Baltimore Sun

Lockheed Martin to shutter Middle River plant in 2023

After 90-plus years, site will relocate work to other locations

- By Lorraine Mirabella

Lockheed Martin plans to close its 465-employee Middle River plant within two years and relocate the work to other company locations, ending more than 90 years of manufactur­ing at the site.

The decision ends the company’s long history of manufactur­ing in Middle River, tracing back to its predecesso­r, the Glenn L. Martin Co., which began building aircraft there in 1929. The plant currently produces vertical launch systems and other equipment for U.S. Navy warships.

“In our ongoing effort to drive down costs for customers and increase efficiency and value, we

are consolidat­ing some operations in our Rotary and Mission Systems business to better align employees, technology and facilities to meet customer needs,” the Bethesda-based defense contractor said Friday.

The work in the Lockheed Martin facilities in the Baltimore County plant will be moved out of state, the company said.

Most of the 465 workers will be offered a chance to relocate or telework, with the plant ramping down operations between March and June of 2023, the company said. Most of the jobs would be transferre­d to other facilities, while 140 people will be asked to telework, allowing them to stay in Maryland.

“It is always disappoint­ing when you have a facility close,” said state Del. Kathy Szeliga, a Republican who represents part of Baltimore County including Middle River. “Middle River and Lockheed Martin has such a rich history of aeronautic­s.”

Szeliga said she was grateful the company provided notice two years before the expected closure. She said she has been in touch with the state Department of Commerce to ensure displaced workers can get job placement support.

A spokeswoma­n for the state

Department of Commerce said the agency planned to support any displaced workers with help finding new jobs.

“Lockheed Martin has taken steps to mitigate as much as possible the impact of this closure on its employees and work to place them in alternate positions within the company over the next two years,” said Karen Glenn Hood, the spokeswoma­n.

The Middle River plant works on ship systems and small combatants programs, including the MK 41 Vertical Launching System, next-generation launching systems, ship controls and automation. It also provides engineerin­g for Navy combat ships designed for close-to-shore operations.

Lockheed Martin’s predecesso­r, the Glenn L. Martin Aircraft Co., once employed tens of thousands of workers in Middle River. During World War II, the company produced thousands of aircraft and bombers, including the workhorse B-26 Marauder.

The company’s founder, Glenn L. Martin, bought the land in Middle River in 1928 to build and test aircraft. With the wartime boom, employment grew from 3,500 workers to a peak of 53,000. Housing for employees sprouted near the plant.

The company merged with American-Marietta Corp. to form Martin Marietta in 1961 and began producing missiles, space hardware and guidance systems. Employees built the Titan II rocket in the 1960s.

Growing up in Middle River, Del. Richard K. Impallaria remembers as a kid seeing buildings still camouflage­d from wartime.

“Middle River was really built up around the Lockheed Martin facility,” said Impallaria, a Republican, who said he was shocked by the closing announceme­nt. “It is a one-ofa-type operation where you actually have a large airfield and the plant, all together in one. … I feel sorry for the people that are at the plant and their lives get turned upsidedown.”

Lockheed Martin was formed in 1995, when Martin Marietta merged with Lockheed Aircraft. Lockheed sold a large part of its operation, including the historic factory, two years later, to General Electric, which formed Middle River Aircraft Systems in 1998 to make parts for jet engines. In 2019, ST Engineerin­g, a global aerospace and engineerin­g giant based in Singapore, acquired that plant and renamed it Middle River Aerostruct­ure Systems.

Lockheed Martin will maintain its corporate air operations at Martin State Airport and retain ownership of its newer manufactur­ing building at the Middle River site, just west of the airport. The closure will have no impact on Lockheed’s corporate headquarte­rs in Bethesda or its other facilities in the state.

The defense giant employs more than 3,150 people in Maryland, with 32 facilities and 569 suppliers, supporting nearly 100 small businesses across the state. The state is home to the company’s Cyber Security Center of Excellence, which employs around 600 people in Hanover, Annapolis Junction, Linthicum, Fort Meade and Rockville. Lockheed said it expected to hire additional workers for cybersecur­ity jobs.

Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr. said Friday the county’s workforce developmen­t team would be available to help any workers who lose jobs in the upcoming consolidat­ion.

“While we are encouraged that most employees will be given an option to continue working in Maryland, we are disappoint­ed that this news signals an end to the Lockheed plant’s storied chapter in our county’s history,” Olszewski said in a statement. The county “will work to ensure the site is put to productive use in the years ahead.”

Impallaria said he hoped another contractor or manufactur­er would move into the facility or that Lockheed would end up with another contract and change plans. It has done that before — most recently in 2016 when it reopened a retooled missile launcher production line in Middle River.

“They are a defense contractor, and we’ve just changed administra­tions, and they have to look at the future of how much money this administra­tion is going to spend on defense contracts,” the delegate said.

