A presidential panel announced yesterday that NASA’s space shuttle program will likely need to be extended beyond its retirement deadline this time next year in order to finish the space station and that the first Orion flight might be delayed a year longer. This is a decision that is good for the space station and shuttle programs, but a bad one for the Constellation program.
NASA shouldn’t be rushed to finish the space station to meet an arbitrary deadline that was set in 2004. While that would be nice, safety would be compromised at this point, with the likelihood that if NASA were to meet that deadline, 2010 could be one of their busiest years on record for launching humans into space. After seeing the Challenger and Columbia accidents, this is perhaps the wisest decision they can make, since both accidents originated out of complacency and a drive to get things done fast rather than right.
On the other hand for Orion, that means our return to the Moon by 2020 will be jeopardized. The more I look at the issue the more I realize that the current plan using an Ares I rocket and an Orion capsule is the wrong way to go. NASA seriously needs to utilize private industry on this one. The Falcon 9 rocket already exists, though it has yet to be tested, but already has a capsule designed to fit it, all that’s missing is the money to build one. Furthermore, an Atlas V or Delta IV rocket could be modified to carry an Orion-like or Dragon-like capsule for far cheaper than reinventing a whole new launch system.

That isn’t to say NASA should be out of the game completely. Let them devote the bulk of their remaining resources to the Ares V rocket and Altair lander. They would still be paying for the system, but they could get a rocket and spacecraft to the launchpad faster if they pursue a commercial route, all they need is permission from Congress and the President.
If we want to make it to the Moon before 2020 and beat the Chinese there, private industry needs to play a larger role. The big standard contractors like Boeing, Lockheed, and Northrop Grumman are going to keep doing things the same way if NASA doesn’t include the smaller start-ups like SpaceX in the game more than they already are. The cost of spaceflight has actually gone up since the Apollo missions and it’s high time that changes.
I would urge that one of the first things that NASA’s new administrator Charles Boldin do is change the way that NASA deals with contractors and move control of more standard missions to the space station to companies like SpaceX and retain control of riskier missions like those to the Moon and Mars.

The first reason that I support a 2031 Mars shot is that, unlike NASA’s current policy with regards to Project Constellation, this sets a time frame by which to aim for the Red Planet. “Moon, Mars, and Beyond” is a nice catch phrase and slogan, but that’s currently NASA’s only official “timetable” for going to Mars, and that it will be sometime in the future after returning to the Moon. Assigning a date over 10 years after we should have made a return to the Moon is a reasonable leap in technology, provided the flow of funding remains steady or is even increased for NASA.