At the August 18 meeting, the Sierra County Commission will consider whether to be the fiscal agent overseeing the doling out of $500,000 from the state Economic Development Department to AeroVironment.
AeroVironment, a company based in Simi Valley, Ca., partnered with SoftBank in December 2017 to form HAPSMobile, Inc. HAPS stands for High Altitude Pseudo Satellite.
The HAPSMobile vehicle was developed in 24 months, according to a press release issued by AeroVironment and included in the County meeting packet, “which is a very short time.”
The vehicle, the HAWK30, has a 260-foot wingspan covered in solar panels, which power 10 electric motors, creating zero emissions. The vehicle will fly 65,000 feet above sea level for months without landing.
The purpose of the vehicle is to provide internet access, “with the aim of bridging the world’s digital divide,” according to the press release.
AeroVironment was founded in 1971 and is a “global leader in unmanned aircraft systems and tactical missile systems, and serves defense, government and commercial customers,” the press release states.
The total project cost for the HAPSMobile project is $126 million, stated in the press release and AeroVironment application.
The state Economic Development Department, just like other states, is competing for what has become a valuable commodity—jobs. It will give $200,000 to AeroVironment for creating and maintaining 10 full-time jobs for six consecutive months that pay about $60,000.
Another $200,000 will be given when 20 full-time jobs are sustained for six months and a final $100,000 for reaching 30 full-time jobs for six months.
The County will oversee disbursement of the money, verifying jobs created and purchase receipts.
AeroVironment, in its application, said it will use the $500,000 “to expand infrastructure and to develop the runway, office and hangar facilities” at Spaceport America.
The Spaceport America “will be the primary test site in 2020,” the application states, and “the possible long-term test site” in the future.
Initial full-time workers will move to the area from California, the application states, with future workers probably hired from “Las Cruces (NMSU), a natural source of local labor.”