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More NASA centers shift to mandatory telework

More NASA centers shift to mandatory telework

WASHINGTON — NASA centers in California, Louisiana and Mississippi have instituted mandatory telework for all but mission-essential personnel in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans announced March 16 that it was moving to “Stage 3” of a NASA response framework to the pandemic. At Stage 3, employees are instructed to work remotely, with only mission-essential personnel allowed access to the site. Travel is also restricted to that deemed mission-essential by the agency.
In an email to facility staff, Robert Champion, director of Michoud, said that no employees had been diagnosed with the coronavirus disease COVID-19. Instead, he said he decided to institute mandatory telework because more than 100 cases of COVID-19 had been diagnosed in the area, raising concerns of growing community transmission of the disease.
Similarly, the Stennis Space Center in Mississippi has moved to Stage 3, instituting mandatory telework. No employees of the center have been diagnosed yet with the disease.
NASA officials had already been discussing special measures at Stennis, where the first Space Launch System core stage is being prepared for its “Green Run” static-fire test later this year. Doug Loverro, NASA associate administrator for human exploration and operations, said at a March 13 meeting of the NASA Advisory Council’s science committee that agency officials, including its chief medical officer, had discussed performing “temperature checks” of those working on SLS there “to make sure we don’t have the entire workforce down for a month.”
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, announced late March 16 that it was instituting mandatory teleworking effective March 17. JPL had previously advised employees that they were “highly encouraged” to start teleworking on that date, but decided to make it mandatory.
As with Michoud and Stennis, JPL has yet to report any employees diagnosed with COVID-19. The move, the center said in a statement, is made “out of an abundance of caution” given the spread of the disease.
JPL is run for NASA by the California Institute of Technology, which, like many other universities, has canceled in-person classes through the rest of the academic year, instituting remote learning. The university has canceled all on- and off-campus events through June 12, the end of the spring term.
Two other NASA centers, Ames Research Center in California and the Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama, had previously decided to go to Stage 3 after one employee at each center had been diagnosed with COVID-19.
In addition, several California countries in the San Francisco Bay Area, including Santa Clara county, where Ames is located, are under “shelter in place” orders restricting all but essential movement. Ames, in a March 16 statement, said it was rescinding any previous approvals for people to work on-site, limiting access to only personnel needed for the center’s safety and security. The mandatory telework order at Ames will remain in effect through at least April 7.




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