HII Hosts Congressional Delegation and USMC Officers at Ingalls Shipbuilding
03 März 2023 - 12:30AM
GlobeNewswire Inc.
HII’s (NYSE: HII) Ingalls Shipbuilding division hosted U.S. Reps.
Trent Kelly, R-Miss.; Joe Courtney, D-Conn.; and Jerry Carl, R-Ala.
who were accompanied by U.S. Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Karsten Heckl
and Lt. Gen. Christopher Mahoney today for a meeting with Ingalls
Shipbuilding leadership and a shipyard tour visit.
“It is always a privilege to host members of the House and our
Marine Corps partners,” Ingalls Shipbuilding President Kari
Wilkinson said. “We make the best decisions and investments as
collaborative partners aligned in our understanding of the
opportunities to forward our common mission of providing for our
service men and women.”
For 85 years, Ingalls has designed, built and maintained
amphibious ships, destroyers, and cutters for the U.S. Navy and the
U.S. Coast Guard. During this official visit, the Ingalls
Shipbuilding team lead their guests on a shipyard tour including
visits aboard amphibious transport dock ship Richard M. McCool Jr.
(LPD 29) and large deck amphibious assault ship Bougainville (LHA
8).
Photos accompanying this release are available at:
https://hii.com/news/hii-hosts-congressional-delegation-and-usmc-officers-at-ingalls-shipbuilding/
"It's always great to be back at Ingalls Shipbuilding, and I
remain impressed with the talent, dedication and teamwork of
Ingalls shipbuilders as they construct the next generation of ships
for our Navy and Marine Corps,” Kelly said. “Congress has been
clear about the requirement for amphibious warships, including the
establishment of a minimum 31 amphibious warships in our Navy fleet
in last year’s NDAA. I was especially pleased to visit and see
construction progress on both LPD 29 and LHA 8 today, and I look
forward to working with my colleagues on HASC to provide for the
future of amphibious warships in the FY24 National Defense
Authorization Act.”
“The work being done by Mississippi’s shipbuilders and engineers
at the Ingalls shipyard in Pascagoula is absolutely critical to the
mission of our U.S. Navy, and the national security of America and
its allies,” Courtney said. “What I saw at the shipyard
should inspire confidence in every American focused on the success
of our Marine Corps and Navy — this workforce is sharp, highly
skilled and has taken full advantage of the investments Congress
made into LPD 32 and LHA9 procurement. Our 2023 NDAA authorized
full funding for both programs while also providing advance
procurement for the next ships in both classes, all in support of
the statutory floor for 31 amphibious ships authorized by the
Seapower subcommittee. The volume, pace and capability of what is
being built at HII’s Pascagoula shipyard is a huge achievement, and
I’m grateful to Chairman Kelly for organizing this opportunity for
us to see their impressive workforce in action.”
“It’s an honor to visit and engage industry on how best I can
support our Mississippi and Alabama shipbuilders and Marine Corps,”
Carl said. “The volume, pace and capability of what is being built
at this shipyard is impressive. The workforce should be very proud
of building these amphibious ships that are critical to the Navy
and Marine Corps who protect our security interests around the
globe.”
Ingalls Shipbuilding is the sole builder of the entire San
Antonio class of ships and has delivered 12 San
Antonio-class ships to the Navy and has three more under
construction, including Richard M.
McCool, Harrisburg (LPD 30) the first Flight II LPD,
and Pittsburgh (LPD 31). The shipyard is also building
large-deck amphibious ships for the Navy and Marine Corps,
delivering a total of 15 ships, and the production remains online
and efficient with the ongoing construction
of Bougainville and Fallujah (LHA 9), which started
fabrication in December 2022.
“It is great to be able to see the level of construction taking
place on amphibious ships currently being built at Ingalls,”
Mahoney said. “These amphibious ships are crucial to our national
security.”
Heckl echoed the sentiments of Mahoney on the critical need for
amphibious ships. “The reality is that the diverse set of missions
our amphibs are most likely to execute are very real, occur fairly
regularly, and could occur anywhere on the globe,” Heckl said. “The
naval force must advocate for a larger Department of the Navy
budget. This will enable congressionally authorized multi-ship
buys, provide cost savings through industrial base stability, and
improve current maintenance and readiness levels."
HII recently invested nearly $1 billion in infrastructure,
facility and toolsets at Ingalls Shipbuilding enabling shipbuilders
to improve product flow and process and efficiency, and enhancing
product quality. Ingalls is supported by over 1,200 suppliers
across 49 states and is the largest manufacturing employer in
Mississippi and a major contributor to the economic growth of
Alabama.
About HII
HII is a global, all-domain defense provider. HII’s mission is
to deliver the world’s most powerful ships and all-domain solutions
in service of the nation, creating the advantage for our customers
to protect peace and freedom around the world.
As the nation’s largest military shipbuilder, and with a more
than 135-year history of advancing U.S. national security, HII
delivers critical capabilities extending from ships to unmanned
systems, cyber, ISR, AI/ML and synthetic training. Headquartered in
Virginia, HII’s workforce is 43,000 strong. For more information,
visit:
- HII on the
web: hii.com
- HII on
Facebook: facebook.com/TeamHII
- HII on
Twitter: twitter.com/WeAreHII
- HII on
Instagram: instagram.com/WeAreHII
Contact:
Kimberly Aguillard Kimberly.K.Aguillard@hii-co.com (228)
935-6821
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/b5c90abd-2089-4468-82ac-95ccf4be85d2
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