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Rejoining the C-130 AMP 

Rejoining the C-130 AMP: The Air Force would like to perform avionics upgrades to 166 special-mission and older combat-delivery C-130 aircraft that currently lie outside of the scope of its C-130 Avionics Modernization Program. It does want to include them under that same project. “The funding requirements to modernize these 166 aircraft will be considered during the FY10 budget preparation,” USAF spokeswoman Lt. Col. Jennifer Cassidy tells the Daily Report. Originally these 166 aircraft, about three-quarters of which are Air Force Special Operations Command gunships and Combat Talon covert insertion/extraction airplanes, were a part of the C-130 AMP. But the Air Force removed them during a restructure of the AMP last year to reduce risk and cost after its baseline program cost ballooned by 169 percent, requiring a recertification of its merit to the Congress per Nunn-McCurdy cost-monitoring legislation. The current C-130 AMP encompasses 222 combat-delivery C-130H2, C-130H2.5 and C-130H3 models. The AFSOC aircraft are considered comparatively complex to upgrade because they are in unique configurations and carry specialized electronics. “We would like to bring those into the C-130 AMP, the basic restructured C-130 AMP,” Lt. Gen. Donald Hoffman, the Air Force's military deputy for acquisition, told reporters when discussing the 166 outliers last month. “It is mainly a funding restricted [issue] right now.”
 
1/7/2008 
Verbatim

Preemptive Action
"Since the [Defense] Department's acceptance of the independent estimates last fall, we've been, in just about every respect, acting as if the program were in a Nunn-McCurdy breach. ... We've been taking all of the mitigating and corrective action that we would take as if there were a Nunn-McCurdy breach."
—Air Force Secretary Michael Donley, discussing with reporters the restructure of the F-35 strike fighter program announced in February 2010 and the probability that the program will soon exceed Nunn-McCurdy cost-monitoring thresholds that would necessitate, per US law, a program review and corrective steps, Washington, D.C., March 2, 2010. 

Verbatim

Message for Grandma
"She has working for her as a citizen in the United States an Air Force Reserve that has some very talented, capable, patriotic, and willing individuals doing the business to keep this nation free. Just like her generation—the 'Greatest Generation'—was, I am very proud of the folks that we have got. If not the second greatest, then they are an extension of the greatest generation and they are ready, willing, and able to do the things that she would want them to do to make sure we keep our freedoms."
—Lt. Gen. Charles Stenner, Air Force Reserve chief, responding to a reporter's question on what the reporter should tell his 85-year-old grandmother to convey to her the importance of Air Force Reservists to the nation's security, Orlando, Fla., Feb. 19, 2010.

 

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