Simon Peter “Pete” Worden
Michelle Hanlon
James A. M. (Jim) Muncy
Laura Montgomery
Dr. Michael Simpson
Dr. Michael K. Simpson is the past Executive Director of the Secure World Foundation and former President of the International Space University. He is a Board Member of the Institute of Space Commerce and Chairperson of the Ten to the Ninth Plus Foundation.
He has also been President of Utica College (now Utica University) and the American University of Paris with a combined total of 22 years of experience as an academic chief executive officer. He holds an appointment as Professor of Space Policy and International Law at ISU. He is a member of the International Academy of Astronautics, a member of the International Institute of Space Law and a Senior Fellow of the Institute of Space Commerce.
Dr. Simpson served in the United States Navy retiring after Reserve service with the rank of Commander. His duty included service as a Political-Military Action Officer with US European command. He is a graduate of the French National Institute of Advanced Defense Studies (IHEDN).
He is the author of numerous scholarly papers, presentations, articles and book contributions. He has also authored a book on space travel for young children. His practical experience includes service as an observer representative to the UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, participation in the IAF committees on Commercial Spaceflight Safety and Space Security, participating organization representative to the Group on Earth Observations and member of its 2015 Ministerial Working Group, member of the Board of Directors of the World Space Week Association and the Board of Governors of the National Space Society in the USA, member of the Panel on Asteroid Threat Mitigation, and Vice Chair of The Hague Space Resources Governance Working Group. He is a board member of the Secure World Foundation and the Institute of Space Commerce. He chairs the Ten to the Ninth Plus Foundation, is an advisor to the Moon Village Association and the Beyond Earth Foundation, and served as an Observer in the Global Expert Group for Sustainable Lunar
Frank Dibello
Over a 50-year career in the business of space, Frank DiBello has served in a wide variety of roles, all of them dedicated to guiding and strengthening the aerospace industry in America. In January of 2024, Frank formed SolvX Space Industry Advisors after he retired from Space Florida– an Independent Special District of the State of Florida. In his 14 years with Space Florida he was instrumental in the state’s recovery from the retirement of the Shuttle in 2011 and its subsequent rise to even greater heights as the thriving commercial space operations and manufacturing cluster it is today. Frank’s leadership and contributions to the advancement of the aerospace industry in Florida has positioned the state as the clear leader in a rapidly transforming aerospace market, which has set an example to many other states, such as New Mexico, Virginia, Alaska, Texas and Georgia to improve their capabilities in the marketplace as well.
Frank began his career in the space industry at KPMG, where he spent more than 20 years guiding the firm’s aerospace industry practice. While at KPMG, he founded the firm’s Space Industry Practice to focus on new space businesses, including taking satellite programs to Wall Street for financing and developing commercial uses for the International Space Station (ISS). After his time at KPMG, Frank co-founded SpaceVest, a venture capital firm focused on investing in companies taking defense and space technologies to commercial applications and markets. He went on to serve as President and CEO of Constellation Communications, International (CCI), where he planned and raised the financing for an early global satellite network for mobile broadband communication services. Before joining Space Florida, Frank became President and CEO of Florida’s Aerospace Finance Corporation (FAFC), which was established by the Florida Legislature to assist with financing the infrastructure needs of new and established companies in the aerospace, aviation and space markets.
Chris Hearsey
Stephan Reckie
Hoyt Davidson
Hoyt received a Physics degree from MIT and upon graduation spent six years in the Space Systems Division of Lockheed leaving as a Senior Research Engineer to return to MIT for an MBA. At MIT’s Sloan School of Management, Mr. Davidson was awarded the Henry B. duPont III scholarship for academic excellence and headed to Wall Street where he rose to the level of Managing Director at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette and later at Credit Suisse. At DLJ, in the mid-1990s, he co-founded the Space Finance Group, the first corporate finance coverage group focused on the commercial satellite industry. This group had a #1 ranking for the sector for many years and raised over $15 billion for commercial satellite companies.
In 2002, he left Credit Suisse to start Near Earth LLC, to continue focusing on the growth of space-related companies. Near Earth is a FINRA licensed broker-dealer and provides M&A advisory services for small to lower middle market companies, equity private placement services and strategic and financial consulting. Clients include major companies and institutional investors in those industries, and early-stage entrepreneurial firms seeking private equity capital or strategic partners. Near Earth has also been engaged by NASA and the U.S. Air Force for space related consulting assignments. Hoyt currently serves on the board of XO Markets Holdings, the parent of NanoRacks LLC, and on the advisory boards of Lynk Global and Nexteon. His non-profit participations include serving on the board of the Space Foundation, where he acted as Treasurer from 2016 – 2019 and is a member of its Finance Committee, serving on the board of the National Space Society, where he was the Vice President for Development from 2017 until recently and is a member of the Policy and Investment Committees, and he formerly served on the NASA Advisory Council for Commercial Space.
