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A G-League player is in police custody on suspicion of murder.

Comanche was arrested on Friday afternoon by members of the California FBI for a kidnapping charge in connection with the missing person case. He was not granted bail, per the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office. The center has played the past two seasons for the Stockton Kings, the G-League affiliate of the Sacramento Kings.

The Stockton Kings confirmed to USA TODAY Sports that they released Comanche. The team had no further comment. He was averaging 14 points and 7 rebounds a game this season.

Comanche’s inmate record shows he was arrested without a warrant for a PC 1551.1 felony, which, according to California law states that a person may be arrested without a warrant ‘upon reasonable information that the accused stands charged in the courts of any other state with a crime punishable by death or imprisonment for a term exceeding one year.’

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The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said that Sakari Harnden, 19, was also arrested on Wednesday in Clark County, Nevada on a kidnapping charge in the case. She was identified as a friend of Rodgers’ and reportedly met up with her on Dec. 5. with Comanche, who was identified as Harnden’s boyfriend. Rodgers wasn’t seen or heard from since.

Comanche, who played college basketball at Arizona, has a court date scheduled for Tuesday and is to be extradited to Nevada.

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TAMPA, Fla.  — Texas volleyball served up a second straight national championship to its fans.

Literally.

Powered by a pinpoint service game, Texas stunned top-ranked Nebraska in Amalie Arena while rolling to a second consecutive national title. The 25-22, 25-24, 25-11 sweep capped off an improbable repeat run for the Longhorns, who never topped the national poll this season and entered the NCAA Tournament as a No. 2 seed.

But Texas (28-4) played its best volleyball in December while knocking off top seeds Stanford, Wisconsin and, finally, Nebraska. That’s become a habit for the Longhorns, who haven’t dropped a set in ether of its two wins in the past two national-title games.

Junior outside hitter Madisen Skinner, a leading candidate for the national player of the year award, again aced the Texas offense with 16 kills while setter Ella Swindle had 21 assists while becoming just the third true freshman to lead her team to a Division I championship. Libero Emma Halter joined Skinner, O’Neal and Swindle on the all-tournament team after collecting nine digs.

Emotions ran hot all match in the meeting between two teams that have now each won five national titles, especially in a taut first set. After a questionable four-touch call on Texas negated a kill from Wenaas at the end of a marathon rally, Elliott didn’t hide his frustration with the officials and drew a yellow card for a caution. Moments later, Elliott got even more steamed over an apparent substitution violation by Nebraska that didn’t get called, which led to a red card and a point for Nebraska.

But with the set tied at 22-22 and the partisan Cornhusker crowd in full throat, Texas showed its championship poise by scoring three straight points, including an ace by Keonilei Akana that closed out the set.

The next two sets lacked such drama as the Longhorns cruised to the win over a shell-shocked Nebraska (33-2) with the match breaking the NCAA attendance record for an indoor volleyball contest as 19,727 fans took in Sunday’s final.

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MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. – Miami Dolphins star Tyreek Hill ran a variety of wide receiver routes, and even danced while warming up before Sunday’s game against the New York Jets.

A week of not practicing seemed to do well for Hill, who entered with a left ankle injury. But a game to rest instead of force the issue could prove to be better for the Dolphins this season.

Sorry, fantasy football owners who depended on Hill to reach the playoffs in Week 15.

But Dolphins coach Mike McDaniel made the right move sidelining his best player and several other standouts who will be vital to Miami’s postseason push in the final three games of this season.

Raheem Mostert scored twice increasing his NFL-lead to 20 touchdowns, quarterback Tua Tagovailoa threw a 60-yard touchdown to receiver Jaylen Waddle in the first half and Miami stifled Zach Wilson and Trevor Siemian to ground the Jets 30-0 at Hard Rock Stadium.

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Miami still owns first place in the AFC East and second place in the conference after the win.

“That wasn’t the easiest decision, but when you look at what’s the best decision for the team and what’s the best decision for him … It became easier in the moment,” McDaniel said of Hill, who he deemed was “pretty close” to play.

“I think some decisions are hard, but easy at the same time.”

Now, comes their biggest test of the season: Miami faces the Dallas Cowboys at home on Dec. 24, the Baltimore Ravens on the road Dec. 31 and the Buffalo Bills in a home finale in Week 18.

But they must get healthy.

Dolphins have been a hobbled bunch in December

It wasn’t just a get right game for the Dolphins, who lost 28-27 to the Titans last Monday. It was a get healthy game for several standouts, too.

