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US Air Force cutting 9,000 jobs now, more later

Dunya News

The US Air Force said it has planned to eliminate 9,000 civilian jobs in a cost-saving move.

More reductions in US Air Force will come later as part of a military-wide effort to adjust to a new era of defense spending cuts.We clearly understand the turbulence these and future reductions will cause in the work force, Gen. Norton A. Schwartz, the Air Force chief of staff, said in an announcement that triggered criticism by members of Congress from states affected by the changes. Schwartz said the Air Force would try hard to achieve the job reductions through attrition and other management moves to avoid forced layoffs.After growing rapidly for a decade, the Pentagon budget is headed for substantial reductions. The Obama administration is committed to cuts of between $450 billion and $465 billion over the next 12 years and cuts approximately double that size could be imposed depending on the outcome of congressional budget negotiations.The Air Force did not spell out the full range of its planned job reductions but said a portion would come from a reorganization of the command that is its largest employer of civilians, the Air Force Materiel Command at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. That commands restructuring is to be done by October 2012.The Air Force said the Materiel Command will not be the only major command affected by the cutbacks, but it mentioned no others. It said workers Air Force-wide will be informed of changes in the next several days.The Air Force has bases around the world, with tens of thousands of airmen and civilians in Europe alone.The announced moves will cut 9,000 civilian positions in management, staff and support at several bases. The Air Force says separately it plans to add 5,900 positions in other, higher-priority areas like weapons buying, nuclear weapons management and the expanding field of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance. It offered no details on that expansion.Brig. Gen. Gina Grosso, the Air Force director of manpower, said officials are still working on details of how to reduce by a further 4,500 civilian jobs. There is more work to be done, to achieve savings, she said.