Politics & Government

Sequestration Ax Looms Over Redondo Beach, Report Suggests

Pentagon budget cuts of $500 billion could hammer Redondo Beach.

Members of Congress and business lobbyists have been sounding alarms about sequestration—looming Pentagon budget cuts that could exceed $500 billion over 10 years.

They could begin in January if lawmakers don’t deal with the so-called “fiscal cliff,” including the fallout of the 2011 Budget Control Act.

But what does that mean for Redondo Beach?

Find out what's happening in Redondo Beachwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Although military jobs and pay would not be affected, the cuts could trickle down to 10 local businesses and individuals that did business with the Department of Defense last year to the tune of $419 million.

According to the Center for Defense Policy, which last week released updated data from several federal sources, these Redondo Beach companies and individuals did business with the Pentagon in 2011 (with the value of contracts noted):

Find out what's happening in Redondo Beachwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

  • Bonnie Faye Gibson-Brydon (one contract for $30,000) for "translation and interpretation services"
  • Marcus Goodloe (one contract for $5,750) for "all other miscellaneous schools and instruction"
  • Production Services America (10 contracts for a total of $133,684) for "ball and roller bearing manufacturing"
  • Redondo Optics (four contracts for a total of $733,455) for "research and development in the physical, engineering and life sciences (except biotechnology)"
  • Sierra Monolithics Inc. (six contracts for a total of $211,407) for "instrument manufacturing for measuring and testing electricity and electrical signals"
  • Structural Mechanics Corp. (one contract for $121,000) for "engineering services"
  • F1 Service Company (one contract for $6,750) for "pump and pumping equipment manufacturing"
  • Mician Inc. (one contract for $21,971) for "software publishers"
  • Northrop Grumman (45 contracts to different divisions for a total of $419,761,861) for "research and development in the physical, engineering and life sciences (except biotechnology)" and other projects.
  • Daniel Plaster (one contract for $35,100) for "fine arts schools"

Additionally, TRW Inc. paid the government $2,032,212 for three contracts on "guided missile and space vehicle manufacturing" and "fluid power valve and hose fitting manufacturing."

Pentagon cuts of 18 percent over 10 years are forecast under current plans.

An analysis in late August by Todd Harrison of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (see attached PDF) said cuts would not affect funding already obligated in contracts, but would lead to “reduction in new contract awards, contract extensions, options, etc. … and likely force DoD to renegotiate contracts to buy in smaller quantities and cause unit costs to rise.”

Who would decide on the cuts?

The Congressional Budget Office says: “The [Obama] administration’s Office of Management and Budget has sole authority to determine whether a sequestration is required and, if so, the proportional allocations of any necessary cuts.”

Sequestration is the word used to describe automatic cuts mandated by the August 2011 Budget Control Act, which came after the national debt ceiling debate and failure of the congressional “super committee” to reach a deal on deficit reduction.

Nobody knows where the budget ax would swing—and even how hard the South Bay and its large defense industry presence would be hit.

But in mid-June, Rep. J. Randy Forbes of Virginia was quoted by U-T San Diego as telling a University of San Diego audience that “this is something that ought to be in every congressional debate, as we go into the November election.”

In early August, Frank Kendall, a Defense Department undersecretary, urged a San Diego Convention Center gathering “to keep reaching out to local leaders in Congress and letting them know the job cuts that could come to their districts as a result of sequestration,” according to the San Diego Daily Transcript.

“That seems to be getting their attention more than anything else right now,” Kendall was quoted as saying.

On Tuesday, the right-wing think tank Center for Security Policy posted congressional district reports to help estimate the potential local economic impacts of the cuts to the nation’s defense budget under sequestration. 

Reports citing 2011 data showing the effect of 18 percent “sequestration cuts” for all U.S. states and territories, counties and cities.

The center, whose projects have criticized as biased, projected that California would loses at least 141,130 jobs under sequestration, including 15,341 civilian Defense Department jobs and 125,789 private-sector jobs.

Citing the Aerospace Industries Association, the Center for Security Policy said: “Four out of five likely voters in critical battleground states want our leaders in Washington … to find an alternative to ‘sequestration’ budget cuts before the November elections take place, according to a Harris Interactive online poll.”

In 2007, a writer for Watching the Watchers said a column in a forum established by the Center for Security “called on President Bush to declare himself ‘President for Life’ and remove all Arabs from the Middle East so he can ‘repopulate the country with Americans.’”

But figures used in the center’s sequestration report appear to be unbiased.

The center said contract figures for the sequestration report “derived from public data at the Federal Procurement Data System based on queries from governmentcontractswon.com, and combined with public ZIP code data linked to congressional districts.”


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here