On the eve of this morning’s expected announcement of more than $100 million in government contracts for local companies,
Rep. John Murtha did not apologize for delivering the funds.
His opening remarks Thursday at Showcase for Commerce commended area defense contractors and employees for providing a strong return on the government’s investment. The event’s success and growth is a credit to the local community, Murtha said.
Murtha welcomed a record
170 exhibitors, filling 215 booths at Cambria County War Memorial.
Standing before some of the national media reporters who have criticized the Johnstown Democrat’s earmark funding for the local airport, police department grants and other projects, Murtha laid out some local history.
“When we started this Showcase in 1991, we had 24 percent unemployment,” Murtha said.
“We’ve had a stimulus package here in Johnstown for a long time. This Showcase has been the key to our economic survival.”
Giving a verbal nod to the recent criticism, Murtha said he drove past the John Murtha Johnstown-Cambria County airport on the way to Showcase.
“I went by to make sure the airport was still there,” Murtha quipped.
He recalled the airport’s first earmark to create a highway access road. The new infrastructure opened the development of The Galleria and surrounding retail businesses, Murtha said.
Additional earmarks, Murtha continued, extended sewer and water systems to allow more economic development and job creation in a community that lost 12,000 steel jobs and a similar number of mining jobs.
Funding for military contractors is also about job creation, but it’s good for business and the taxpayer as well, Murtha said.
“They come because you save them money,” he said. “You do quality work, and that’s what brings them back year after year.”
Concurrent Technologies Corp. of Johnstown has been among the largest beneficiaries of Showcase-announced contracts, and company President Ed Sheehan expects this year to be no different.
“There will be some good announcements about some contract awards,” Sheehan said, hinting that one will have major positive impact on the community.
His predecessor at CTC’s helm, Showcase Chairman Daniel R. DeVos, said the event is about showing off what this region has to offer.
“We are proud of what we have accomplished in Johnstown,” DeVos said. “It is a business show. There are shows all over the country, but they like this one because it’s friendly. There are low-cost, quality suppliers.”
Exhibitors at this year’s event ranged from national defense corporations such as Raytheon and DRS Technologies, to a home-based Johnstown specialty business called The Crystal Quill.
Owner Teena Petrus said Showcase for Commerce is “like Christmas” for her imprinting and graphic design business, which creates many of the exhibitors’ promotional items given away this week. The same companies often order a year’s supply while they are gearing up for Showcase, she said.
Diversity of local technology business is illustrated at booths like Memorial Medical Center’s medical simulator mannequin and Science Applications International Corp.’s tsunami buoy forecasting system.
The hospital is using the lifelike human body simulator to train medical personnel from a wide area, Dr. William Fritz said. The wireless mannequin can be programmed to respond to treatment. Its portability makes the training program ideal for everyone from rural emergency responders to medics on the ground in Afghanistan.
“It shows what we deliver,” Fritz said. “The government is getting a bang for their buck here.”
At SAIC’s 227 Franklin St. location, 15 software developers are working on a system to forecast tsunami waves before they hit populated areas, local manager Richard Williams said. Johnstown’s work force creates opportunities for new projects, he added.
Local News
Murtha hails expo’s benefits to region
- Local News
-
-
Somerset County teacher accused of using insulting names
School board members and administrators say they’re still investigating whether a teacher called her eighth- and ninth-grade algebra students names like “retard,” “idiot” and “moron.”
-
Seward tax preparer set to plead in federal court
A Westmoreland County tax preparer is scheduled to plead guilty or no contest to charges that he filed fraudulent income tax returns for his customers and asked some of them to lie to Internal Revenue Service investigators.
-
Police probing financial irregularities at Indiana County parish
State police say they’re investigating financial “irregularities” at a Catholic parish with five worship sites in Indiana County, after the local diocese reported the problems to police.
-
Blogging with heart
I was feeling overwhelmed yesterday, so today, I’m organizing my work. I have talked to probably a couple dozen people for Heart Month stories and I have pages and pages of notes.
-
Video: Young bear, wolf play together
It’s like something out of a children's book: A bear cub meets a wolf cub and they become the best of friends. Even though they are different species and ferocious predators, the unlikely couple stays pals for life.
-
Two Cambria district judge offices to be cut
Two of Cambria County’s 10 magisterial districts could be eliminated as President Judge Timothy Creany looks at realigning boundaries to cut costs while taking into consideration caseloads of the district judges and population changes.
-
Westmont couple inseparable, even in death
People who knew James and Marjorie Landis of Westmont said the two were nearly always together.
-
Company buys valuables from people ready to unload
Jan Hagerich’s buffalo nickel was “healthy” – which was unhealthy for her finances.
-
Special Olympics return to region
More than 300 athletes eager to show off their skills, along with 135 coaches, will be coming to the region to take part in the 2012 Special Olympics Pennsylvania Winter Games.
-
Special Olympics Schedule
Here is a list of events related to the Pennsylvania Special Olympics Winter Games through Tuesday at venues across the region:
Saturday
• Laurel Highlands Polar Plunge to benefit Special Olympics; Quemahoning Reservoir near Boswell; registration at 9:30 a.m.; plunge at 1 p.m. - More Local News Headlines
-
Somerset County teacher accused of using insulting names






