Lockheed backers set for fight
Fort Worth role in planes' production threatened in cut plan
11:31 PM CST on Wednesday, January 12, 2005
By KATIE FAIRBANK / The Dallas Morning News
The budget cycle has barely begun, but opponents are already massing to fight substantial cuts to two military aircraft produced by Fort Worth-based Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Co.
Congress and the Air Force began their campaigns this week to soften the blows to favored programs including the F/A-22 Raptor fighter jet and the C-130J Hercules transport plane. Parts of the two jets are built in Fort Worth, and final assembly is done in Marietta, Ga.
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Several Lockheed Martin plants could close, including the Marietta facility, sources familiar with the plans said Wednesday. About 12,000 people would lose their jobs, including 3,000 in Fort Worth. Lockheed Martin employs 15,550 people in Fort Worth.
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On Tuesday, almost a quarter of the U.S. Senate signed a letter asking President Bush to spare the C-130, which is scheduled for termination next year. The letter argues that shutting down the transport plane's production line doesn't make financial sense because it would cost more than $800 million in termination and support costs.
Republican Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas was one of the senators asking the President to reconsider the move.
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