Horrible Management and No Future - AST Materials Engineer NASA Employee Review

1.0
Mar 6, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Exceptionally easy work, easy to stand out as a high performer, decent benefits

Cons

General schedule pay scale for civil servants is not even remotely competitive anymore, especially on the archaic standard step scale. Promotions are almost entirely tenure based, nothing is really built around performance. There is no reward for exceptional performance besides more work and managers taking credit for your work. In addition to this the center has pretty much eliminated the technical promotion pathway in favor of saving the available GS14 and 15 levels for our over abundance of management roles. Labs are generally empty as we don't hire anyone capable of doing hands on work anymore in favor of contract managers and oversight roles. Most of the strong technical talent is being pillaged by the growing space industry across the US and especially in the local Huntsville area. Also there's a ton of infighting and territorialism at every level: center level, lab level, division level, and team level. Honestly I'm surprised anything was ever accomplished by all the arguing and stovepiping on who is "allowed" to do what.

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5.0
Jul 8, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice pay. And super fun

Cons

Not many cons honestly can’t think of one

1.0
Jul 4, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I have nothing good to say.

Cons

If you are the victim of a crime or experience something illegal connected to NASA, do not blindly trust the internal process to protect you. In my experience, NASA has built relationships with local and federal agencies in a way that can push people right back into NASA’s own internal channels, including HR, the Inspector General, and Protective Services. The problem is that those offices may not have the authority, independence, or experience to properly handle serious criminal or legal issues. Once you are back inside that system, the priority can quickly become protecting the organization, managing liability, and controlling the narrative instead of protecting the person who was harmed. Victim intimidation is not just possible in that kind of environment. It should be expected. Once the organization is involved in controlling the process, the person reporting harm can end up pressured, isolated, discredited, or steered away from outside accountability. That is unacceptable. Victims should not be forced into a process where the organization involved gets to influence how the matter is handled. Internal offices are not a replacement for real legal protection, outside law enforcement, or independent legal counsel. If something illegal happens to you, talk to a lawyer first. Get independent advice. Have your attorney guide you through the appropriate outside agencies and legal channels. Do not assume NASA’s internal process is neutral, independent, or designed to protect you.

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