Posted on 09/14/2015 10:37:13 PM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
The Pentagon is considering whether to cancel construction of one of the next-generation destroyers being built at Bath Iron Works, a move that would imperil jobs at Maines fifth-largest private employer.
Several reports said the Defense Department is trying to decide whether to complete construction of the USS Lyndon B. Johnson, the last of three Zumwalt-class destroyers, even though the vessel already is more than 40 percent complete.
Its a topic to be reviewed in the next few weeks by teams formed by the Pentagons independent cost-assessment office, according to a report by Bloomberg News that cited an Aug. 25 Defense Department briefing document. Two officials familiar with the issue told Bloomberg that the possibility of scuttling the ships construction arose during planning for the fiscal 2017 budget.
The three Zumwalts are part of a $22 billion program at General Dynamics BIW shipyard, which employs more than 5,000 workers and has an annual payroll of $360 million.
A cancellation also could affect a multitude of businesses that support the yard, or operate within its supply chain. BIW spent $64 million with 345 companies located in 12 of Maines 16 counties in 2014. The bulk of that money $40 million flows to small businesses, according to figures provided by the company.
Jay Wadleigh, president of Local S6 of the Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding Workers of America, said there would be a lot of work lost if the Navy reneges on the third Zumwalt, but because of concurrent work on other ships in the yard it is impossible to predict how much.
Defense analyst Loren Thompson told The Associated Press that talk of scuttling the third Zumwalt destroyer is a result of the 2011 budget deficit reduction law, which continues to squeeze the Navys shipbuilding budget.
This is not so much a reflection of the ships value as it is the shortage of funding for shipbuilding, said Thompson, who works for the Lexington Institute, a public-policy think tank in Arlington, Virginia. This has actually been under consideration for a while now.
BIW spokesman Matt Wickenheiser said he would not comment on the reports.
QUESTIONING POTENTIAL SAVINGS
The Zumwalt-class was designed as the Navys next-generation destroyer, a stealth vessel that can fire missiles on targets more than 70 miles inland. But from an initial order of 32 ships, the number of Zumwalt vessels the Navy planned to build has been reduced over the years to seven and then to three, reflecting increasing costs and a change in what the Navy predicts it will need in a future force.
Officials with the Congressional Research Service told Bloomberg that the procurement cost for all three Zumwalt vessels has increased by an estimated 37 percent since 2009, to $12.3 billion. The estimated construction cost for the third destroyer, designated DDG-1002, is about $3.5 billion. A key question is how much of that could be saved by canceling a ship thats about 41 percent built, according to the officials, who asked not to be identified in discussing internal deliberations.
Employees at the Bath shipyard were taken by surprise by the news Monday, Wadleigh said. The union represents about 3,400 of BIWs more than 5,700 employees.
It seems to me itd be a huge waste of taxpayer dollars, he said in an interview Monday afternoon.
The number of jobs that would be at stake is impossible to determine because so much of the work overlaps with whats being done on the other destroyers under construction, Wadleigh said. Hypothetically, if the Pentagon canceled the third Zumwalt, the shipyard could potentially accelerate work on the five other destroyers under construction in the yard two other Zumwalts and three DDG 51-class destroyers to keep people working. But that would be a short-term fix, he said.
Ultimately, theres a lot of work being lost because even if the company was able to fill the gap and avoid layoffs, wed get hit on the back end, he said.
The program enjoys the support of some powerful allies in Congress, including Maines two senators. Sen. Angus King is a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee and Sen. Susan Collins heads a Senate Appropriations subcommittee and serves on its defense panel.
They reacted to Mondays news with dismay.
If Pentagon officials are contemplating the cancellation of this ship at the eleventh hour and when it is already more than 40 percent complete, it would be a policy and financial mistake that would weaken the Navys fleet, degrade the manufacturing industrial base upon which our countrys security depends, and would not save money at this stage due to cancellation and other contractual fees, the senators said in a joint statement.
They said there are always challenges with developing a first-of-its-class weapons system.
Just last week, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus said the Navy is committed to all three ships because of the capabilities they will bring to the fleet, and we take him at his word, King and Collins said.
The senators were referring to comments by Mabus included in a Politico article published Sept. 7 in which he confirmed the Navys commitment to building all three Zumwalts in Bath.
If you were going to make a decision to not have all three, that decision should have been made a long time ago, Mabus told Politico. Now, its probably as expensive to cancel as it is to build it, just because of the way the contract is written and the way the material is bought, the infrastructure put in that sort of stuff.
STRAINED BIW, NAVY RELATIONS
U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree, who represents Bath as part of Maines 1st Congressional District, said canceling the third Zumwalt would make no sense.
The first ship in a new class is always the most expensive and then the cost goes down as more are built, so canceling the third ship would actually be canceling the one that is the most cost-effective, she said in a written statement. In addition, the fact that its already under construction means pulling the plug now would be a total waste of taxpayer dollars.