Miami also played without starting cornerback Xavien Howard (hip), while safety Jevon Holland (knees) missed his third straight game, and right guard Robert Hunt (hamstring) has missed four of his last five games.

Miami was already without starting edge rusher Jaelan Phillips (Achilles) and linebacker Jerome Baker (knee); both are done for the regular season.

The Dolphins got by the Jets with running back De’Von Achane (toe), left tackle Terron Armstead played (knee and ankle), and interior lineman Liam Eichenberg (calf) playing despite injuries.

Starting right tackle Austin Jackson started despite an oblique injury, and left the game in the second half as a precaution.

The Dolphins will have Hill near 100% healthy to make their push to win the division and contend for the No. 1 seed and home-field advantage in the playoffs.

How far is Tyreek Hill from 2,000 yards?

Hill raised eyebrows when he said he wants to be the NFL’s first 2,000-yard receiver, and he made well on his quest before being missing the Jets game.

Hill still leads the NFL with 1,542 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns despite not playing. He is 400 yards shy of tying Calvin Johnson’s NFL receiving record of 1,942 yards set in 2012. Hill is also 458 yards away from 2,000.

Hill will need to average 133.6 yards in the final three games to break Johnson’s record or 152.6 yards to reach 2,000 yards.

More important, though, is the Dolphins’ quest to reach the postseason for the second straight season and clinch the AFC East for the first time since 2008.

Important enough for Hill to miss his first game as Dolphins in two seasons, and his first game since an inconsequential season finale with the Chiefs in 2020.

Hill has been instrumental to Miami’s success this season, and will be depended on heavily in their playoff pursuit.

“It’s tough not having one of your star guys out there,” Tagovailoa said after completing 21 of 24 for 224 yards and no turnovers without Hill.

Waddle finished with eight catches for 142 yards, while Mostert had 15 carries for 42 yards to lead Miami.

“We’ve got a lot of other guys that we trust, that we believed in … and that’s what happened out there.”

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Kyle McCord, the former Ohio State starting quarterback who entered the NCAA transfer portal earlier this month, is bound for Syracuse.

McCord announced on Sunday that he is committed to join the Orange for his senior season after visiting the school this weekend.

In one season as a starter for the Buckeyes, he threw for 3,170 yards with 24 touchdowns and six interceptions with a 161.64 passer rating that ranked 14th among quarterbacks in the Football Bowl Subdivision, helping keep Ohio State unbeaten and in contention for the College Football Playoff until the last weekend of the regular season.

But he did not hit the lofty standard set by his immediate predecessors at Ohio State, a group that included C.J. Stroud, Justin Fields and Dwayne Haskins Jr., who were all finalists for the Heisman Trophy in their first seasons as starters. McCord was a third-team All-Big Ten selection.

The debut from McCord did not cement his status as the Buckeyes’ starting quarterback for next season.

On the day before McCord put his name in the portal, coach Ryan Day was noncommittal about him remaining at the top of the depth chart, suggesting a competition was brewing.

McCord had earlier in the year been in a tight battle for the starting job with redshirt freshman Devin Brown, and the gap was close enough that it continued into September. It took two games before McCord was named the starter indefinitely.

The transfer to Syracuse allows McCord to return to the Northeast. He grew up in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, and attended high school at St. Joseph’s Prep in Philadelphia, where he developed into a five-star recruit.

Perhaps the bigger draw, though, is that the Orange have an opening on the depth chart for a starting quarterback.

Garrett Shrader, a transfer from Mississippi State who has started since 2021, is due to move on, and Syracuse has only two other scholarship quarterbacks returning on its roster between Braden Davis, who was a redshirt freshman this fall, and Carlos Del Rio-Wilson, who was a redshirt sophomore. Both started a game in place of Shrader this season when he was unavailable. Jakhari Williams, a three-star quarterback from Macon, Georgia, is also verbally committed in the upcoming signing class.

The Orange have a new coach after hiring Fran Brown, a New Jersey native who was the defensive backs coach at Georgia, to replace Dino Babers, who was fired after eight seasons last month. They went 6-6 this year and face South Florida in the Boca Raton Bowl on Thursday.

Before zeroing in on Syracuse, McCord had also taken a look at Nebraska and visited Lincoln earlier in the week.

But the potential of him ending up with the Cornhuskers seemed to cool as Nebraska has also been looking to flip Dylan Raiola, one of the top-ranked high school quarterbacks in the class of 2024.

