Don't know if, in the face of all the human tragedy, many have noticed what 
more harm might be done
to the already-going-through-it's-death-rattles shuttle program:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9176225/

Updated: 3:07 p.m. ET Sept. 2, 2005
NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, where space shuttle external 
tanks are constructed,
appears to have escaped major damage from Hurricane Katrina. 

But it's not known just how many employees at the site — operated by Lockheed 
Martin Space Systems
for NASA — are missing, evacuated from the area, and are now without housing.

Lockheed Martin’s main Internet site is now reformatted and headlined with 
response information for
the firm's employees affected by Hurricane Katrina. It carries a hotline number 
that operates from 8
a.m. to 7 p.m. ET weekdays, and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekends. A message posted on 
the Web site said
there were "no injuries reported" but the company was "still confirming status 
of some employees."

"The facility will re-open no earlier than Monday, September 26," the company 
says.

The site calls out: "Let us know if you’re OK … If you are a Lockheed Martin 
employee affected by
Hurricane Katrina, we’d like to know you’re OK." 

The site requests company workers to call the hotline or send an e-mail listing 
their name, business
unit, a phone number and an address where that individual can be reached. It 
also says that several
locations with Lockheed Martin employees were affected by the hurricane.

Operators at a Lockheed Martin Hurricane Katrina Employee Assistance Hotline 
are assisting in
answering employee questions, or guiding them to the appropriate resources for 
assistance.

Workforce disruption
Harry Wadsworth, a Lockheed Martin spokesman for Michoud operations, said an 
emergency team at the
external tank facility has been clearing debris.

"Ours is a fairly open area with buildings. There are not a lot of trees, which 
is probably good,"
Wadsworth told Space.com in a phone interview. He is positioned three hours 
away from Michoud at
this time, in Lafayette, La.

Like many others that work at the Michoud facilities, Wadsworth also has no 
idea whether or not his
own home survived the horrific blow to the area created by Hurricane Katrina. 

"I’m hoping that my house is dry. I would be lucky if it is," Wadsworth said. 
His wife is a nurse at
one of the local hospitals, part of an essential team that has been in the New 
Orleans area since
Monday.

"People are scattered all over in various cities … places where they took 
refuge from the storm with
their families," Wadsworth said.

Regarding the disruption of the workforce at the facility, Wadsworth said that 
this remains an
unknown. 

"It will be one of the challenges … to get employees temporary housing, 
apartments," or other types
of shelter, Wadsworth added. "That’s something that a lot of the companies in 
New Orleans are
looking into."

Water, power issues
The Lockheed Martin work force is between 2,000 and 2,100 employees at the NASA 
Michoud Assembly
Facility, Wadsworth said. 

Wadsworth said that it is doubtful very many people have been able to get back 
and check on their
homes, although some areas are open. For those able to return to the hard-hit 
area at this time,
there is no water availability, power or air conditioning to combat the 
98-degree outside
temperature, he said.

The 832-acre NASA Michoud Assembly Facility is located in New Orleans, 
Louisiana some 24 miles (38
kilometers) from New Orleans International Airport and 15 miles (24 kilometers) 
from the French
Quarter.

The Michoud facility uses a deep-water access port for the transportation of 
the large external
tanks by barge across the Gulf of Mexico, around Florida and up to Kennedy 
Space Center.

Lockheed Martin’s toll-free Hurricane Katrina Employee Assistance Hotline for 
employees is at (800)
563-8442.
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