LONG BEACH, Calif. - The last Boeing 717 has left the factory.

The slender airliner, trailed by dozens of the workers who built it, was
rolled out before dawn last week and towed across a boulevard to Long Beach
Airport.

Its delivery to AirTran Airways next month will mark the end of seven
decades of commercial airplane production in Southern California.

At another sprawling complex nearby, thousands of workers still produce the
Boeing C-17 military cargo plane. However, there are no new orders for the
aircraft in the proposed Defense Department budget.

If congressional efforts to restore the program fail, the last of those
flying warehouses will be delivered in 2008, and all airplane production
would end in California - once the center of commercial and military
airplane construction in the nation.

"More aviation history has been made in Southern California than in any
other place in the world," said Bill Schoneberger, author of "California
Wings," a history of aviation in the state.

"But we've evolved. The aeronautics industry has moved from an airplane
business into a systems business," he said.

Indeed, as corporate consolidation and defense cuts sent airplane production
to Seattle, St. Louis and other regions, Southern California has moved from
metal bending to aerospace research and development.

Today's workers build satellites, helicopters and unmanned surveillance
drones while developing rockets and military jets that are made elsewhere.

Southern California aviation history dates to the early 1900s and features
pioneers such as Howard Hughes, Jack Northrop and Donald Douglas, whose
Douglas Aircraft built the DC-1 in 1933, one of the first commercial
passenger planes.

With weather that accommodated year-round flying, the region drew companies
that produced bombers and fighter planes during World War II. Later came
jetliners such as the DC-8, DC-9, DC-10, MD-80, MD-90, MD-11 and L-1011
TriStar, and space vehicles that included the Apollo capsule and space
shuttle. Boeing Co. acquired the Long Beach plant in August 1997 when it
bought McDonnell-Douglas Corp.

As the nation's defense priorities shifted, Northrop Grumman Corp. went from
building B-2 stealth bombers and other planes in the region to providing
electronic warfare systems, including the Global Hawk unmanned surveillance
plane, built in San Diego.

Boeing builds satellites in El Segundo. And at a research facility in
Palmdale, Lockheed Martin Corp. is developing the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter,
the next generation warplane.

California's congressional delegation believes the high-wing, four-engine
C-17 still has a place in that arsenal.

"We live in a time of uncertainty. No one knows how many C-17s we will
need," Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said during a recent tour of the
factory in Long Beach that employs 6,000 people.

The cargo plane has been used since 1991 to airlift heavy equipment and
transport troops. Supporters say its ability to land on short dirt runways
has helped take the load off supply trucks that come under heavy fire in
Iraq and Afghanistan.

To replace the C-17, the Defense Department will consider acquiring a
proposed new tanker aircraft and modernizing another transport plane, the
larger C-5.

Only 180 more C-17 planes remain on order in California. The planes cost
about $154 million each.

Ron Marcotte, Boeing vice president of global mobility systems, said it
could take billions of dollars and several years to restart the program if
it shuts down.

"It's the suppliers and the learning of this work force which would go away
overnight," he said.

No effort is in the works to save the Boeing 717, a mid-size, twin-jet
passenger plane that struggled to find its market.

Boeing has sold 155 of the planes since the first delivery in 1999. Many of
the unionized workers on the assembly line have transferred to the C-17
program or been placed in jobs at other aerospace companies.

The last Boeing 717 is now parked on the airport ramp, awaiting the start of
flight testing. The names of the 800 workers who built it have been scrawled
on the inside skin of its fuselage and covered by metal paneling.

Many have worked on airplanes for a quarter-century or more.

Boeing employee Kelly Jenson spent 21 years building passenger planes before
shifting to the C-17, where his fate is uncertain.

"We spend a minimum of eight hours a day here, sometimes 10 or 12," Jenson
said. "We're with each other more than we're with our family. This is our
family."

Gregory S. Williams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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