Joey Kaufman covers Ohio State football for The Columbus Dispatch and can be reached at jkaufman@dispatch.com.

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Bill Belichick is one of the most decorated and accomplished coaches in NFL history, but the 2023 season has pumped the brakes on the coach’s glory train.

With the New England Patriots’ 27-17 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs at Gillette Stadium on Sunday, the team has 11 losses, tying for the most defeats he has been handed in his 29-year career as a head coach. With three games left in the season, the Patriots are now 3-11 with a .214 winning percentage, the lowest of Belichick’s career, which includes five seasons with the Cleveland Browns and 24 in New England. Belichick went 5-11 during his final year in Cleveland in 1995 and his first season with the Patriots in 2000.

The Patriots went up 10-7 in the first quarter after rookie linebacker Marte Mapu intercepted Patrick Mahomes. But New England couldn’t keep up with the defending Super Bowl champions from there.

Belichick has made his mark in the NFL history books as the only head coach with six Super Bowl rings. This season, he became the third coach in the league to reach 300 regular season wins with an upset of AFC East foe the Buffalo Bills. The win put him in the company of Hall of Fame coaches Don Shula and George Halas.

New England was eliminated from playoff contention in Week 14. Despite capturing a road win over the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Patriots were knocked out due to the Cincinnati Bengals defeating the Indianapolis Colts. Per CBS, it’s the earliest the Patriots’ postseason hopes have been dashed since 2000.

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The 2023 season has been marred by a quarterback carousel between Mac Jones and Bailey Zappe. After a promising start to the campaign, a Week 4 loss to the Dallas Cowboys rattled the defense. Rookie cornerback Christian Gonzalez suffered a season-ending shoulder injury and veteran linebacker Matt Judon was placed on injured reserve after hurting his biceps.

Bill Belichick’s performance without Tom Brady

The Patriots have been a shadow of themselves since Tom Brady left for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers ahead of the 2020 season.

Belichick’s record without his star quarterback is 28-36. He has not won a playoff game since Brady’s departure.

In 2020, the Patriots’ first season without Brady under center, they went 7-9. It was Belichick’s worst season since he went 5-11 in his first year with the franchise. They missed the playoffs for the first time since 2008.

The Patriots went 10-7 in 2021, the first year played with 17 regular season games. They went back to the playoffs and lost in the wild-card round to the Bills.

In 2022, New England went 8-9 and missed the postseason.

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A group of recently released hostages and their relatives met with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and war cabinet minister Benny Gantz Saturday evening. 

One of the freed hostages, quoted by The Times of Israel, relayed the fear that captives endured daily and the lingering trauma they’ve experienced since their release. 

‘Every passing day is terrifying. You have no idea what kind of monsters we are dealing with. If they’re feeling threatened, they will use the captives. They scared us that the IDF would use the Hannibal Directive on civilians, and therefore we were scared when the [IDF] bombings were close,’ the unnamed individual was quoted as saying, referring to the IDF’s use of heavy fire if a soldier is abducted – even at the risk of killing the soldier. 

‘They were so close that we begged them to take us [from the building in which we were held] into the tunnels [for safety], and at one stage, they did,’ the subject said, before warning the soldiers: ‘Don’t go into the tunnels. They are moving around in there in vast numbers. It’s a colossal danger to soldiers and to hostages.’ 

The comments come more than two months after Hamas militants stormed into southern Israel and killed some 1,200 people and captured scores of hostages. 

Israel’s offensive has killed more than 18,700 Palestinians per the Hamas-run Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between combatants and civilians. Israel has disputed these figures. 

Hamas released over 100 of more than 240 hostages captured on Oct. 7 in exchange for the release of scores of Palestinian prisoners during a brief cease-fire in November. Nearly all freed have been women and minors. 

Hamas has said no more hostages will be released until the war ends and that in exchange it will demand the release of large numbers of Palestinian prisoners, including high-profile militants. 

According to those tracking the Iranian-backed group – and admissions by its leaders – Hamas has built an approximately 300-mile subterranean system that snakes beneath civilian homes, schools, and hospitals in urban areas of the Gaza Strip. 

Fox News’ Ruth Marks Eglash contributed to this report. 

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Chilean voters headed to the polls on Sunday and rejected a proposed constitution written by conservatives to replace the country’s current Pinochet-era set of laws, created when Gen. Augusto Pinochet, a dictator, ran the country.

