| Base jobs in doubt as vote nears Local officials continue debate on moving 1,262 jobs to Massachusetts site
By Jessica Wehrman
Dayton Daily News
LEXINGTON, MASS . | In the early months of 2004, a coalition of Massachusetts civic leaders brought a group of planners to Hanscom Air Force Base to help determine whether the base, nestled tightly between lush green Boston suburbs and Revolutionary War battlefields, could expand.
After all, a key component of the upcoming base closure process was space — and Hanscom, a comparatively diminutive Air Force base just at 846 acres without a single runway to its name, seemed to have little to spare.
The planners looked around and asked a question that would result in a controversial $410 million state improvement plan denounced by two Ohio congressmen: Why not build up, they asked?
The Massachusetts proposal to expand would add levels to existing buildings and fill parking lots with multi-level parking garages.
This week, the independent base realignment and closure commission is scheduled to vote on a Defense Department recommendation to give Hanscom at least 2,795 new jobs, including at least 1,262 from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Those jobs include government jobs and embedded contractor jobs. Counting contractors and other so-called "indirect jobs," the Wright-Pat number swells to 2,250.
The Pentagon recommendation aims to beef up Hanscom's role as the center of all work on command, control, communication, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance — known as C4ISR to the Air Force. The work helps airmen on the battlefield determine if they've hit targets, and provides other battlefield communications as well.
Whether the Massachusetts expansion proposal played any role in the Defense Department's recommendations is a subject of some deb
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