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Why is JPL Hiring?

I’ve read that JPL is hiring about 100 new college graduates. This is a
huge amount of new people compared with other NASA centers.  Does anyone
know why?  Are there any new programs that JPL is embarking upon?

posted by admin in Uncategorized and have Comments (10)






10 Responses to “Why is JPL Hiring?”

  1. admin says:

    Steve Podleski wrote:
    > I’ve read that JPL is hiring about 100 new college graduates. This is a
    > huge amount of new people compared with other NASA centers.  Does anyone
    > know why?  Are there any new programs that JPL is embarking upon?

    A huge chunk of the original people from the 60′s are retiring or due
    to retire.  30-35yrs old to get a PHD, plus 35 years = retirement age.

  2. admin says:

    Joseph Oberlander wrote:
    > Steve Podleski wrote:

    > > I’ve read that JPL is hiring about 100 new college graduates. This is a
    > > huge amount of new people compared with other NASA centers.  Does anyone
    > > know why?  Are there any new programs that JPL is embarking upon?

    > A huge chunk of the original people from the 60′s are retiring or due
    > to retire.  30-35yrs old to get a PHD, plus 35 years = retirement age.

    Joseph,

    Thanks for replying.

    Many, if not most of the NASA centers are in a similar situation but are only
    hiring at most a dozen people per center.  For some reason, JPL’s hiring is
    an order of magnitude greater.

  3. admin says:

    In article <3FAA4EFE.28BAE…@worldnett.att.net>,
    Steve Podleski  <steve_podle…@worldnett.att.net> wrote:

    >> A huge chunk of the original people from the 60′s are retiring or due
    >> to retire.  30-35yrs old to get a PHD, plus 35 years = retirement age.

    >Many, if not most of the NASA centers are in a similar situation but are only
    >hiring at most a dozen people per center.  For some reason, JPL’s hiring is
    >an order of magnitude greater.

    Possibly some combination of sheer accident — a bunch of people who
    happen to retire at the same time — and the fact that JPL is not exactly
    a NASA center, and may have more freedom to deal with the problem.  (JPL
    is technically part of Caltech, operated by them as contractors to NASA.)

    MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec    | Henry Spencer
    pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well.  | he…@spsystems.net

  4. admin says:

    Steve Podleski wrote:
    > I’ve read that JPL is hiring about 100 new college graduates. This is a
    > huge amount of new people compared with other NASA centers.  Does anyone
    > know why?  Are there any new programs that JPL is embarking upon?

    I am told that JPL is run by Cal Tech as a contractor. This probably means
    that they have more freedom in hiring than NASA.

  5. admin says:

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    Henry Spencer wrote:
    > In article <3FAA4EFE.28BAE…@worldnett.att.net>,
    > Steve Podleski  <steve_podle…@worldnett.att.net> wrote:
    > >> A huge chunk of the original people from the 60′s are retiring or due
    > >> to retire.  30-35yrs old to get a PHD, plus 35 years = retirement age.

    > >Many, if not most of the NASA centers are in a similar situation but are only
    > >hiring at most a dozen people per center.  For some reason, JPL’s hiring is
    > >an order of magnitude greater.

    > Possibly some combination of sheer accident — a bunch of people who
    > happen to retire at the same time — and the fact that JPL is not exactly
    > a NASA center, and may have more freedom to deal with the problem.  (JPL
    > is technically part of Caltech, operated by them as contractors to NASA.)
    > —
    > MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec    | Henry Spencer
    > pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well.  | he…@spsystems.net

    Henry,

    Just read your post after posting my followup.  The fact the JPL is run by
    Caltech explains much of the difference in hiring numbers.

  6. admin says:

    Steve Podleski wrote:
    > Steve Podleski wrote:

    >>I’ve read that JPL is hiring about 100 new college graduates. This is a
    >>huge amount of new people compared with other NASA centers.  Does anyone
    >>know why?  Are there any new programs that JPL is embarking upon?

    > I am told that JPL is run by Cal Tech as a contractor. This probably means
    > that they have more freedom in hiring than NASA.

