WASHINGTON, Dec. 9, 2004

Feds To Regulate Space Tourism

Countdown To Regulated Out-Of-This World Vacations

    • American Dennis Tito, the world's first paying space tourist, just before taking off in a Soyuz rocket in April 2001.

      American Dennis Tito, the world's first paying space tourist, just before taking off in a Soyuz rocket in April 2001.  (AP)

    • SpaceShipOne, a privately funded craft, has successfully exited the Earth's atmosphere in test flights.

      SpaceShipOne, a privately funded craft, has successfully exited the Earth's atmosphere in test flights.  (AP)

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(AP)  Outer space could become the final frontier of tourism under legislation passed Wednesday by the Senate to regulate commercial human spaceflight.

The bill, approved by voice vote in the final minutes of the 108th Congress, would authorize the Federal Aviation Administration to issue permits allowing private spacecraft operators to blast paying passengers into space.

The agency would also regulate the young industry, which was invigorated by the successful flights of a privately financed manned rocket over California's Mojave Desert in October.

While laws exist to regulate private-sector space endeavors such as satellite launches, there is no legal jurisdiction for regulating commercial human spaceflight. Even without one, entrepreneurs have announced plans to offer private space flights within several years, and wealthy thrill-seekers are plunking down deposits.

The Commercial Space Launch Amendments Act of 2004, by Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., passed the House last month and will now go to the president for his signature.

"This is a great victory for the future of America's space efforts," Rohrabacher said. "The people who will invest the type of big dollars necessary to make this a major new step in mankind's ascent into space have been waiting for the government to lay down the regulatory regime and set the rules of the game, and this is the first major step towards doing that."

Senate passage came only after the bill stalled several times because of disagreements over how much safety protections to offer potential space tourists and crew.

The final version allows the Federal Aviation Administration to begin issuing regulations to protect the safety of passengers and crew only eight years after the bill becomes law. Before then, the agency may restrict design features or operating practices only if they've resulted in a serious or fatal injury to passengers or crew, or caused an unsafe unplanned event.

Rohrabacher and industry lobbyists contended that space tourists must fly at their own risk, and that more stringent safety regulations would stifle innovation. Some Democrats had pushed for tougher safety regulations.

The bill requires passengers to be informed of the risks involved, and the Federal Aviation Administration may issue regulations to protect the non-flying public's health and property and the country's national security and foreign policy interests.


© MMIV The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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