Joshua Buck
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1100
jbuck@nasa.gov
WASHINGTON -- NASA and the
Transportation Department's Maritime Administration (MARAD) signed a memorandum
of understanding Aug. 21 to transfer NASA's solid rocket booster recovery ship,
M/V Liberty Star, to the National Defense Reserve Fleet for use as a training
vessel at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point, N.Y.
"Liberty Star served NASA well
during the Space Shuttle Program," said Robert Lightfoot, acting associate
administrator for NASA. "We know it will greatly benefit the Kings Point
midshipmen, and we're proud that Liberty Star will continue to serve the United
States with distinction."
With the end of the Space Shuttle
Program, the two agencies worked together to ensure Liberty Star could continue
service as a training vessel for midshipmen at the Merchant Marine Academy.
This agreement is mutually beneficial for NASA and MARAD. This ship will serve
as a training vessel at the academy, providing significant merchant marine
training value to Kings Point midshipmen as the vessel has dynamic positioning,
modern towing capabilities and other features that will expand training
opportunities. NASA will continue to have access to Liberty Star if the agency
requires its use and it is available.
"This agreement is a win-win for
both Kings Point and NASA," said Maritime Administrator David Matsuda.
"The ship's high tech equipment and real world capabilities closely mirror
what graduates will see entering the maritime work force."
Liberty Star was launched in 1981 and
served as one of two recovery vessels for retrieving the space shuttle's solid
rocket boosters, which were jettisoned about 2 minutes after launch from NASA's
Kennedy Space Center in Florida. NASA still is working to identify a suitable
new use for M/V Freedom Star, the other recovery ship.
For information about NASA and agency
programs, visit http://www.nasa.gov.
For information about the U.S. Merchant
Marine Academy, visit http://www.usmma.edu/.
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