    In fact, only 20-25% of the people at JPL even work on NASA/government
    projects.  My neighbor worked there for 30+ years and never had a
    security clearance.  His last projects were looking for spacejunk
    and something about weather/ocean patterns.  Completely removed from
    the larger projects.

    My friend’s father – he did some NASA projects – a few satelites
    and such, but most of his time he did engineering for them of other
    projects.

  7. admin says:

    On Thu, 06 Nov 2003 22:49:31 GMT, Joseph Oberlander

    <josephoberlan…@earthlink.net> wrote:
    > In fact, only 20-25% of the people at JPL even work on NASA/government
    > projects.  My neighbor worked there for 30+ years and never had a
    > security clearance.  His last projects were looking for spacejunk
    > and something about weather/ocean patterns.  Completely removed from
    > the larger projects.

    JPL is run _for_ NASA by CalTech.  It’s part of NASA and the work
    people do there is on NASA projects.  By definition.  Space debris and
    weather and oceanic patterns are very much within NASA’s charter, you
    know.

    I worked for NASA for 30+ years and would not have needed a clearance
    for a lot of the work I did, probably half.  There are NASA employees
    who will never need a clearance in their entire career, too.

    Mary


    Mary Shafer   Retired aerospace research engineer
    mil…@qnet.com

  8. admin says:

    On Thu, 06 Nov 2003 21:44:34 -0800, Mary Shafer <mil…@qnet.com>
    wrote:

    >I worked for NASA for 30+ years…

    …Yeah, and you go and retire, and everything falls apart. Thanks a
    lot, Mary :-P

                                    OM

    "No bastard ever won a war by dying for     | http://www.io.com/~o_m
     his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms
     poor dumb bastard die for his country."    | Human O-Ring Society

            – General George S. Patton, Jr

  9. admin says:

    JPL is am operating division of Caltech. Caltech signs, on 5 year
    intervals, a contract with NASA to operate JPL for NASA. (In
    government speak, that makes JPL a Federally Funded Research and
    Development Center – FFRDC – much like many of the DOE labs).

    JPL employees are not civil servants, but are Caltech employees. There
    are a few NASA civil servants at JPL to oversee the operation of the
    lab. This means JPL does not fall under civil service hiring rules, or
    civil servant hiring freezes. JPL staff is almost all Caltech
    employees; contrast that with other NASA centers which have a mix of
    NASA civil servants and contractor employees on site.

    All work at the lab is governed by the prime contract between NASA and
    Caltech, even work done for other agencies in the government and
    private industry. The VAST majority of the work done at JPL is for
    NASA, less than 10% is non-NASA work currently. In fact, the amount of
    non-NASA work is limited by the prime contract, to ensure that the lab
    is focused on its NASA mission.

    Tim

    On Thu, 06 Nov 2003 22:49:31 GMT, Joseph Oberlander

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    <josephoberlan…@earthlink.net> wrote:
    >Steve Podleski wrote:

    >> Steve Podleski wrote:

    >>>I’ve read that JPL is hiring about 100 new college graduates. This is a
    >>>huge amount of new people compared with other NASA centers.  Does anyone
    >>>know why?  Are there any new programs that JPL is embarking upon?

    >> I am told that JPL is run by Cal Tech as a contractor. This probably means
    >> that they have more freedom in hiring than NASA.

    >In fact, only 20-25% of the people at JPL even work on NASA/government
    >projects.  My neighbor worked there for 30+ years and never had a
    >security clearance.  His last projects were looking for spacejunk
    >and something about weather/ocean patterns.  Completely removed from
    >the larger projects.

    >My friend’s father – he did some NASA projects – a few satelites
    >and such, but most of his time he did engineering for them of other
    >projects.

  10. admin says:

    On Thu, 06 Nov 2003 13:33:03 -0500, in a place far, far away, Steve
    Podleski <steve_podle…@worldnett.att.net> made the phosphor on my
    monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that:

    >I am told that JPL is run by Cal Tech as a contractor. This probably means
    >that they have more freedom in hiring than NASA.

    Yes, JPL employees aren’t civil servants.


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