Our astronaut, our shuttle?
Charles Bolden gives Houston a huge edge in the decrepit old space shuttle race
Much fuss has been made about the "stiff" competition for the two remaining space shuttles set to be retired by NASA this year.
The Discovery is headed to the Smithsonian, which leaves the Atlantis and the Endeavor shuttles with some 20 cities hoping to house a space shuttle exhibit.
Houston seems like an obvious choice because ... it is. The Johnson Space Center houses mission control and the entire Astronaut Corps. It's called "Space City" for a reason. Still, people seem worried — pointing out that Austin has offered more than $28 million toward repairing and delivering one of the aging artifacts.
Did we forget that it's NASA Administrator Charles Bolden who gets to make the final call? Who has lived in Clear Lake for years and years? And, who the Chronicle reports, assured Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee that the Johnson Space Center "has all the assets that NASA wants?"
Don't worry Houston, we've got circumstance on our side. We'll more than likely find out this summer that we get to spend $50 million preparing and transporting the shuttle to a new 53,000-square-foot addition to the JSC.
Yay!