobs.

Many Kennedy Space Center workers, like Bundy, have not written a résumé for more than 30 years. Transitional instructors teach workers how to include decades of experience into a one- or two-page résumé.

"You need to have a plan B," said transitional program director Judy Blanchard. "The shuttle is retiring, and the end is inevitable."

Boeing aerospace engineer Juan Vazquez took the warning to heart, having worked on shuttles for 23 years.

This year, he opened two laundromats that he runs in his spare time. To ensure that he would succeed as a small-business owner, Vazquez completed the transitional program's entrepreneur training class.

"I grew up on shuttle. I've been working on shuttle since I was 18 years old," Vazquez said. "I pretty much live and breathe this stuff. I really enjoy what I do."

Other shuttle workers have had a hard time coming to terms with the idea that there is no definite replacement for shuttle, according to Rice.

When Bush announced that the shuttle program would end in 2010, he said it would be replaced by the Constellation program to return man to the moon and beyond.
I don't know how to put 31 years into a sentence.
--John Bundy, former NASA employee

Many shuttle workers held out hope that they could find new jobs in the Constellation program, which would have included two new rocket systems and a new crew module to transport astronauts into space.

From the beginning, Constellation was plagued by underfunding. This year, Obama killed the program's future funding because of budget overruns and because it was behind schedule.

That could affect more than 20,000 workers along Florida's space coast, according to Rice.

"We are looking at 9,000 aerospace workers who will be affected with another 14,000 indirectly affected in community," she said.

For Bundy, walking away from Kennedy Space Center was not as hard as he thought, he said Friday morning. He praised United Space Alliance for going "above and beyond to help their people adjust, from job placement to constant job fairs."

But it's more about just losing a job, he explained.

"I have a lot of friends, a lot of teammates," Bundy said. "I wish them all the best, and I'm going to miss them all."

TonkaTruck3's photo
Fri 10/01/10 01:34 PM
Yep, another American being put in the place where Oblowme wants him to be.

markc48's photo
Fri 10/01/10 01:42 PM
Well god forbid they end the war. Or who knows how many soldiers would lose there jobs.huh

mightymoe's photo
Fri 10/01/10 01:56 PM
barry wants the space program to be a world thing, where the US is part of it... some much for US pride, and all the EXPERIENCED nasa workers going to go overseas to work... Barry is a dork, plain and simple... no wonder he is at a 39% approval rating right now....
this kinda makes me sad, for 2 reasons... we have an idiot muslim as president, and he is slowly trying to ruin America.

metalwing's photo
Fri 10/01/10 03:37 PM
"Houston, we have a problem!"

The Manned Spaceflight Center in Houston is being hit much harder than the Florida launching site since ending the manned space program ends training for the astronauts and all the systems they are trained to operate.

Obama shifted some money to Florida in a Pie-in-the-sky fake plan that is supposed to help private industry take over the manned space program. No company has the resources to do that. Obama apparently felt like shifting some money to Florida might mitigate the negative effect to the degree that Florida could still swing democratic in the next election cycle as it has trended over the years due mainly to the large number of liberals who move there to retire each year.

Texas, on the other hand, is not likely to turn Democratic any time soon so the massive job losses at the Johnson Space Center wouldn't hurt the democrats anyway. Obama does not mention Houston in his speeches about the future of the space program. Texas senator Kay Baily Hutchinson led the fight to provide the funding for extra space shuttle missions for which Obama is already taking credit.

It should be noted that all the manned spaceflight money deleted by Obama was not a cost saving or budget balancing effort. All funds were earmarked to transfer to inner city child care. By transferring money to such a "heartfelt" direction it forces opposition to his plan to appear either "heartless" for taking money "away" from inner city child care or "budget busting" to add money back from nowhere.

mightymoe's photo
Fri 10/01/10 08:12 PM
yea, they are pissed in clear lake about that... the whole town may go under. that is where the space center and offices are located, just south of Houston. here is what really pisses me of tho...

Many shuttle workers held out hope that they could find new jobs in the Constellation program, which would have included two new rocket systems and a new crew module to transport astronauts into space.

From the beginning, Constellation was plagued by underfunding. This year, Obama killed the program's future funding because of budget overruns and because it was behind schedule.