With production not scheduled to start until 2009, you might say it’s premature to get excited about a project for which two Johnstown defense companies are vying with competitors across the country.
But when the winner is awarded a $10 billion contract creating 1,000 jobs ... oh well, we’re excited.
Lockheed Martin and JWF Defense, a subsidiary of JWF Industries, are locked into nationwide competition for a contract to build a military vehicle to replace the well-known Humvee – about 140,000 of them to be exact; the entire fleet.
That’s huge.
John Polacek, chief operating officer of JWF Defense, said the partnership’s prototype already is causing a stir.
“The buzz we heard at the AUSA show from the top military people really tells me that we’re out in front on this competition,” Polacek said last week.
That’s very encouraging.
He was talking about the previous week’s Association of the U.S. Army’s showcase event held in Washington, D.C., where the local version of the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle (JLTV) prototype was unveiled.
The JLTV program is a joint venture by the Army and Marines seeking a replacement vehicle for the Humvee.
The Lockheed team, to its knowledge, is the first to produce a working prototype, giving the company what it thinks is a definite edge in the early competition.
Kathryn Hasse, director of the tactical wheeled-vehicles programs for Lockheed Martin’s Systems Integration facility in Owego, N.Y., said, “The biggest advantage it gives us is the ability to help shape the customers’ expectations, refine their specifications and help them to visualize how the final product should be.”
Any edge on the competition is important at this point, Hasse said, because the timeline on the project is beginning to tighten.
War or no war, military experts see a bright future for the JLTV in America’s defense arsenal. Making Johnstown a big player in its production would give a big boost to our economy.
At the same time, it would be a real feather in the cap of our growing defense industry, which already is attracting attention not just nationwide but worldwide.
Editorials
Defense team humming
$10 billion contract, 1,000 local jobs on line
- Editorials
-
-
Laurels and barbs
Laurel: Hats off to federal, state and local law-enforcement agencies for busting last week what has been termed a large-scale drug trafficking ring that operated in Cambria, Indiana and Westmoreland counties.
-
Readers' Forum 5-26 | Kudos to sci-fi organizers for fresh thinking
I was lifted by the story “Sci-fi buffs gather in Ebensburg” in the Sunday edition of The Tribune-Democrat.
-
Joe Gandelman | Are hoodies 'thug gear'?
If someone shoots a person wearing a hoodie, could it be partially explained because it made the person look like a menacing gangster? Apparently that continues to be the view of Fox News’ fading, mustachioed news personality Geraldo Rivera, who is at it again.
-
Hospitals’ finances are on the mend | State report a reason for optimism
While the champagne isn’t being uncorked at area hospitals, financial reports for the past fiscal year aren’t doom and gloom, either.
-
Needling the defiant
Students noncompliant with new state vaccination rules should not be sitting in a classroom this morning.
-
George Hancock | A changing landscape – not always for good
Change is constant in a runner’s life. The weather can change in mere moments, creating numerous challenges.
-
Readers' Forum 5-25 | Oppose rink relocation; alliance responds
If you think finding a parking space at or near Roxbury Park is difficult now, prepare to be extremely frustrated.
-
Readers' Forum 5-25 | Area matchless in heritage of service
The Armed Forces dinner, held recently at Pitt-Johnstown, was truly a night to remember for the 200 people who attended.
-
Activities abound this weekend
Wow. If you can’t find something to do, some type of pleasing entertainment, in our region over the upcoming holiday weekend, then you’re not looking.
-
Caribbean cuisine
To the casual observer, it would seem that a successful restaurant/bar at Johnstown’s airport is a no-brainer.
- More Editorials Headlines
-
Laurels and barbs