The site, with access to rail, an airport and highways, would be suitable for another heavy manufactur­er or distributo­r, Impallaria said.

“We need to find innovative ideas to bring business back into there,” he said.

COLLEGE PARK — Hannah Leubecker did not play like someone making the second start of her college career.

The sophomore attacker for the No. 9 Maryland women’s lacrosse team enjoyed a near-perfect showing with a game-high seven goals on nine shots, and the host Terps earned a much-needed victory by defeating No. 18

Michigan, 17-13, on Friday evening at the Field Hockey & Lacrosse Complex.

Maryland improved to 1-1 overall and in the Big Ten and put to rest any memories of Sunday’s season-opening 15-13 upset loss at then-No. 16 Penn State. That setback had been the program’s first to a conference opponent in the regular season since joining the league in 2015.

“We needed to get this win under our belt,” coach Cathy Reese said. “So now we can move forward and know that we can do it. With a team as young as the group that we have, this was an important one for us.”

Emblematic of that youth is Luebecker, a Forest Hill resident who was home-schooled through high school and scored just two goals in six games last spring before the coronavi

rus pandemic wiped out the rest of the 2020 season.

“It was a big adjustment coming in,” she said. “I had never played on a team with so many weapons, and I never played in an offense like this. So it definitely took me a while to adjust, but now that we’re here, I’m definitely enjoying it a lot better, and I’m glad we can continue.”

After scoring just two goals in that loss to the Nittany Lions, Leubecker exploded for four goals on four shots in the first half and three more on five attempts in the second. She did not miss the cage until 10:03 remained in the second half after she had already scored seven times, and her last attempt from the slot rang off the face mask of Wolverines senior goalkeeper Arielle Weissman (eight saves) with 2:29 left.

“I just want to be able to contribute in any way that I can and do anything that the team needs me to, and today, I ended up scoring goals,” she said. “The lanes just opened up. So any way I can contribute, I think that’s kind of the attitude that everybody has, whatever we need to do to win, and that was just my role today.”

While Leubecker insisted that any of her teammates could have finished the game as the offense’s top producer, senior midfielder Grace Griffin called Leubecker “a superstar.”

“She just went hard,” Griffin said. “She did what she was good at. We knew she was capable of that. She shot to score, and she stuck them in the back of the net. She was just amazing, and I love how hard she went, and that’s what you want from everyone.”

Leubecker was especially effective at pouncing on Michigan’s mistakes. The Wolverines failed to clear the ball five times, and on two of those occasions, Leubecker scored on a breakaway in the first half and a feed from senior attacker Catie May (McDonogh) in the second.

“It’s a big momentum shift,” Leubecker said. “So that’s something we like to capitalize on.”

The Terps had five-goal leads twice in the second half, but couldn’t pull away from Michigan, which defiantly chipped away at the deficit. Maryland’s defense played solidly if not spectacula­rly. Sophomore goalie Emily Sterling (John Carroll) made a game-best 11 saves, including seven in the first half, and the Wolverines were kept scoreless for the final 7:35 of the game.

Griffin, a Sykesville resident and Liberty graduate, said the plan was to aid Sterling, who made only eight stops against Penn State.

“Just get some contact, stay on-body, and help our goalie make some saves,” said Griffin, who also chipped in two goals and two assists. “… Just making it so that the attackers couldn’t get the shots that they want, making it just a little bit more difficult, cutting down their angles just a little bit, taking that extra step so that they can’t do what they want and help Emily just see the ball a little bit better.”

In addition to Leubecker and Griffin, senior midfielder Hannah Warther (Liberty) earned her first hat trick of the season, and sisters Catie and Libby May (McDonogh and Hereford, respective­ly) each found the net twice.

Redshirt senior midfielder Nadine Stewart paced Michigan (0-2) with four goals, and senior attacker Caitlin Muir and junior midfielder Kaitlyn Mead each compiled two goals and one assist. But the Wolverines failed to take advantage of an 18-of-32 outing on draw controls and a 3-of-6 showing on free-position opportunit­ies.

The teams will meet again Sunday at noon, and Reese said the Terps are capable of playing better.

“We’re seeing improvemen­t from last time, which is what we want, but we still have a long ways to go and a lot of room to grow,” she said. “So as we move forward, we’ve got a quick turnaround to be ready to play again on Sunday. We just need to reset, refocus, and hopefully make some little changes and minimize our mistakes a little

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Lockheed Martin plans to close its Middle River plant and relocate the work to other company locations.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN Lockheed Martin plans to close its Middle River plant and relocate the work to other company locations.
 ?? MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN KARL ?? Maryland attack Hannah Leubecker, who scored seven goals, turns upfield against Michigan defender Hailey Mead in College Park on Friday.
MERTON FERRON/BALTIMORE SUN KARL Maryland attack Hannah Leubecker, who scored seven goals, turns upfield against Michigan defender Hailey Mead in College Park on Friday.

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