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THE INDUSTRIAL BASE


industry production and innovation challenges resulting from a shrinking labor pool and legacy machinery. Meanwhile, these new innovations can both increase domestic competitiveness and create the adaptability needed for future Army requirements. Te successful venture between PM SCIE, CCDC-SC and OSD IBAS in the Textile Automation to Enhance Domestic Military Produc- tion program will help foster these industry changes.


For more information, visit the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment (IBAS) website at: https://www.businessdefense.gov/IBAS/.


JEFFREY PACUSKA is the program manager for Future Technologies Integration at the U.S. Army CCDC-SC at Natick, Massachusetts, and the technology and systems integration lead at the Defense Fabric Discovery Center (DFDC) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Labs. He previously worked as a CCDC-SC team leader and portfolio manager and as an assistant product manager and project engineer within the PEO Soldier. He holds an M.S. in materials system engineering management from Worcester Polytechnic Institute and received a B.S. in biochemistry from Tufts University. He is certified as a Project Management Professional, and is a member of the Army Acquisition Corps (AAC).


CLAY WILLIAMSON is the future programs officer for PM SCIE at PEO Soldier and serves as DOD Soldier Systems Sector Lead for Executive Order 13806. He retired as a major from the Army, and was an assistant product manager and then co-founder and president of a publicly traded defense industry company. He has an M.A. in procurement and acquisition management and a B.A. in industrial- organizational psychology. He is certified as a Project Management Professional and is a member of the AAC.


SUZANNE HORNER is the lead systems engineer for Soldier Cloth- ing and Individual Equipment at PEO Soldier at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. She served as an assistant director technical management for Project Manager Soldier Survivability, managing research and devel- opment programs for the Soldier Protection portfolio. She received a M.S. in mechanical engineering from the University of Massachu- setts and is a member of the AAC.


STEPHEN LUCKOWSKI is a directorate advanced manufacturing associate at the Combat Capabilities Development Command Arma- ments Center at Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey. His primary roles are program manager of the DOD Revolutionary Fibers and Textiles Manufacturing Innovation Institute and providing strategic plan- ning for the Armaments Engineering Analysis and Manufacturing


SWEET NEW THREADS


Semiconductors so small they are measured in microns are embedded into monofilament fibers by drawing the semiconductor, insulators and conductors at the same rate using AFFOA’s draw towers.


Directorate. He is working on behalf of DOD’s Manufacturing Technology Program to establish an advanced fibers and textiles manufacturing innovation ecosystem. He holds a B.S. in materi- als engineering from Drexel University and previously served in the U.S. Army, leaving service at the rank of major. He is a member of the AAC and a prior chair and current member of the American Welding Society D1.9 Structural Welding Titanium Code Commit- tee. He has been awarded multiple patents and has been recognized by the Army’s Greatest Invention Awards Program for inventions in titanium welding as well as armament and protection systems.


https://asc.ar my.mil 27


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