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AST, Safety and Mission Assurance

National Aeronautics and Space Administration
George C. Marshall Space Flight Center
This job announcement has closed

Summary

The Boosters Branch of the Safety and Mission Assurance Directorate (SMA), Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) is seeking a senior engineer to serve as the Chief Safety Officer (CSO) for Solid Propulsion Boosters used on Manned Launch vehicles and its derivatives to be used on future launch vehicles. Delegated as the SMA Technical Authority (TA) to serve as the primary SMA technical interface to the Element Office and will serve as the SMA counterpart to the Element Office Chief Engineer.

Overview

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Reviewing applications
Open & closing dates
07/16/2020 to 07/29/2020
Salary
$111,433 to - $170,403 per year
Pay scale & grade
GS 14 - 15
Location
1 vacancy in the following location:
Huntsville, AL
1 vacancy
Telework eligible
Yes—as determined by the agency policy.
Travel Required
Occasional travel - Travel may be required for training or other work-related duties
Relocation expenses reimbursed
No
Appointment type
Permanent
Work schedule
Full-Time
Service
Competitive
Promotion potential
15
Job family (Series)
Supervisory status
No
Security clearance
Not Required
Drug test
Yes
Announcement number
MS20C0146
Control number
573557700

This job is open to

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Clarification from the agency

Current Marshall Space Flight Center employees on career, career conditional, non-competitive, and NASA term appointments that provide for conversion eligibility. Current NASA employees on long-term rotational assignments to the NASA Engineering and Safety Center or the NASA Safety Center.

Duties

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  • Responsible for identifying and processing appropriate manned solid propulsion related technical issues through the institutional Technical Authority process for review and adjudication.
  • Routinely communicates any developing significant technical issues and associated information involving SMA assessments to the Element Office, associated Chief Engineers, MSFC SMA Management, and Program CSO.
  • Conducts technical oversight and reviews of the assigned element activities and technical issues to assess implications to safety, reliability, and/or quality.
  • Coordinates the system safety and quality engineering evaluation of changes to existing solid propulsion flight hardware manufacturing and processing procedures and the development and evaluation of new flight hardware components.
  • Advises SMA management of the status and analyzes potential technical problems, including consideration and impact on the programmatic aspects of Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance.
  • Duties described above are at the full-performance level. Duties assigned at a lower grade level will be of more limited scope, performed with less independence and limited complexity; duties will be commensurate with the grade of selected employee.

Requirements

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Conditions of employment

  • Position subject to random drug testing
  • Selectee must complete a financial disclosure statement

Qualifications

In addition to the Basic Education Requirement, you must have one year of specialized experience equivalent to the next lower grade (GS-13) which has equipped you with the particular competencies needed to successfully perform the duties of the position described above.

To qualify for the GS-14:

Specialized experience such as (1) providing system safety, reliability, and quality assurance advice and guidance for aerospace applications; (2) performing, reviewing, and evaluating engineering analysis of flight hardware; (3) evaluating solid rocket motor and solid rocket booster components using both aerospace and mechanical engineering principles; (4) collaborating with various organizations, contractors, subcontractors, Government agencies, and stakeholders on Safety and Mission Assurance (SMA) functions as they relate to resolving problems that impact NASA's mission (e.g., addressing overall system safety, reliability, quality, project integration, and compatibility of systems and subsystems).

In addition to the Basic Education Requirement, you must have one year of specialized experience equivalent to the next lower grade (GS-14) which has equipped you with the particular competencies needed to successfully perform the duties of the position described above.

To qualify for the GS-15:

Specialized experience such as (1) providing system safety, reliability, and quality assurance advice and guidance concerning solid rocket motors for aerospace applications; (2) performing, reviewing, and evaluating engineering analysis of complex flight hardware; (3) evaluating solid rocket motor and solid rocket booster components using both aerospace and mechanical engineering principles to resolve novel or obscure problems, extend and modify techniques, apply new, innovative techniques or experimental aerospace engineering theories; (4) collaborating with various organizations, contractors, subcontractors, Government agencies, and stakeholders on Safety and Mission Assurance (SMA) functions as they relate to resolving problems that impact NASA's mission (e.g., addressing overall system safety, reliability, quality, project integration, critical timelines, resource allocation, compatibility of systems and subsystems, and project performance).

