Everybody knows this is the best kept secret thread to be on!
Just like South Texas....
Just like South Texas....
Quote:
Even while the Federal Aviation Administration is taking a second look at SpaceX's Boca Chica rocket building/testing operation to determine if it's still within legally allowable parameters, the company's founder and CEO Elon Musk is plunging ahead with accelerated development of SpaceX's Starship Mars rocket.
To ramp up production and development even more, though, Musk needs more people beyond the 1,000 employees give or take now working on Starship at Boca Chica. On Tuesday, less than two hours after the Starship SN11 prototype blew up and deposited rocket parts around the launch site and vicinity near the end of an apparently otherwise successful flight test, Musk, who has 50.1 million Twitter followers, tweeted out a call for people to join him in South Texas.
"Please consider moving to Starbase or greater Brownsville/South Padre area in Texas & encourage friends to do so! SpaceX's hiring needs for engineers, technicians, builders & essential support personnel of all kinds are growing rapidly," he wrote.
Musk also predicted that Starbase, on the site of the current Boca Chica Village adjacent to the Starship production complex, "will grow by several people over the next year or two."
The only problem is, where are they going to live?
Nick Mitchell-Bennett, executive director of Come Dream Come Build, formerly the Community Development Corporation of Brownsville, said Brownsville is already suffering from a housing shortage without thousands more descending on the area practically overnight.
"I would love for the guy to invest in kind of a house trust fund," he said. "He's telling people to come down here. We don't have enough room for you right now."
Mitchell-Bennett said he's not opposed to the growth opportunity but that Brownsville and the area need to be smart about it and not repeat the mistakes of other cities that have experienced rapid growth.
carl spacklers hat said:
I likely won't try to make it tomorrow. Did the drive down on Monday, sat on the side of Hwy 48 past the second bridge headed to PI until they scrubbed the attempt. Heard folks who went to the Island took hours to get off.
Anticlimactic for in-person viewing but a HUGE success for SpaceX. 49 minutes from launch to termination on re-entry. Watched the show on Everyday Astronaut. Incredible footage.oldord said:
Anyone else see the launch this morning?
Kind of anticlimactic imho