CINCINNATI (Cincinnati Business Courier) – GE Aerospace will invest millions of dollars into its Greater Cincinnati facilities to progress testing of its next-generation open-fan engine technology, a milestone in the program that is decades in the making and could determine the future of flight.
The world’s most prolific maker of airplane engines Jan. 10 announced a $9 million research and development grant from JobsOhio and its local arm, REDI Cincinnati, to put new testing equipment at its Evendale headquarters and test operations center in Peebles.
As part of the grant, which is performance based, GE Aerospace committed to creating 200 new engineering jobs, with estimated total annual payroll of $16 million, by the end of 2028. The commitment reflects, at least in part, a doubling down on a prior commitment, announced last May, to hire hundreds in Greater Cincinnati as part of a national hiring blitz targeting the open-fan engine technology development program.
Read the full story from the Cincinnati Business Courier.
Cincinnati Business Courier is a Local 12 News partner
Jobs are opening up in the sports industry as teams expand and money flows into the industry.Excel Search &
Fired federal workers are looking at what their futures hold. One question that's come up: Can they find similar salaries and benefits in the private sector?
After two days of increases, mortgage rates are back down again today. According to Zillow, the average 30-year fixed rate has decreased by four basis points t
Julia Coronado: I think it's too early to say that the U.S. is heading to a recession. Certainly, we have seen the U.S. just continue t