Wadleigh agreed with Pingree. He said BIW employees working on the third Zumwalt report that everything is running smoother than it did on the first two.
The design quirks and the other issues have been worked out and the performance seems to be better, he said.
Asked by Bloomberg about discussions of a potential cancellation, Cmdr. Thurraya Kent, a Navy spokeswoman, said, It would be inappropriate to discuss business-sensitive information or speculate on budget deliberations.
The ship was reviewed last month as part of a regularly scheduled meeting, and the internal discussions of this meeting are not publicly releasable, Kent said in an email.
Lucy Ryan, a General Dynamics spokeswoman, told Bloomberg in an email, Were not going to speculate on any future Navy budget action. This decision is entirely up to the Navy.
The Navy is reviewing a BIW proposal to adjust target costs for the second and third vessels in the class, with an updated proposal planned for December, according to a Navy program update last month, Bloomberg reported.
Separately, the Navy said delivery of the first vessel will slip beyond November, which already was 14 months later than originally scheduled. Kent told the news service that contractor-sponsored dockside tests would start in November, followed in December by sea trials. Rear Adm. Jim Downey, program manager for the ships, estimates the new delivery date for the first Zumwalt will be closer to May 2016.
In an assessment for the Aug. 25 review, Downey wrote that although most management issues with the contractor are on track, a pending BIW request for equitable adjustment for reimbursement of some design, construction and support costs has strained BIW and Navy management relations, Bloomberg reported.
The Navy also continues to witness strained relations between BIW and the labor unions in the shipyard, Downey wrote.
The union and management are disputing job classifications and outsourcing, issues stemming from a desire by BIW President Fred Harris to lower costs so the yard can compete for other vessels, especially Coast Guard cutters. Eleven of the cutters are going out to bid, a contract potentially worth $10 billion, in early 2016.
Wadleigh, at Local S6, said the relationship between the union and the company is improving. He said the company has hired the Gephardt Group, an Atlanta-based labor-related consulting firm led by former U.S. Rep. Dick Gephardt, to act as a mediator between the parties and help them find common ground.
The fact theyre in here I see as a positive sign, Wadleigh said.
Could be “somebody’s” got plans to “do something” before the 2016 elections are over..
The Military personel are being dumbed down.. “penerated”..
And Military equipment on several levels are being culled..
America is basically being militarily dis-assembled..
Question: FOR WHAT?.. it’s way too directed and operated at high levels.. for it to be JUST INCOMPETENCE...
40% done...
Good freakin grief.
All the planning materials and things already manufactured and waiting to be put together... really well timed rethink on this.
40% done may mean more than that actually in the pipeline.
Obama’s work is nearly done...
Okay, so the government originally ordered 32, then dropped to 7, then 3, maybe now 2. Why not just cancel the program?! That 2 or 3 is somehow acceptable says the ship is a failure or simply not needed. What’s the Navy going to do with just 2-3?
OK, what am I missing here?
According to the article, if they cancel this Zumwalt that’s 40 percent done, they’ll be able to accelerate work on 5 other destroyers, including two MORE ZUMWALTS?
Why not just finish this one and cancel one of the others?
take it out with a couple of guys in a boat, and 12 oil drums filled with explosives ....
This is something that I hope a guy like Trump can fix. These things are just jobs programs at this point. We’re not even getting any weapons out of our spending anymore. It’s PATHETIC!
Planned numbers: 32, then 7, then 3, now 2.4 headed to 2.
It’s no wonder the world is pushing us around everywhere and the ME is in flames. All part of Obama’s plan to destroy us. But there’s important work yet to be done in the Navy: “What shade of pink should we use for the new and improved navy uniforms?”
So as not to make new sailorets feel lacking, all new ships do not have urnials.
This is NOT s/
VIDEO: ISIS Terrorist Admits - We are being funded by Obama Administration.
In every case I was involved in, cancelling the contract cost at least as much as fulfilling it. The cancellations are usually political, not economic.
No money for the ship. Not with all those new illegal mouths to feed.
This is Obola punishing Governor LePage (R).
I mean, REALLY rebuilding it - like, 600+ ships.
In addition to "jobs", we actually get useful things.
One was already launched and is fitting-out. The second Zumwalt is more than 40% complete. Probably just months from actual launch. The one the article is talking about is #3 of 3.
As another poster pointed out, “40% complete” means that all the materials and major sub-assemblies have been purchased. Basically you’ve got a keel and now you’re going into final assembly.
Much more than that. I didn’t see any military rationale here, just budgets. But in our system of having civilian companies maintain the military construction infrastructure, occasionally you do have to maintain less than state of the art weapons so they you keep a trained workforce in place.
Usually presidents get an aircraft carrier!
Hopefully when the time comes Obama will get a Zodiac!
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