Across America, War Means Jobs  
          Defense Spending Pumps New Life Into
          Small or Dying Towns By
          Jonathan Weisman 
          Washington Post Staff Writer 
          Tuesday, May 11, 2004; Page A01  
          FAIRFIELD, Ohio -- Along a quiet strip of gray corrugated metal buildings, across the
          street from a La-Z-Boy distribution center, Gary Allen and his ever-expanding crew are
          running one of the most urgent operations of the Iraq war.  
          Around the clock, seven days a week, O'Gara Hess & Eisenhardt churns out heavily
          armored Humvees, designed for the guerrilla combat and roadside bombs bedeviling U.S.
          troops. Last August, a back-lot warehouse held excess inventory. Now, after a $1.5 million
          investment, 30 new workers on two shifts produce 500 sets of three-inch-thick bulletproof
          glass a week. As many as 10,000 sets are on back order.  
          In November, the company snapped up a 40,000-square-foot building down the road, moved
          its entire commercial armoring operation there and in three days, with an additional $1.5
          million, it doubled the Humvee operation.  
          In six months, employment has more than tripled, to over 600, and 250 more people in
          this part of southwestern Ohio work as direct suppliers. Production manager Ronnie Carson
          figured he interviews 15 job applicants every day and hires 10 to 12 of them. Just
          yesterday, the company's parent corporation, Armor Holdings Inc., announced it received an
          additional $16.6 million from the Army to ramp up production yet again. The clocks setting
          the pace on the assembly line were reset, from one vehicle every hour and a half to one
          every hour and 15 minutes.  
          "For us, the economy is great," said Allen, senior vice president and general
          manager of Armor Holdings Inc.'s Mobile Security Division. "It's a sad situation, but
          . . . " His voice trailed off, then he added, "I don't think anyone here is
          thinking about it that way."  
          In this corner of a critical presidential-election battleground state, the economy is
          surging with the urgency of a boom. But it wasn't President Bush's tax cuts, Federal
          Reserve interest rate policies or even a general economic turnaround that did the trick.
          It was war.  
          The frenetic activity is repeated all over the country. New kilns in California bake
          ceramic body-armor plates. Apparel plants in Arkansas, Alabama, Florida and Puerto Rico
          struggle to keep up with uniform orders. Once-idle textile mills in South Carolina spin
          rugged camouflage fabric. Army depots operate 24/7 to repair and rebuild the wreckage of
          war in time to ship it back with the next troop deployment.  
          In the first three months of this year, defense work accounted for nearly 16 percent of
          the nation's economic growth, according to the Commerce Department. Military spending
          leaped 15.1 percent to an annualized rate of $537.4 billion, up from $463.3 billion in the
          comparable period of 2003, when Bush declared major combat operations in Iraq over.  
          "That's pretty good, considering it's only 3 to 4 percent of the economy,"
          said Joseph Liro, an economist at the New Jersey-based research firm Stone & McCarthy.
          "For one quarter, that's a pretty big number."  
          It is impossible to know how many of the 708,000 jobs created in the past three months
          are defense-related, since the Labor Department does not track defense contractor
          employment. But anecdotal evidence suggests the contribution is significant.  
          The flagging textile and apparel industry, which lost 50,000 jobs last year, gained
          2,400 in April and is up 500 through the first four months of 2004, said Charles W.
          McMillion, president and chief economist of MBG Information Services. That is the first
          net job gain for the industry in the first four months of any year since 1990, the last
          year for which the Labor Department maintained statistics. Since civilian textile demand
          is satisfied largely through imports, "Buy American" military orders must be
          driving the increases, McMillion said.  
          In pockets of the country, the effect is magnified greatly, as in picturesque St.
          Marys, Ohio, 90 miles north of here, where a 65-year-old red-brick Goodyear plant bustles
          around the clock, building the tracks for the Army's Bradley Fighting Vehicles, supplies
          of which have been dangerously depleted. Goodyear officials refused to open the plant for
          a visit or even to comment on operations and employment there. Workers also would speak
          about the factory only on condition of anonymity.  
          But over beers at the windowless Wayne Street Bar and Grill, just beyond the plant
          gate, a Goodyear manager confided that at around 650, employment is up, overtime is up and
          "it's humming pretty good, I'll tell you." After a terrible lull, traffic is
          picking up at the bar as well, said bartender and waitress Debra Temple.  
          "The economy is always helped by war. That's just a fact," said Gary Gayer,
          an appliance salesman in St. Marys.  
          There are economic downsides. In inflation-adjusted terms, the war's cost will surpass
          the United States' $199 billion share of World War I sometime next year. Coming on top of
          three major tax cuts, that spending will drive the federal budget deficit to more than
          $400 billion this year. That borrowing will eventually have to be repaid in higher taxes
          or reduced government services and benefits.  
