Female astronaut clears up why the all-female spacewalk was canceled: ‘That was my recommendation’

(ABC News) Astronauts Nick Hague, Anne McClain, center, and Christina Koch speak on board the International Space Station.(NEW YORK) —  Social media users quickly reacted to NASA’s announcement last month that it would cancel the first-ever all-female spacewalk because of a lack of medium-size spacesuits on the International Space Station.

Now, the female astronaut who was supposed to be half of that historic spacewalk, is speaking out to explain what happened.

“That was my recommendation,” Anne McClain, a U.S. astronaut who has been on the International Space Station since December, said Monday in a live interview from space on Strahan & Sara.

McClain explained that when she and fellow astronaut Nick Hague went on a spacewalk on March 22, the medium-size spacesuit she was wearing “fit perfectly.”

McClain was supposed to go on the all-female spacewalk on March 29 with Christina Koch, who arrived at the space station in March and also needed a medium-size “hard upper torso,” or the shirt of the spacesuit, according to NASA.

Instead of McClain switching to a larger size, she made the call to have Koch do the spacewalk with Hague instead.

“Because everything went so well on the first one we realized, you know, hey, we don’t need to inject any additional unknowns into something that is as important and can be as dangerous as the space walk,” McClain said. “It’s very important that all of us are able to work as efficiently and safely as possible.”

Couldn’t be prouder of my #8Ball classmates @AstroHague and @Astro_Christina
today! They are out in space right now working hard to get needed @Space_Station upgrades complete, you can watch live at https://t.co/ZeFXSRNm27 pic.twitter.com/Xu4gGu79K4

— Anne McClain (@AstroAnnimal) March 29, 2019

The decision by NASA was largely one borne out of logistics. There are a limited number of spacesuits on the space station and NASA has lacked the funds to update its spacesuits in recent years.

Some of the parts on the spacesuit used by Koch and McClain were also on the spacesuit worn by Kathryn Sullivan, the first American woman to walk in space, who completed her history-making spacewalk in 1984.

“NASA’s space suit inventory is woefully old and woefully paltry,” Sullivan told ABC News last week, highlighting the agency’s budgetary issues.

Many people though viewed the spacewalk cancellation as yet another sign of women being held back on the job.

Make another suit. https://t.co/mu9w13xsi0

— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) March 26, 2019

Shameful! #NASA has canceled the first all-women #spacewalk because the almighty organisation doesn’t have enough the medium-size spacesuits for women. Instead of reconfiguring the existing spacesuits, the final decision is to replace a woman astronaut by a male colleague.

— Maja Bjelos (@MajaBjelos) March 26, 2019

Just found out the all female spacewalk scheduled by #NASA has been cancelled..wanna know why?

They didn’t have enough “female sized” spacesuits.

I wish I was making this up.

— Tammy Harrington (@tammyharrington) March 26, 2019

McClain did not address those criticisms, focusing instead on the difficult tasks involved with a spacewalk.

A spacewalk is defined by NASA as “anytime an astronaut gets out of a vehicle while in space.” A typical spacewalk typically lasts six to seven hours.

“They are a lot of work, six to seven hours outside,” McClain said. “But prior to even going out in order to get suited up and get ready and get your body ready, it’s six to seven hours of work before you can go out the door, and before that day it is years of training to be ready to do these.”

“They are very physically and mentally intensive but they are what keeps the space station running,” she added.

Koch and Hague went on to have a successful spacewalk on March 29, updating the batteries on the space station’s power system.

McClain is now expected to perform her next spacewalk on April 8 with another male, Canadian Space Agency astronaut David Saint-Jacques, according to NASA.

Copyright © 2019, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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