Syracuse:
The Pentagon has delayed a decision that it had expected to make this month on where to build an East Coast missile interceptor base that New York members of Congress have touted for Fort Drum.
The Missile Defense Agency is completing a two-year study of three sites selected as finalists for the project — Fort Drum, about 80 miles north of Syracuse, and military installations in Ohio and Michigan.
All three states have actively sought the potential $3.6 billion project, which would provide an economic boost by creating up to 1,450 new jobs for civilians, the military and construction workers.
Vice Admiral James Syring, director of the Missile Defense Agency, informed members of Congress from New York, Ohio and Michigan of the “slight delay” in the decision on Friday.
An aide told the congressional delegations that more time is needed to complete the study, but provided no other details other than saying “it will now slip into the new year.”
Chris Johnson, a spokesman for the Missile Defense Agency, confirmed the delay Monday. “MDA requires additional time to complete the study and coordinate with the combatant commanders,” Johnson wrote in an email. “The final EIS (environmental impact statement) and proposed alternative will be released once we complete a thorough review.”
The study, mandated by Congress, examined a 1,219-acre site at Fort Drum and competing plans to place an undetermined number of missile interceptors at Camp Ravenna Joint Training Center in Ohio and Fort Custer Training Center in Michigan.
Members of Congress, including Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-Willsboro, whose district includes Fort Drum, have pushed for a third ground-based missile interceptor site in the United States.