NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe to Resign
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Monday, Dec. 13, 2004
WASHINGTON Sean O'Keefe, who has spent three tumultuous
years running the nation's space program, is preparing to resign, a
government official says.
In a sign of possible future plans, a spokesman for Louisiana
State University said O'Keefe was a leading candidate to become the
$500,000-a-year chancellor of LSU's main campus in Baton Rouge.
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O'Keefe, 48, will meet on Thursday with a search committee
seeking to fill the job, the panel's chairman, Joel Tohline, said
Sunday.
O'Keefe's tenure as administrator of the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration included the loss of the shuttle Columbia
and its seven astronauts as well as budget battles and debates over
the future of American space travel.
The government official relayed word of O'Keefe's impending
resignation but declined to be identified because "the White House
still has to decide how it wants to announce his departure."
Despite O'Keefe's appointment with the search committee, the
official said his resignation was not linked to an offer from LSU
and probably would come earlier than the meeting in Louisiana.
White House spokeswoman Suzy DeFrancis had no comment on
O'Keefe's future.
NASA spokesman Bob Jacobs said, "When the administrator is
prepared to announce his future plans, he will tell us and the
public."
John Logsdon, director of George Washington University's space
policy institute and a member of the Columbia Accident
Investigation Board, said the sense in the Washington space
community, at least, was that O'Keefe had been eager to leave NASA.
"The general thought was that he was hoping for a different job
in the second administration, probably back in the national
security field, kind of his natural home, and that hasn't
happened," Logsdon said in a telephone interview. "But ... Sean
has always said that he likes the academic life."
LSU system president and acting chancellor William Jenkins "has
had his eye on O'Keefe for quite some time," said Charles Zewe,
spokesman for the university's Board of Supervisors.
Possible Replacements
The Florida Today newspaper in Melbourne, Fla., reported Sunday
that a White House team already is weighing five candidates and
plans to announce O'Keefe's departure and pick a new NASA
administrator by Thursday. It quoted an unidentified source it said was familiar with the selection process.
Leading the president's list was said to be Air Force Lt. Gen.
Ronald Kadish, who directed the effort to develop a system to
shield the country from a missile attack, the newspaper said. It
said the others under consideration were former Rep. Robert Walker,
R-Pa., and former shuttle astronauts Ron Sega, Charles Bolden and
Robert Crippen.
NASA was burdened with cost overruns when O'Keefe was named to
head the agency in 2001. The biggest crisis during his tenure was
the shuttle Columbia disaster on Feb. 1, 2003.
In April, a study of the post-Columbia effort to change NASA's
culture found many problems remaining and space agency employees
still afraid to speak up about safety.
"The leadership's got to take it on, starting with me,"
O'Keefe said then.
More recently, O'Keefe has been under fire for his insistence
that it was too risky to send astronauts to repair the popular Hubble
Space Telescope.
NASA also is struggling to return its aging shuttles, grounded
after the Columbia accident, to spaceflight. The agency has been
unable to make crucial improvements recommended by the Columbia
accident board.
O'Keefe has embraced a new space effort, envisioned by President
Bush, that would send manned missions to the moon and Mars.
O'Keefe taught business administration and management at
Syracuse and Pennsylvania State universities before becoming
secretary of the Navy under the first President Bush.
He became deputy director of the Office of Management and Budget
under the current President Bush before taking over NASA in January
2002. He is from New Orleans, about an hour's drive from Baton
Rouge.
LSU's position has been vacant since June, when Mark Emmert
left for the University of Washington. The Baton Rouge campus has
31,500 of the university system's 60,000 students.
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