A 'banner day' for Hill
Utah air base survives; chemical depot does not
Elsewhere, military installations learned the Department of Defense was recommending they be closed or downsized. But Hill Air Force Base, Utah's largest employer with more than 50,000 direct and indirect jobs, was largely spared by the Department of Defense, and cuts to other Utah bases were either small or were expected.
"Any time you lose even some jobs, you cannot be completely happy," said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, but he nevertheless called it a "banner day."
Before closures or downsizings can take effect, the Defense Department's proposal must be approved or changed by a federal base-closing commission by Sept. 8, and then approved by Congress and President Bush in a process that will run into the fall.
The Pentagon proposes shutting about 180 military installations from Maine to Hawaii, including 33 major bases, triggering the first round of base closures in a decade and an intense struggle to save facilities viewed as the economic lifeblood of local communities.
Overall, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said his plan, which affects workers at 775 military bases, would save $48.8 billion over 20 years while making the military more mobile and better suited for the global effort against terrorism.
Deseret Morning News graphic Utah bases and facilities Requires Adobe Acrobat. |





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