Jefferson Morris

Editor-in-Chief, Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Washington, DC

Summary

Jeff has been involved in aerospace journalism since the mid 1990s. Prior to joining Aviation Week, Jeff served as managing editor of Launchspace magazine and the International Space Industry Report. He has been the editor and chief of Aviation Week's Aerospace Daily & Defense Report since 2007 and has been a regular contributor to Aviation Week magazine. He received his B.A. from the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Va.

Articles

Jefferson Morris
Sea Launch is hoping to conduct two more launches before the end of 2007, according to President Robert Peckham, following the Jan. 30 failure that destroyed the SES New Skies NSS-8 communications satellite and its Zenit-3SL booster. Prior to the failure, the company had six launches on its manifest for 2007, which is the maximum the equatorial Odyssey launch platform can manage in a year due to processing times. The company conducted five flights in 2006.

Jefferson Morris
Boeing envisions a mix of two medium Earth orbit (MEO) and two geostationary (GEO) spacecraft for the U.S. Air Force's Space Based Surveillance System (SBSS), which the service is developing to keep watch over events in orbit. Boeing and Ball Aerospace are leading the team developing the SBSS Block 10 satellite, which will be a GEO spacecraft. The follow-on Block 20 system originally was envisioned as four LEO satellites that would be developed and procured separately.

Jefferson Morris
NASA should more consistently follow its own guidance on the payment of award fees to contractors to ensure that such fees are better tied to program outcomes, according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO). At the request of the House Science & Technology Committee, GAO reviewed $31 billion in cost-plus-award-fee (CPAF) contracts at NASA during fiscal years 2002-2004. CPAF contracts accounted for almost half of NASA's contracting dollars over that time, GAO said in a report released Feb. 16.