By Timothy J. Gibbons , The
Times-Union
Saturday, September 16, 2006
Logistic Services International Inc. has received the largest
surface warfare contract in its history.
Over the next two years, the Jacksonville-based company will be
paid $22 million to rewrite the training materials used by
journeyman-level engineers who work on naval surface ships.
The training will be used by the engineers who work on all the
ships in the U.S. Navy other than aircraft carriers and
submarines, said Phil Voss, LSI's chief corporate development
officer.
"That's a whole bunch of ships," Voss said. "This is real big."
The work involves taking the current instructor-led courses used
by the Center for Naval Engineering in Norfolk, Va., and
re-engineering and revising the courses to make them into
self-paced instruction courses.
Since bidding for the contract earlier this year, the company
has been hiring workers, bringing about 40 new workers onto the
129-employee team that will be working on the project at LSI's
headquarters at Cecil Field, the Westside airport that used to
be a military base.
LSI was one of nine companies bidding on the contract, awarded
by the Naval Air Warfare Center, which said the company's
proposal "represented the best value to the government."
Subcontractors on the project include Northrop Grumman Technical
Services, General Dynamics Information Technology and Cape Henry
Associates of Virginia, Battelle Memorial Institute of Ohio and
Craig Technologies of Cocoa Beach. |