The Associated Press reported that as of late Sunday, 96% of the votes had been counted, with 55.8% opposed to the new charter and about 44.2% in favor.

The results come over a year after citizens of the country rejected a proposed constitution written by left-leaning lawmakers, which was characterized as one of the world’s most progressive charters.

But even the new charter, which was drafted largely by conservatives, was criticized for being more conservative than the one it was looking to replace – it aimed to deepen free-market principles, may have limited some rights of women, and reduced state intervention.

‘From a perspective of coherence and respect for democracy, we recognize the results, Javier Macaya, the leader of the conservative Independent Democratic Union party said as he recognized the charter’s defeat.

The defeat means the Pinochet-era constitution will remain in effect. The constitution has been amended several times over the years.

Ex-President Michelle Bachelet hoped, when she voted, that it would be defeated and that the current constitution would remain.

‘I prefer something bad to something worse,’ the AP reported Bachelet as saying.

The proposed constitution contained articles that some found controversial.

For example, the drafted proposal said, ‘the law protects the life of the unborn,’ which some feared would have made abortion fully illegal in Chile.

The country currently allows abortions for reasons of rape, if the mother’s life is at risk and if the fetus is unviable.

Another article under the proposed constitution would allow prisoners who suffer terminal illness and who are not considered to be a danger to society, to be granted house arrest.

But some of the left-wing opposition argued the measure may benefit people who were convicted of crimes against humanity during the Pinochet-era, when the dictator ruled between 1973 and 1990.

Lawmakers began writing a new constitution after protests in 2019, when thousands complained about the inequality in one of South America’s strongest countries, which was also politically stable.

In 2022, voters rejected a proposed constitution that would have characterized the country as a plurinational state, prioritized the environment and gender parity, and established autonomous Indigenous territories.

The AP reported that one of the more recent polls by local firm Cadem indicated 46% of the people surveyed would vote against the new constitution, and 38% would vote in favor.

Based on Sunday’s results, the difference was much closer than expected.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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The White House has privately addressed concerns over an increasingly close relationship between Beijing and private industry in the Middle East that could see Chinese influence over powerful new artificial intelligence (AI) models. 

‘It’s very reminiscent of the Huawei issue where you have these technologies with 5G,’ Dr. Georgianna Shea, the chief technologist at the Foundation for Defense of Democracy’s Center on Cyber and Technology Innovation, told Fox News Digital. 

‘Everyone’s using [5G], so that it becomes a backdoor into a lot of different systems within the United States,’ Shea said. ‘AI offers that same opportunity when [China] partners with our allies: They can both get in on the development side of it and, possibly, skew some of those biases or directly go through and pull out the intellectual property from what’s being put into the model.’ 

The Biden administration has made clear in private discussions with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) that the oil-rich nation should pay close attention to ties between Beijing and the Emirati company G42, which launched its Jais AI model – reportedly the most advanced Arab-language AI model. 

The Emirati Minister of Artificial Intelligence, Omar Sultan Al Olama argued at a summit last month that the Middle East has to learn from past mistakes when it comes to technology, citing the ban on the printing press, which he labeled ‘over-regulation.’ 

The White House in June held talks with the UAE’s national security adviser, Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed, over G42’s ties to China during the sheikh’s visit to the U.S., as he is the controlling interests in the firm, according to the New York Times. 

China and the U.S. have spent most of the year jockeying for leadership over AI development, recognizing the value the technology already has and its incredible potential to transform industries and how people in different countries interact with the world around them.

G42 posted staggering growth over the past year thanks to partnerships with several companies – chief among them a partnership with OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT and its parent company Microsoft. 

The Gulf states have increased their spending in China, stepping up investment from $100 million in 2022 to a staggering $2.3 billion this year so far, even as the U.S. remains the chief investment interest of the region, according to The Telegraph. Relations between the UAE and the U.S. hit a stumbling block when U.S. intelligence determined China was secretly building a suspected military facility at an Abu Dhabi port, which the UAE ended after pressure from Washington. 

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson dismissed U.S. concerns, calling it another effort to ‘sabotage cooperation between Chinese companies and other countries,’ which he accused the U.S. of doing ‘on multiple occasions’ through ‘economic coercion.’ 

Peng Xiao, the chief executive of G42, admitted the U.S. has already started applying some pressure and making clear that the company ‘cannot do much more work with Chinese partners,’ citing concerns over U.S. data handled by the company. 

