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April - The Monty Heat Treat News

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which all the details can be found below. Two thoughts struck us about this press<br />

release. <strong>The</strong> first being that industry in the southeastern USA continues to grow<br />

largely at the expense of other regions of the US. <strong>The</strong> second is that the number of<br />

jobs vs. the capital expenditure is out of whack in this press release. A $2 million<br />

USD investment does not equate to 60 jobs in the commercial heat treating<br />

industry, so our conclusion would have to be that there will be further investment<br />

down the road which will justify more hiring or the other obvious thought is that the<br />

local government has inflated the new job count in an effort to look good-we<br />

become cynical as we get older don't we? March 20/2013<br />

"<strong>Heat</strong> treating company will create 60 new jobs, invest $2 million in metal-treating<br />

facility. Eastman, GA, March 18, 2013-Aremac <strong>Heat</strong> <strong>Treat</strong>ing, LLC<br />

announced it will expand its heat treating operations in Eastman.<br />

<strong>The</strong> facility is in the design-phase and the company plans to be in<br />

operations in the Third Quarter of 2013. This project will result in<br />

the creation of 60 new jobs in Dodge County within five years. "We<br />

have finalized our decision to move here. It is nice to be wanted, to<br />

be part of a community, where we can join in the moral and social<br />

fabric and add to the functioning parts of this community," stated<br />

Denny Butler, Vice President, Aremac <strong>Heat</strong> <strong>Treat</strong>ing, LLC. Aremac is<br />

in the process of expanding its heat treating operations through the<br />

establishment of a new facility in Eastman. This facility will benefit<br />

currently underserved markets along the East Coast. Aremac's new<br />

approximately 28,000 square-foot facility will be located on 10<br />

acres adjacent to the Heart of Georgia Regional Airport and Middle<br />

Georgia State College's Aviation Campus. This area is home to<br />

several other industries serving the aerospace market, representing<br />

a growing strategic industry cluster. Positioning itself near existing<br />

companies such as Dynamic Paint Solutions and Heart of Georgia<br />

Metal Crafters, Aremac's decision to locate adjacent to the Heart of<br />

Georgia Airport will continue to strengthen the area's exposure to the aerospace<br />

industry.<br />

More than 500 aerospace companies have operations in Georgia, employing more<br />

than 86,000 Georgians. Georgia's nationally-recognized Center of Innovation for<br />

Aerospace (COI) is the state's one-stop-shop for aerospace solutions to industry<br />

needs. <strong>The</strong> COI-Aerospace tackles opportunities large and small, from assisting<br />

with federal contracts to prototype manufacturing of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.<br />

Nearly half a billion dollars is spent annually on cutting-edge, university-backed<br />

engineering R&D, putting them in reach of the latest aerospace technologies.<br />

Aremac provides numerous services, including hardening, tempering, vacuum heat<br />

treating and more. By working with alloy materials such as aluminum, nickel-based,<br />

steel, titanium, and other metals including beryllium copper, plain carbon steels,<br />

mumetal, brass and bronze and ductile iron, Aremac has successfully positioned<br />

itself as a recognized leader in the metal treating industry. Aremac provides heat<br />

treating services for recognizable aerospace companies such as Boeing,<br />

Bombardier, Honeywell, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin and Goodrich.<br />

www.themonty.com

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