Impact of proposed military force reduction will vary from plant to plant across Coosa Valley
by Doug Walker
Jan 16, 2012 | 558 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Mount Vernon Mills employees make military uniforms. (File, Doug Walker / Rome News-Tribune)
Mount Vernon Mills employees make military uniforms. (File, Doug Walker / Rome News-Tribune)
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As Washington debates massive budget cuts that would impact the nation’s military, citizens in Trion, Rockmart and Centre, Ala., are keeping an ear to the wind, hoping that proposed cuts don’t blow away the primary employers in their communities.

Mount Vernon Mills in Trion, Meggitt Polymers and Composite in Rock­mart, and American Apparel in Centre all have large military contracts that are likely to be impacted by significant military cutbacks.

Mount Vernon Mills and Meggitt Polymers each have nearly 1,200 employees and are overwhelmingly the leading employers in Chattooga and Polk counties. American Apparel has approximately 300 employees at its Centre plant and is among the top five employers in Cherokee County.

President Barack Obama, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Joint Chiefs Chair Gen. Martin Dempsey all conducted briefings last week to address a significant shift in military strategy that would likely result in the fewest boots on the ground since the beginning of World War II, along with massive cuts to the Air Force as well as both Army and Air Reserve and National Guard.

Both Dempsey and Panetta have indicated that cuts could easily exceed $475 billion during the next decade.

Mount Vernon Mills and American Apparel are both manufacturers of uniforms for the military, while Meggitt makes fuel cell bladders that are used by a variety of military aircraft.

Rep. Phil Gingrey, R-Marietta, said that with respect to the defense industrial base, there are several companies in Northwest Georgia that are critical to U.S. security.

“I will continue to work toward enacting substantial reforms to our country’s spending habits, including the enactment of a Balanced Budget Amendment, without sacrificing the security of our nation,” Gingrey said.

Greg Williams, vice president of sales and marketing at Meggitt Polymers and Composites in Rock­mart, said that certainly it is going to be a little tricky during the next few years for military and defense contractors.

“But we do not have a gloom and doom story here in Rockmart. It’s actually a very good news story, as sales and employment will continue to increase over the next five years,” Williams said. “The technologies we’re producing and developing, in ground and aerospace, do save lives, and despite cuts in the defense budget the government and Meggitt share a common objective to protect our most precious resource, the soldier.”

Michael Paulk, director of new programs at Meggitt, said the lion’s share of business for the plant in Rockmart involves the support of rotary wing assets (helicopters) in the Department of Defense.

“Those rotary wing assets are heavily utilized whether it is combat or peace time,” Paulk said. “We are showing in 2012 a continued growth pattern that we’ve shown for the last 10 years.”

Beyond the fuel bladders, Williams said Meggitt is developing a product, which neither he nor Paulk could disclose for competitive reasons, and he hopes to get a contract announcement within a matter of weeks for that new product.

“That’s another way we plan to weather these cuts,” Williams said.

Getting that one contract alone could mean another 50 jobs for the Rockmart plant.

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