Sen. Bayh’s Fight for Indiana-Made Military Jet Engine Ends with Obama Signature
Rolls Royce will keep making Joint Strike Fighter engine; bill preserves 300 Indianapolis jobs, up to $1.7 billion for state economic development
October 28, 2009 -- Washington – Senator Evan Bayh today praised President Obama’s signing of a defense spending bill that includes full funding for an alternate Joint Strike Fighter aircraft engine made in Indianapolis.
Bayh led the fight on the Senate floor to secure funding for Rolls Royce North America to develop and produce the military fighter engine at its Indianapolis facility. When funding for the program was stripped out of the legislation this summer, Bayh successfully fought to have it reinstated in a joint Senate-House conference committee.
The fiscal year 2010 defense spending bill includes $560 million for Rolls Royce and General Electric to make a competitive engine that will serve as the backbone of the future U.S. tactical air fleet. Today’s bill signing preserves 300 Indianapolis defense manufacturing jobs and could generate up to $1.7 billion in economic development for Indiana over the life of the project, according to Rolls Royce, which currently employs 4,000 Hoosiers.
“We were about to lose 300 good-paying jobs in Indianapolis at a time when the economy is already in terrible shape,” Bayh said. “It was going to cost the taxpayers money and eliminate competition for an important weapons system. So I put my foot down. As a result, we were able to save these jobs, save the taxpayers’ money, and preserve competition. In times like these, I think that’s a pretty good thing.”
Bayh said defense workers at Rolls Royce in Indianapolis play a critical role in ensuring that military engine components are delivered on time and under budget. Without support for a second engine supplier with the ability to produce a second engine for the F-35 jet, production delays or a failure of the primary engine would have proven catastrophic for the American tactical air fleet.
“Making this critical investment today will result in lower costs, improved performance, increased reliability and greater contractor responsiveness,” Bayh added.
Also included in the FY 2010 National Defense Authorization Act signed today by the President is funding for a broad range of national defense and security programs, including weapons systems, soldiers’ salaries and counterterrorism operations around the world.
Source: Senator Evan Bayh
Scroll down for related articles:
Related articles
- 2009-10-30: Sen. Bayh’s Fight for Indiana-Made Military Jet Engine Ends with Obama Signature
- 2009-10-19: President Obama Names Director of the White House Military Office
- 2009-10-05: Sen. Bayh: DoD Inspector General to Investigate Response to Chemical Exposure of U.S. Troops
- 2009-06-22: First Meeting of the US Interagency Council on Homelessness under the Obama Administration
- 2009-06-18: President Obama Armed Forces Report to Congress
- 2009-06-08: Remarks By President Obama At D-Day 65th Anniversary Ceremony
- 2009-06-04: President Barack Obama Remarks on the Nomination Of John McHugh As Secretary Of The Army
- 2009-06-03: President Obama Announces Intent to Nominate Congressman John M. McHugh as Secretary of the Army
- 2009-05-26: President Obama On Memorial Day
- 2009-05-25: Memorial Day: President Obama Calls on All Americans to Honor the Service of the Troops and Their Families
- 2009-05-25: President Signs Levin-McCain Bill to Reform Weapon Systems Acquisition Process
- 2009-05-19: Statement of President Barack Obama on Military Commissions