Dayton Daily News

Wright-Patt just keeps growing

Turner confirms base has achieved ‘exciting milestone’ of 35,000.

- By Thomas Gnau

Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is home to about 35,000 military and civilian employees, Dayton leaders said this week — a milestone that represents nearly a doubling in employment growth at the base since the early 2000s.

While Dayton Developmen­t Coalition officials cautioned that the number is still considered unofficial, U.S. Rep. Mike Turner — chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce and a longtime advocate for Wright-Patterson — confirmed the number Monday in an interview at the Dayton Defense Cyber Dialogue with Industry event at Sinclair Community College.

“For some time now, I’ve indicated that we were on our way to hit 35,000 (employees),” Turner said. “And it certainly is an exciting milestone, because it shows really a huge transforma­tion overall to the local economy.”

When Turner, a Dayton Republican, was first elected to Congress in 2002, Wright-Patterson had about 19,000 people “inside the fence,” he said.

“Today, it’s 35,000,” he said. “Those individual­s are part of our community. They buy houses, they go to restaurant­s. In addition, that shows Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and the Air Force are spend

ing more dollars in our community than they were before.”

Turner and others believe the growth will continue.

“The importance of the missions there is only going to continue to grow, and I certainly hope that at some point, we’ll be celebratin­g the milestone of the workforce having doubled,” the congressma­n said.

Jeff Hoagland, coalition president and chief executive, marveled at how the base continued to grow through the 2008 “Great Recession,” the exit of NCR to the Atlanta area, the closure of the General Motors SUV assembly plant in Moraine, the Delphi bankruptcy and other economic blows.

“Wright-Patt is now at its highest point, and the rest of our econ

omy in Dayton is much more diversifie­d and has caught up to it as well,” Hoagland said. “Now, we’re at a stronger point than we’ve ever been.”

Questions about the base’s employment were sent to a representa­tive of the 88th Air Base Wing, the host organizati­on at

Wright-Patterson.

Growth at the base has been steady since about 2005, when the Base Realignmen­t and Closure Process shifted missions to the base. The U.S.

Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, the Air Force Institute for Operationa­l Health, the Performanc­e Enhancemen­t Directorat­e merged to form the 711th Human Performanc­e Wing, which moved to the Air Force Research Labortory, headquarte­red at Wright-Patterson. They went on to share finance, planning, operations and contractin­g staffs.

According to a 2007 release from the 88th Air Base Wing, the base expected to gain about 1,120 military and civilian jobs from the BRAC process, with some 3,800 people moving to communitie­s around the base.

The BRAC aftermath involved $335 million in constructi­on and renovation projects, Louis Zavakos, then of the 88th Air Base Wing Civil Engineer Directorat­e, said at the time.

More recently, the government located the National

Space Intelligen­ce Center at Wright-Patterson.

Meanwhile, the steady pace of retirement­s from base offices and missions creates opportunit­ies for younger workers.

“Today, if you are a high school student interested in math and science, you are certainly looking to the opportunit­y that Wright-Patterson Air Force Base will have a job waiting for you when you get out of college,” Turner said.

 ?? ?? Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is home to at least 35,000 military and civilian employees, Dayton leaders said this week. That’s a milestone that represents nearly a doubling in employment growth since the early 2000s, and many see the expansion continuing.
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base is home to at least 35,000 military and civilian employees, Dayton leaders said this week. That’s a milestone that represents nearly a doubling in employment growth since the early 2000s, and many see the expansion continuing.

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