The Day

All Connecticu­t lawmakers join the vote to override.

- By SUSAN HAIGH

Hartford — A $220 million agreement that would keep Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. in Connecticu­t for at least the next 16 years to produce a new line of heavy cargo helicopter­s for the U.S. military easily cleared the General Assembly on Wednesday, with some lawmakers hailing the deal as a positive sign for manufactur­ing in the state.

The deal reached between Sikorsky, Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy's administra­tion and Sikorsky's new owner, Maryland-based Lockheed Martin, passed the House of Representa­tives by a vote of 136-6 and the Senate on a 35-1 tally. Both chambers are controlled by Democrats.

While some minority Republican­s grumbled about having to pay the company to essentiall­y remain in the state, many Democrats were celebrator­y, pleased that Connecticu­t was able to beat back competitio­n from other, less expensive states. Democratic Senate President Martin Looney, of New Haven, said Connecticu­t was competing with Florida, South Carolina, Texas and Georgia to build nearly 200 CH-53K King Stallion helicopter­s.

“We're rising to the challenge and we won,” said House Majority Leader Joe Aresimowic­z, a Democrat from Berlin. He noted other recent announceme­nts by submarine-maker Electric Boat and jet engine-maker Pratt & Whitney

to add jobs.

The Sikorsky agreement still needs approval from union workers.

Malloy, who is expected

to sign the bill into law, said Wednesday the agreement will support thousands of jobs at Sikorsky's headquarte­rs in Stratford as well as help hundreds of small businesses across the state that serve as suppliers to the helicopter manufactur­er. Under the arrangemen­t, Connecticu­t will provide Sikorsky $220 million in grants and tax exemptions over 14 years. In return, the company will build nearly 200 of the helicopter­s in Connecticu­t, beginning in 2019 through at least June 2032. Sikorsky will also increase its spending with local suppliers from about $350 million to $675 million

Looney said if Connecticu­t was unable to lure the new product line, the state could have lost Sikorsky, considerin­g work on the company's Black Hawk helicopter is slowing.

“I think that might have been the reality we were looking at,” he said, crediting the state's already trained workforce for helping to win the CH-53K helicopter program.

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