_Aerospace Daily

Staff
GLOBALSTAR and AEROASTRO are developing a new, low-cost simplex data modem to allow remote sensing and asset tracking using satellites. The companies plan an initial demonstration of the capability this summer. The modems will be part of a system combining Globalstar's satellite communications network with AeroAstro's Sensor Enabled Notification System (SENS) technology, which allows sensing or tracking data to be sent from remote locations via satellite and the Internet.

By Jefferson Morris
Problems with NASA's most recent audit point to an outdated and inadequate financial management structure at the agency, according to the General Accounting Office (GAO). From fiscal years 1996 through 2000, NASA received unqualified, or "clean," audit opinions from its former auditor, Arthur Andersen, making it one of the few federal agencies to consistently receive such a rating.

Staff
George Ferito has been named manager of Flight Safety's Fort Worth learning center. Mike King has been named manager for its tw learning centers at St. Louis Lambert International airport.

Rich Tuttle ([email protected])
Integral Systems Inc.'s win of a competition for the Air Force's Command and Control System-Consolidated (CCS-C) program puts it in a good position to get contracts for similar programs, Steve Chamberlain, CEO of the Lanham, Md., company said March 20.

Staff
TEST LAUNCH: Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control and the U.S. Army conducted a successful engineering and development test for the Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS). The test involved ripple-firing two GMLRS rockets, which flew less than 12.5 miles and dispensed their submunition payloads. The test was the fourth of six for the program, which is a cooperative program between the United States, the United Kingdom, Italy, France and Germany.

Staff
Jim Hampton has been named the university's director of public relations.

Staff
OSPREY AWARD: The Bell-Boeing Joint Program Office was awarded a $770 million contract modification March 19 for work on 11 low-rate initial production V-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft. Work is to be completed by August 2005, according to the Department of Defense.

Sharon Weinberger ([email protected])
Raytheon's Joint Tactical Terminal (JTT) is meeting its new schedule for deliveries and is moving forward to operational testing, according to company officials, after its acquisition track experienced a protest and delays. Production was almost two years behind schedule in 2000, but Raytheon has made up some of the lost time and is delivering units to the services, according to Patrick Luna, a senior program manager at Raytheon Corp. "The bottom line is we're back on track," he told reporters at a March 18 press briefing.

Staff
Volumetric weapons (VW), which use high amounts of pressure to damage their targets, appear to be growing in popularity and could be used against the U.S. within the next decade, according to Navy Vice Adm. Thomas Wilson, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency.

Staff
If the U.S. Navy's ship-buying rate isn't increased soon, shipbuilding funds may have to compete with other pressing military modernization programs down the road, a House lawmaker warned Navy officials March 20.

Marc Selinger ([email protected])
The Air Force's top two officials said March 20 they are studying the possibility of expanding competition in the unmanned aerial vehicle industry, jointly developing a prototype-sized reusable launch vehicle with NASA, and giving KC-135 tankers the additional role of intelligence gathering.

Staff
German lawmakers passed a compromise deal to buy 40 Airbus A400M transport planes, clearing a key hurdle for Europe's largest joint defense program ever, Aerospace Daily affiliate AviationNow.com reported. The German parliament's budget committee approved a 5.1 billion euro ($4.5 billion) outlay March 20 to buy 40 planes, 33 short of the country's full commitment to the 18 billion-euro program.

Staff
Linda Beach Cutler has been named vice president, corporate communications.

Staff
AMRAAM SALE: The Department of Defense notified Congress March 20 of a possible sale to Spain of 31 AIM-120C Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missiles (AMRAAM) and associated equipment. The total sale could be worth as much as $19 million, according to the DOD.

John Fricker ([email protected])
Britain will deploy 1,700 more military personnel for operations against al Qaeda and Taliban troops in Afghanistan, bringing its total in-theater forces to around 6,400. The latest deployment, announced March 18, includes mountain combat-trained Royal Marines from No. 45 Commando. When he announced the deployment in Parliament, Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon said this would be the largest British military deployment into an active combat zone since the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

By Jefferson Morris
In its second interim report, released March 20, the Commission on the Future of the U.S. Aerospace Industry recommends the Bush Administration create a multi-agency task force to revamp the nation's overtaxed air traffic management system.

Nick Jonson ([email protected])
A panel of industry leaders testifying before the House Armed Services Subcommittee for Military Procurement March 19 disagreed over whether the "buy American" clauses inserted into many defense contracts are helping or hindering the defense industry. John Douglass, president and CEO of the Aerospace Industries Association, said the clauses for many aerospace-related contracts occasionally must be waived to ensure compatibility and reciprocity.

Sharon Weinberger ([email protected])
The demands of ongoing military operations in Southwest Asia are creating shortages in other regional command areas, particularly for the availability of aircraft carriers, according to the European and Pacific commanders-in-chief (CINCs).

Staff
Standard&Poor's has lowered the corporate credit rating for aviation component supplier Fairchild Corp. but removed the company from CreditWatch, where it had been placed Sept. 21, 2001. In a report released March 18, S&P aerospace analyst Roman Szuper lowered the rating for the Dulles, Va.-based company from "B" to "B-" out of concern that the continued softness in the commercial aviation market would weaken its financial profile. The company's ratings outlook is negative.

Staff
AIR AGREEMENT: NASA officials and Boeing Air Traffic Management senior managers will sign a memorandum of understanding March 21 to plan future research projects to enable "the next-generation air transportation system," according to NASA.

Staff
BOEING BONDS: Boeing Capital Corp. filed a prospectus with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for the issue of up to $1 billion of Boeing Capital investment-grade corporate bonds through Incapital's InterNotesSM Medium-Term Note program. The company provides lease and loan financing for commercial aircraft and equipment, business aircraft and space and defense products.

Staff
NASA contract awards by type of effort, FY 2001 Category Number of contracts Total (millions) Total 6,019 $9,038.1 Research and Development 1,978 2,482.0 Space Station 20 895.6 Aeronautics&Space Technology 809 400.5 Space Science&Applications 324 324.0

Staff
ROCKWELL BUY: Rockwell Collins Inc. has acquired Communication Solutions Inc. for $23 million, the company announced March 19. The buy will expand Rockwell Collins' portfolio for customers in the areas of signals intelligence and surveillance, according to the company. Maryland-based Communications Solutions reported $16 million in 2001 revenues from its defense and security-related SIGINT products.

Marc Selinger ([email protected])
A high-level Navy official said March 19 that he is trying to secure significantly more money for new weapon systems in the service's fiscal 2004 budget, which the Bush Administration is scheduled to release in about 11 months.

Marc Selinger ([email protected])
The Air Force's fiscal 2003 unfunded priorities list contains hundreds of millions of dollars to repair and upgrade many of its existing aircraft.