Lockheed Martin's space business to cut 1,200 jobs

DENVER (AP) - Aerospace and defense contractor Lockheed Martin Corp. plans to cut 1,200 employees in its space systems equipment division.

The company said Tuesday the cuts will be nationwide and trim the division's 16,000-person work force by nearly eight percent. The company said middle management will be reduced by 25 percent.

The cuts will most heavily affect areas where Lockheed Martin is winding down its contract work, such as Sunnyvale, Calif., the Delaware Valley region of Pennsylvania, and Denver.

Lockheed said it will offer voluntary layoffs to eligible salaried employees to minimize involuntary job cuts.

The cutbacks come as budgetary pressures are prompting the Obama administration to pare back defense spending. On Tuesday, a House panel approved a defense spending bill that would impose limits on U.S. spending in Iraq and Afghanistan.

By voice vote, the House Appropriations Committee approved the legislation that would provide $530 billion to the Pentagon and $119 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The bill is $9 billion less than President Barack Obama requested.

"It's really all about the budgetary environment that is affecting our customers," said Lockheed Martin spokesman Steve Tatum. "There are fewer new business opportunities on the horizon."

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