NASA eliminates chief scientist and other jobs at its headquarters
NASA is eliminating its chief scientist and other roles as part of efforts by the Trump administration to pare back staff at the agency’s Washington headquarters.
The cuts affect about 20 employees at NASA, including Katherine Calvin, the chief scientist and a climate science expert. The last day of work for Calvin and the other staff members will be April 10.
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That could be a harbinger of deeper cuts to NASA’s science missions and a greater emphasis on human spaceflight, especially to Mars. During President Donald Trump’s address to Congress last week, he said, “We are going to lead humanity into space and plant the American flag on the planet Mars and even far beyond.”
Trump did not give a timeline for astronauts to reach the red planet, and during an interview on Fox News on Sunday, he said it was not a top priority. “Is it No. 1 on my hit list?” he said. “No. It’s not really.”
He added, “It’d be a great achievement.”
The administration sent notice to Congress on Monday that NASA was abolishing the Office of the Chief Scientist and the Office of Technology, Policy and Strategy.
“This is shortsighted and hugely alarming,” Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., the ranking member on the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology, said in a statement. “Trump’s assault on science continues. If you wanted a playbook on how to lose to China in every technological race, this is it.”
Bhavya Lal, who served as the associate administrator for technology, policy and strategy when the office was created in 2021, said the purpose of the office was to provide “rigorous, quick-turn, data-driven and objective analysis to decision makers at NASA and the White House” on issues that often cut across federal agencies.
The issues included the economics of removing space debris and shaping how future activities on the moon would be governed. The work of the office “wasn’t just about getting to the moon,” Lal said. “It was about laying the groundwork for sustainable lunar exploration.”
The office also “made sure that NASA’s push for innovation was balanced with thoughtful consideration of its long-term impacts,” she said.
The eliminated positions include the chief technologist and chief economist for the agency, which were part of the technology, policy and strategy office. Chief technologist positions at NASA centers like the Johnson Space Center in Houston and the Kennedy Space Center in Florida are not affected, the notice said.
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