John C. Mankins
Mr. Mankins has been recognized as the leading expert in the field of space solar power (SSP), managing NASA’s programs in this area from 1995-2003. He co-chaired the recently completed International Academy of Astronautics (IAA) study of SSP (2008-2011) and was Principal Investigator of a NASA-supported investigation of a novel Solar Power Satellite (SPS) concept that he invented: SPS-ALPHA (SPS by means of Arbitrarily Large Phased Array). Since 2016 he has organized annually the only international SSP student competition sponsored by SPACE Canada, with diverse space advocacy organizations.
Dr. Greg Autry
Robert Brumley
Bob holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from the California Polytechnic State University, in San Luis Obispo, California, and has completed graduate courses and management programs at Harvard University, Santa Clara University, the Wye River Institute, San Jose State University and the Defense Acquisition University.
Alexandra Field
Dr. Marlène M. Losier
Dr. Michael Simpson
Dr. Michael K. Simpson is the past Executive Director of the Secure World Foundation and former President of the International Space University. He is a Board Member of the Institute of Space Commerce and Chairperson of the Ten to the Ninth Plus Foundation.
He has also been President of Utica College (now Utica University) and the American University of Paris with a combined total of 22 years of experience as an academic chief executive officer. He holds an appointment as Professor of Space Policy and International Law at ISU. He is a member of the International Academy of Astronautics, a member of the International Institute of Space Law and a Senior Fellow of the Institute of Space Commerce.
Dr. Simpson served in the United States Navy retiring after Reserve service with the rank of Commander. His duty included service as a Political-Military Action Officer with US European command. He is a graduate of the French National Institute of Advanced Defense Studies (IHEDN).
He is the author of numerous scholarly papers, presentations, articles and book contributions. He has also authored a book on space travel for young children. His practical experience includes service as an observer representative to the UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, participation in the IAF committees on Commercial Spaceflight Safety and Space Security, participating organization representative to the Group on Earth Observations and member of its 2015 Ministerial Working Group, member of the Board of Directors of the World Space Week Association and the Board of Governors of the National Space Society in the USA, member of the Panel on Asteroid Threat Mitigation, and Vice Chair of The Hague Space Resources Governance Working Group. He is a board member of the Secure World Foundation and the Institute of Space Commerce. He chairs the Ten to the Ninth Plus Foundation, is an advisor to the Moon Village Association and the Beyond Earth Foundation, and served as an Observer in the Global Expert Group for Sustainable Lunar
Charles Miller
Charles Miller is a serial space entrepreneur and senior commercial space executive who has repeatedly delivered breakthrough results over 3 decades. Most recently, Miller served as co- founder and CEO of Lynk Global, Inc. (Lynk) the creator of satellite-direct-to-standard-phone (sat2phone) that has become the hottest category in the satellite industry, where he serves as Chairman of the Board.
Miller built the team that discovered and invented the technology to allow satellites to connect directly with standard mobile phones on Earth – without any change to the phone. At the time, this was generally thought to be impossible. Miller then incorporated Lynk, brought sat2phone to the market and created a new $300+ billion business category. Industry analysts now predict 1 that sat2phone will become the largest opportunity in all of space and satellite.
Prior to co-founding Lynk, Miller was:
Served as a member of NASA transition team for Trump-Pence in Dec. 2016-Jan. 2017. Miller recommended that Congressman Jim Bridenstine be named NASA Administrator. Rep. Bridenstine was confirmed as NASA administrator on April 19, 2018.
Co-founding CEO of Nanoracks, which delivered more than 700 commercial satellite payloads to space, before being sold to Voyager Space Holdings in 2021.
Founder and President of ProSpace, which persuaded Congress to pass the Commercial Space Act of 1998. This law forced NASA to contract for commercial space station cargo services, leading to two early NASA contracts for SpaceX at a critical time, $396 million in 2006, followed by $1.6 billion in 2008.
Principle Investigator for the “Fast Space” study for US Air Force in 2017, which led directly to the creation of the DOD’s Space Development Agency in 2019. SDA recently announced a 5-year budget of $25 billion.
Principle Investigator of the “Evolving Lunar Architecture” study for NASA in 2015, which led to the creation of NASA’s first commercial lunar lander program and over $6 billion in fixed- price contracts for SpaceX and Blue Origin in 2021 and 2023.