Your resume must include a clear and detailed narrative description, in your own words, of how you meet the required specialized experience. Experience statements copied from a position description, vacancy announcement or other reference material constitutes plagiarism and may result in disqualification and losing consideration for the job.

Please spell out all acronyms.

Education

Basic Education Requirement: A bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university with major study in engineering, physical science, mathematics, life sciences, computer science, or other field of science. Degrees in engineering technology are not considered to be qualifying for this position.

U.S. Engineering degrees must have been awarded from a college or university school of engineering with at least one curriculum accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission (EAC) of the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET). To find out if a degree meets this requirement, go to http://www.abet.org.

Foreign Engineering degrees must be recognized by a Mutual Recognition Agreement (MRA), often known as accords. These are non-governmental agreements among organizations that accredit academic degree programs. MRAs recognize the substantial equivalence of mature accreditation systems and programs accredited by signatory organizations within their jurisdictions. For a listing of Signatories, please visit, https://www.abet.org/global-presence/mutual-recognition-agreements/is-your-program-recognized/.

Science and other related degrees must have been awarded from colleges or universities that are accredited by recognized accrediting organizations. For a list of schools that meet this criteria, go to http://ope.ed.gov/accreditation/.

If you are using education completed in foreign colleges or universities to meet the qualification requirements, you must show that the education credentials have been evaluated by a private organization that specializes in interpretation of foreign education programs. These education credentials must be deemed equivalent to that gained in an accredited U.S. education program; or full credit has been given for the courses at a U.S. accredited college or university. For further information, visit: https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ous/international/usnei/us/edlite-visitus-forrecog.html.

All degrees must have been received in the year of, or any year subsequent to the original date of accreditation.

Official transcripts will be required at the time of selection to verify that you meet the educational requirement or substitution.

Additional information

Identification of promotion potential in this position does not constitute a commitment or an obligation on the part of management to promote the employee. Promotion will depend upon administrative approval and the continuing need for an actual assignment and performance of higher level duties.

As identical vacancies are identified, additional selections may be made.

You must meet time-in-grade requirements, three months after competitive appointment restrictions, and qualifications requirements by the closing date of this announcement.

Individuals who have special priority selection rights under the Agency Career Transition Assistance Program (CTAP) or the Interagency Career Transition Assistance Program (ICTAP) must be well qualified for the position to receive consideration for special priority selection. See 'How You Will Be Evaluated' for definition of well qualified. Federal employees seeking CTAP/ICTAP consideration must indicate their eligibility when applying for a position. The USAJOBS resume asks you to identify your ICTAP eligibility; the NASA Supplemental Information asks you to identify your CTAP eligibility. If you are selected for the position, you must be prepared to submit proof that you meet the requirements for CTAP/ICTAP. This includes a copy of the agency notice, a copy of their most recent Performance Rating and a copy of their most recent SF-50 noting current position, grade level, and duty location.

Qualified NASA term employees who have term conversion eligibility under the NASA Flexibility Act of 2004 will be referred and considered equally with other NASA permanent employees under internal competitive placement procedures.

Your USAJOBS account asks you to assign a name to each of your resumes. When you apply to a NASA position, we will show you the text of the resume you have submitted, but we do not maintain the name you have assigned to that resume. If you wish to keep track of that information, we recommend you make note of it at the time you apply.

Fair Employment Opportunities for Applicants
NASA Credit for National Service

How you will be evaluated

You will be evaluated for this job based on how well you meet the qualifications above.

Resumes will be rated by an automated system (Resumix) that matches the competencies extracted from the candidate's resume to the competencies identified by the selecting official for the position. Candidates will be evaluated on the competencies they possess that are directly related to the duties of the job, as described in the announcement. Candidates should refer to NASA's Applicant Guide for assistance in developing a complete resume, as NASA will not accept separate KSA statements.

Qualified candidates will be assigned to one of three quality levels based on the degree to which their competencies meet the duties required. A human resources specialist will validate the qualifications of those candidates eligible to be referred to the selecting official. For the purpose of the Career Transition Assistance Program (CTAP) and the Interagency Career Transition Assistance Program (ICTAP), candidates rated in the top quality level are considered well-qualified.

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