          Economists have long argued that war is an inefficient use of government revenue. A
          dollar spent on a highway not only employs workers but also creates a lasting, broadly
          shared benefit for the economy. A dollar spent on military equipment is soon lost to enemy
          attack or the rapid wear of war. If it bought a bomb or bullet, it simply explodes.  
          The families of thousands of National Guard members and reservists have been dealt
          severe financial blows by the extended deployments of breadwinners.  
          "They've taken husbands and wives and sons and daughters over there, and we're
          working and struggling to make up for it," said Temple, noting that a new contingent
          of reservists from the St. Marys area will soon ship out. "Somebody's got to help
          these people."  
          Then there's the constant worry that all this work will disappear as quickly as it
          materialized. A machinist at the Goodyear plant, whose son drives an Army truck in the
          volatile area west of Baghdad known as the Sunni Triangle, fretted that Goodyear has put
          too many eggs in the military basket.  
          "We're only a pawn. You know that. Everybody in this community hopes like hell
          that Goodyear keeps this plant here. If the military drops out, we could be done. It's a
          bad deal," he said.  
          Columbia Sewing Co., in nearby Magnolia, Ark., lost its main customer in 2001, when
          Bass Pro Shops took its business to China, said Brian Smith, the company's vice president.
          Columbia nearly closed. Then came the war, and the firm's first military contract, to sew
          battle-dress trousers and woodland camouflage coats. Employment is up 30 percent over last
          year.  
          "We needed business, they needed small businesses and it fell in just right,"
          Smith said. "If it wasn't for [Defense Department] contracting, we would not be here,
          and 200 people would be out of a job."  
          American Apparel Inc. of Selma, Ala., the largest military uniform supplier, is sewing
          50,000 uniforms a week, said Jim Hodo, the company's chief operating officer. To keep up
          with demand, the firm invested more than $1 million to open two new plants in the
          impoverished Alabama towns of Opp and Roanoke, and hired 300 workers; 150 more could be
          added soon.  
          "We had so many minorities out of work," said Roanoke Mayor Betty Slay
          Ziglar. "These people have grown up sewing in textile plants, and there are so few
          now. They were desperate to have jobs, and it's going to expand again. I am just so
          grateful."  
          For the South Carolina textile mills supplying the fabric, the impact may have been
          even more dramatic, Hodo said.  
          "They were sitting down there, staring at the empty walls, wondering what was
          next," he said of his suppliers, Delta Mills Marketing Co. and Milliken & Co.
          "It's been a godsend to them."  
          At Goodwill Industries of South Florida, which trains and employs severely disabled
          people, orders for camouflage trousers have jumped 70 percent in the past year, said
          Dennis Pastrana, the organization's president and chief executive. Within a three-mile
          radius of the plant, per-capita income averages a mere $10,590 a year, but nearly 600
          workers now have sewing jobs, more than double Goodwill's prewar level.  
          There's no sign that it will end soon. Hodo said military officials assured him the
          buildup will last at least another year, and Allen at O'Gara Hess said the same. The
          Humvee plant turned out 600 vehicles in 2002, 860 last year, and on Thursday the last
          Humvee on the assembly line sported a tag identifying it as the 890th vehicle so far this
          year. To get to one vehicle every 51 minutes, as the Army wants, O'Gara Hess will have to
          hire an additional 100 workers by July.  
          "At the rate I'm at, all these people will be here through 2006," Allen said.
           
          As his shift neared its end, Don Meier, a 24-year-old still sporting an Army-issue crew
          cut and an Operation Iraqi Freedom T-shirt, took a break from installing heating and
          air-conditioning equipment into battle-ready vehicles he would have loved to have had a
          year ago.  
          Back then, he was a mechanic with the Army Reserve's 478th Engineering Battalion,
          ducking mortar rounds and pulling up the rear as troops pushed toward Baghdad. He recalled
          watching Pvt. Jessica Lynch and her crew set off on their ill-fated supply mission last
          spring. He and his comrades were driving basic Humvees that his plant now loads with 3,000
          pounds of glass, steel and ceramics to protect the soldiers who followed him to Iraq.  
          When Meier returned home -- on July 26, 2003, he said with relish -- he first found
          work stocking shelves at an AutoZone store. Then a friend told him that O'Gara Hess was
          hiring at $11 an hour, with full benefits. He might get to meet acting Army secretary Les
          Brownlee or Gen. Paul J. Kern, commander of the Army Materiel Command, on their frequent
          plant visits.  
          "It's a regular job to pay my bills with," Meier said, "but at the same
          time, I know if you get one of these vehicles, you're well off."  
          Bo Gilmore, another former military man, said: "To be able to do something like
          this, protecting our troops, that's invaluable."   |