NASA Layoffs 2024: Federal budget cuts have dealt a severe blow to NASA, with the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) reportedly laying off 100 contractors last week. The impact is felt most acutely on NASA's ambitious Mars Sample Return (MSR) mission, which now faces significant scaling back due to financial constraints.
JPL director Laurie Leshin informed staff last week that NASA's allocation for the MSR mission could be capped at just $300 million this year. This amounts to slightly over a third of the 2023 budget, which stood at $822 million, and less than a third of the budget initially requested by the Biden administration.
Budget uncertainties had already plagued the MSR mission, with reports in June highlighting escalating costs. In October, NASA initiated a reassessment of the mission's architecture after an independent review board flagged the existing plan as having an "unrealistic" budget and schedule.
Beyond the MSR mission, JPL now faces broader workforce impacts. Leshin stated in an internal email, "Adjusting to such a large budget cut in one year will be painful," hinting at the likelihood of layoffs. NASA has directed JPL to curtail a pivotal project within the MSR mission, leading to a hiring freeze and a pause in the work on the Capture, Containment, and Retrieval System designed to bring Mars samples back to Earth.
The MSR mission, a joint effort with the European Space Agency, involves sending samples collected by NASA's Perseverance rover into Martian orbit. A separate spacecraft would then retrieve these samples for return to Earth in the early to mid-2030s.
Lawmakers have expressed dissatisfaction with the cuts, with Representative Adam Schiff (D-CA) criticizing NASA's decision to reduce funding for the MSR mission before the completion of the appropriations process. Despite these setbacks, lawmakers overseeing NASA's budget have allocated the requested $7.91 billion for the agency's Moon-related initiatives for the current fiscal year.
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