Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

At Trump urging, Lockheed keeping copter plant open

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

A Lockheed Martin helicopter plant in Coatesvill­e, Pa., is staying open after President Donald Trump urged its chief executive, Marillyn Hewson, not to close it as planned.

“At the request of President Trump, I took another look at our decision to close the Coatesvill­e, PA facility and have decided to keep it open while we pursue additional work,” Hewson wrote in a statement Wednesday.

The president tweeted in approval of the decision, calling Lockheed Martin one of the “truly great companies” in the United States. “We are

very proud of Pennsylvan­ia and the people who work there,” he added.

Employees at the Coatesvill­e facility manufactur­e helicopter­s for Sikorsky, an aircraft manufactur­er that is a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin. It was unclear whether the facility’s shutdown had been postponed indefinite­ly, and spokesmen for Hewson and Lockheed Martin did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Lockheed had announced in early June that the facility, which employs more than 450 people, would be closed by the end of the year because of a lack of demand for rotorcraft. It said then that some production would be moved to other sites that do manufactur­ing for Sikorsky.

On June 14, Trump said in a tweet that he had spoken to Hewson about continuing operations at the plant. “She will be taking it under advisement and will be making a decision soon,” he added.

A White House spokesman declined to comment on the discussion­s, and it was unclear what additional work the facility was hoping to find.

Trump also claimed credit for keeping manufactur­ing jobs in Indianapol­is after Carrier, an air-conditione­r company, said it would have to move jobs from there to Mexico.

He called the chief executive of Carrier’s parent company, United Technologi­es, shortly after winning the 2016 election and struck a deal involving the layoffs of hundreds of the plant’s bluecollar workers and millions of dollars in tax breaks. The plant stayed open, but the facility has suffered from absenteeis­m and low morale.

The president’s promises to preserve industrial and manufactur­ing jobs were key to his election campaign in 2016. Pennsylvan­ia voted for Trump after twice supporting Barack Obama and will once again be an important state during the 2020 election.

Eight of the state’s counties that Trump carried have lost manufactur­ing jobs since he took office.

Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, a Democrat whose district includes the plant and who has been fighting to keep the facility open, told The Philadelph­ia Inquirer that the decision announced late Wednesday “is a temporary reprieve and our work is not done.”

She added that Lockheed Martin should make “a sustained commitment to this facility, not just a temporary extension driven by a timebound political calculus.”

The company spent weeks reviewing its options, including “what work can be sourced to Coatesvill­e and how we can maintain costeffect­ive operations,” said Callie Ferrari, a Sikorsky spokesman.

“The downturn in the commercial helicopter market puts the Coatesvill­e facility in a tough business situation, which is what drove our original decision,” she said.

Major programs at the plant have included Sikorsky’s S-92 and S-76D helicopter completion work, as well as Canadian Maritime Helicopter Program modificati­ons and upgrades.

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