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Sierra Nevada has long touted the A-29 Super Tucano as a proven, reliable plane already in use with nine air forces around the world. Sierra Nevada also said that its win of the contract would support more than 1,400 American jobs, noting that more than 100 companies will supply parts and services to build the plane. The Machinists union on Friday issued a news release backing Beechcraft in the dispute and arguing the Air Force decision failed to consider the impact on U.S. workers, the U.S. industrial base and U.S. national security concerns. "I don't know why the U.S. government is bending over backwards to accommodate Brazil in the midst of sequestration, but this is a real blow to American workers and taxpayers," Machinists president Tom Buffenbarger said. "The claim by Embraer that most of their plane would be
'built in the USA' adds insult to the injury of the 1,400 jobs that will be destroyed here at home." U.S. Rep. Mike Pompeo, a Republican whose district includes the Beechcraft plant, said the GAO has 60 days to issue its initial response to the protest. He and the state's two Republican senators sent a letter to the Defense Department asking to discuss the contract outcome. Their letter noted that the Air Force's rejection of the Beechcraft bid was largely premised on whether the AT-6 could receive certification, but they argued that was an unreasonable concern given the history of aircraft certification. Beechcraft's offer was below the initial estimated contract cost, while the competition's offer was above it, Pompeo said in a phone interview. He added that Beechcraft's plane also apparently was evaluated as better in almost all contract criteria. "So you had a less expensive product that met more of the capability and yet they didn't choose it
-- and that is to say befuddling to me," Pompeo said. In March 2012 the Air Force canceled the first contract it had awarded Sierra Nevada and launched an investigation after Beechcraft said it had been wrongly excluded from the bidding process. The Air Force began the process again, re-soliciting proposals. Sierra Nevada sued in June for the reinstatement of the initial contract, contending that the revised bid proposal was tilted in favor of Beechcraft. The U.S. Court of Federal Claims ruled in November that the Air Force's decision to solicit proposals again was reasonable and rational.
[Associated
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