
© ABCNASA Administrator Charles Bolden
In 2011, NASA booked a flight for Ames Research Center Director Simon "Pete" Worden to fly first class from Washington D.C. to San Francisco. Cost of the one-way ticket:
$14,773, versus the $189 average coach fare. Although the trip is reported in NASA's annual travel disclosure, the agency now says the flight never happened.
Worden, meanwhile, says he did take the flight. He explained by email to
Scripps News that the trip "included substantial foreign travel," and that he was authorized to fly first class for medical reasons. Yet, NASA's annual report accounting for its first and business class "premium" flights during 2011 includes no reports of foreign travel for Worden that year.
NASA is trying to resolve many of these kinds of disparities as it sorts out what it calls "widespread" errors in travel disclosures to the General Services Administration of its premium travel, according to Elizabeth Robinson, the space agency's chief financial officer. The errors date back to at least 2009, she said.
"We've identified some cases where there are inaccuracies and we are being very forthright about that and we are addressing those inconsistencies," said NASA communications director David Weaver.
Comment: Psychopathic insurance companies - feeding the insatiable greed:
Insurance companies profit from Obamacare
Average healthcare premiums have soared 39%-56% post Obamacare
Obamacare sticker shock: premiums for young healthy people will jump in 45 states
Health insurance premiums rising faster after Obamacare than in the previous eight years
Obamacare becomes nightmare of higher premiums and deductibles