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Meet
Senior Personnel - Bruce Butterworth
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Photo
by Pat Izzo, Code 293 |
Bruce R.
Butterworth became Deputy Director for Planning and Development,
Applied Engineering and Technology Directorate (AETD 500) this January.
Butterworth
came to GSFC with a varied and distinguished government career.
Between 1975 and 1980, he was a professional staff member for the
House Government Operations Committee and managed hearings and investigations
on aviation security, including NASA Ames's Aviation Safety Reporting
System (one investigation saved the program from termination by
FAA in the late 1970s). He then spent 11 years in the Department
of Transportation, eight of them in the Office of the Secretary.
During that time he managed, negotiations over the inclusion of
air and maritime services in the GATT (now WTO), and chaired numerous
US delegations to UN meetings.
More recently,
Butterworth held two senior level posts in aviation security. First,
between 1991 and 1995 he was Director of Policy and Planning, where
he established strategic, long-term and contingency plans, federal
rules, and reshaped a $36 million security Research and Development
program. Between 1995 and 2000, he was Director of Operations, responsible
for many programs, federal air marshals, and 900 field agents, he
fought hard to increase security and the performance of security
measures by US airports here and by US airlines everywhere, and
was credited with doing so after September 11th by at least one
senior member of Congress with a long history of oversight of aviation
security. He launched a successful program of dangerous goods regulation
and cargo security after the Valujet Crash in the everglades in
1995, oversaw the conversion of the air marshal program to a full-time
program with high standards, was a key player in the ValuJet and
TWA 800 accidents, often briefed the NSC and White House on security
matters, and was a frequent media spokesperson.
During September
2000 to December 2002, Butterworth was the Associate Director for
Administration and Operations at the United States Holocaust Memorial
Museum, where he was responsible for security, human resource services,
and building operations.
Butterworth
received a Master of Science degree from the London School of Economics
and Political Science in 1974 and a Bachelor of Arts degree from
the University of the Pacific in 1972 (Magna cum Laude). He was
a California State Scholar and an International Rotary Foundation
Fellow. He attended Harvard's Senior Government Managers program
and was a recipient of numerous government special achievement and
performance awards.
While not an
engineer, he has lived with aerospace and aviation all his life
which began with his father who was involved in the Polaris, Poseidon,
and Trident Missile Programs for Lockheed Space and Missiles; his
uncle was influential in the design of the DC-8 and other Douglas
aircraft, and his brother is a senior Captain for Delta Air Lines.
He also earned his first regular paycheck delivering mail at NASA
Ames in 1968.
He lives in
Bethesda with his wife of many years, Sauci, and has a stepdaughter,
Devorah. He and his wife travel frequently. He is a dedicated photographer,
runner and free-diver.
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