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NASA’s head of human spaceflight resigns days before historic launch of astronauts

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Brevard County, Fla

The chief of NASA’s human spaceflight directorate resigned Monday, a surprising development from an agency scheduled to launch astronauts from American soil next week for the first time since 2011.
In a statement issued Tuesday, NASA confirmed Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations Doug Loverro resigned from his position on Monday. He had just been selected for the role in October.
The agency did not disclose why Loverro, previously of the secretive National Reconnaissance Office, decided to leave the team that is on the cusp of meeting human spaceflight goals.
The shakeup comes just a week before Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley launch from Kennedy Space Center on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, a milestone set to fill the gap a lack of American-led human spaceflight has left behind. The veteran astronauts are set to launch from pad 39A at 4:33 p.m. May 27.
It remains unclear whether or not his departure will have any impacts on the mission timeline. According to a Politico-obtained message Loverro sent to his team, “personal actions” were the force that drove the departure. He told the publication it was not due to a disagreement between him and NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine, but rather a “mistake.” “My leaving is because of my personal actions, not anything we accomplished together,” he told Politico.
His acting replacement: Ken Bowersox, currently the deputy HEO administrator, who is a former astronaut and retired Navy aviator. He also spent several years at SpaceX.
“Bowersox has previously led HEO in a time of transition, and NASA has the right leadership in place to continue making progress on the Artemis and Commercial Crew programs,” NASA said in a statement. Former space shuttle astronaut and current SpaceX consultant Garrett Reisman said via Twitter the timing is not ideal, but added that Bowersox is capable of rising to the task.—AP

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