Politics | NASA Obama Budget Pulls Plug on Moon-Travel Program Project over budget and behind schedule, administration complains By Kevin Spak Posted Feb 1, 2010 3:45 PM CST Copied In a photo provided by NASA, NASA's Ares I-X rocket is seen on launch pad 39b at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., Monday, Oct. 26, 2009. (AP Phgoto/NASA/BILL INGALLS) The proposed federal budget would end NASA’s Constellation program, a Bush administration effort to return to the moon, along with the Ares rocket the agency had intended as a replacement for the space shuttles. President Obama's budget plan said the program “was over budget, behind schedule and lacking in innovation.” He proposes relying on private companies to eventually ferry astronauts when the shuttles are retired later this year. Coincidentally, NASA today completed the launch tower for the Ares, reports the Orlando Sentinel. The platform cost $217 million of the $9 billion NASA has spent on the Constellation program, which a presidential commission concluded wouldn’t reach the moon until 2028. Republicans railed against the move; Richard Shelby said it “begins the death march” of US space flight. But the proposed budget does boost NASA’s budget overall, and extends the life of the space station until 2020. Read These Next Merchants could slap new surcharges on certain credit card purchases. Here's where things stand in the House ahead of shutdown vote. Students hit with felony charges over a giant anti-TPUSA insect. DNA break leads to arrest in 1994 Seattle cold case. Report an error