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BRAC NEWS
Huntsville Gains Jobs in Latest BRAC Round
By JEREMY SINGER
Space News Staff Writer
posted: 01 May 2006
When a delegation of business leaders from northern Alabama made
its annual pilgrimage to Washington last year, the members were
focused on convincing U.S. government decision-makers not to move
defense-related jobs out of the Huntsville area.
Rumor had it at the time that the U.S. Army's Redstone
Arsenal in Huntsville, which hosts a large portion of the service's
space and missile defense work, was on the dreaded Base Realignment
and Closure (BRAC) commission list that was soon to be released.
So naturally members of the business delegation were
pleased --if a bit surprised -- when the list of recommended closures
came out shortly after their trip and Redstone was not on it. What's
more, the commission recommended moving some 4,700 jobs, a significant
portion of which are in missile defense, from Northern Virginia
to the Huntsville area.
A year later, when the 175-person delegation again
descended on the nation's capital, their aim was to highlight the
fact that the job gains resulting from the BRAC recommendations
are turning Huntsville into one of the nation's "biggest hubs
of activity" for defense work, said Michael Ward, vice president
for government relations for the Chamber of Commerce of Huntsville/Madison
County.
The new jobs include uniformed military personnel,
civilians employed by the military and support contractors, Ward
said during an April 24 interview here.
Those jobs, which will be located at Redstone Arsenal,
will be moving between now and 2011, according to Holly McClain,
communications director for the Chamber of Commerce of Huntsville/Madison
County.
The 4,700 figure does not include defense contractors
that already have begun expanding their Huntsville presence.
Raytheon Integrated Defense Systems broke ground April
13 on a building in the city's Cummings Research Park that it plans
to occupy next year for work on missile defense and other programs.
Northrop Grumman Corp. began work on a new campus
in Cummings Research Park in May 2005 that will house work on programs
including the development of the Kinetic Energy Interceptor, a prototype
high-speed missile interceptor.
The military jobs moving to Huntsville are of particular
value to the region because of the high percentage of senior-level
positions among them, including six general officers, Ward said.
U.S. Army Materiel Command is moving its headquarters
-- and its four-star general in charge -- from Northern Virginia
to Huntsville, which will bring it closer to the aviation, missile,
space and missile defense programs that make up a large portion
of the service's weapons-procurement budget, said Dan Montgomery,
a retired Army brigadier general and head of Huntsville operations
for Northrop Grumman Corp.
No firm date has been set yet for that transfer, said
Michelle McCaskill, a spokeswoman for Army Materiel Command.
The three-star general in charge of Army Space and
Missile Defense Command -- now headquartered in Northern Virginia
but which already has a large presence at Redstone Arsenal -- is
also coming, Montgomery said. That move will take place before the
end of 2007, according to Bill Congo, a spokesman for Army Space
and Missile Defense Command.
The U.S. Missile Defense Agency also is moving much
of its headquarters staff from Northern Virginia to Redstone, but
will leave its three-star director inside the Washington Beltway,
Montgomery said.
Comments: jsinger@space.com
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