Despite the growing number of U.S.-created AI options, Shea pointed to TikTok, which has U.S. competitors but still has one of the largest active user base of any social media platform operating in the country: Tiktok ranks as the most daily minutes, while Meta has the largest number of monthly active users, according to Statista. 

An analysis of social media use and engagement found that TikTok provided greater engagement per post than those on social media platforms X and both Facebook and Instagram, according to Rival IQ’s Social Media Industry Benchmark report of 2022 social media performance. 

‘TikTok is one of those types of technology that is… very prevalent,’ Shea said, arguing that ‘if people have the option to use an advanced tool, they will.’ 

‘When you use AI, you put in your information, you put in your questions, you put in your search capabilities, and all of that then gets consumed into a data model,’ Shea explained. ‘Everything you had over into that query area is pretty much handed over.’

Shea raised concerns that the U.S. is ‘struggling with the application of AI’ since ‘you can use it for a lot of different things.’ 

‘Organizations, government, they don’t understand quite how to develop those policies, they’re not quite sure of the security implementation implications, so they haven’t laid out the best rollout for how we will use AI in a secure setting,’ Shea argued. 

‘If there is advanced technology and capabilities out there, then anyone who wants to be in that information-dominant space is going to vie for that ownership and control,’ she warned. 

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EXCLUSIVE: House China Committee Chairman Mike Gallagher is requesting a classified briefing from the Pentagon to discuss ways the United States can work to aid Taiwan in deterrence efforts amid heightened aggression in the region.

Gallagher, R-Wis., penned a letter to Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks, obtained exclusively by Fox News Digital, in which he says the United States needs to build an ‘arsenal of deterrence.’

‘In December 1940, while we were still at peace, President Franklin D. Roosevelt famously called on the United States to be the ‘great arsenal of democracy,’’ he writes. ‘He said it was the ‘purpose of the nation’ to build ‘with all possible speed, every machine, every arsenal, every factory that we need to manufacture our defense material.’’ 

Gallagher said Roosevelt’s call to provide a ‘lifeline’ to allies also helped to ‘arm our own military in advance of and through the years of heavy conflict and ultimately win the war.’ 

‘Today, the United States finds itself needing to rebuild a different kind of arsenal – an arsenal of deterrence,’ he wrote.

Gallagher warns that Chinese President Xi Jinping has ‘ordered the Chinese military to be ready to invade Taiwan by 2027.’

Now, Gallagher is warning that in order to ‘prevent war,’ the United States must ‘quickly remake an arsenal of deterrence that can arm Taiwan as well as our own forces to allow us to prevail in any conflict in the Indo-Pacific.’

Gallagher, however, said the United States’ current ‘struggles’ to meet the significant demand for U.S. munitions in Ukraine, and now even in Israel, have revealed ‘the fragility of our munitions industrial base.’ 

The committee has engaged in war games simulating a conflict with China over Taiwan, which revealed that the United States ‘would run out of long-range, precision-guided munitions in less than one week.’ 

Gallagher warned that the simulation also revealed that the United States would need to fight closer to Chinese defensive fire, and would increase the risk to air and naval assets – as well as the service members who would operate them.

‘With no guarantees that a war in the Indo-Pacific would be limited to weeks or even months, the possibility that we may have to fight for an extended period without the most effective assets in our arsenal is deeply alarming,’ he writes. ‘In addition, significant delays in the deliveries of critical missiles to Taiwan, including anti-ship Harpoon missiles, make it unclear whether Taiwan itself will have sufficient weapons to defend itself and repel a Chinese invasion.’

Gallagher added that ‘rearming Taiwan after hostilities have commenced, as we did with Ukraine, would be significantly more difficult, if not infeasible.’

‘Today’s challenges must force us to adapt and think outside the box. If delays are preventing vital weapons from being delivered to Taiwan, we must be creative in putting together capabilities – using weapons and assets already in our inventory – that we can promptly deliver to Taiwan,’ he said.

Gallagher said if cost and production times are limiting U.S. supplies, he would propose cheaper alternatives that could, instead, be produced quickly, and would complement the more expensive missiles.

‘Two innovative ideas – the ‘MacGyver’ Harpoons and Powered JDAMs – may offer potential solutions to our problems and help strengthen the arsenal of deterrence at this urgent moment,’ Gallagher proposed.

The Harpoon missiles, which Gallagher calls ‘inventive,’ have been used in Ukraine’s fight against Russia.

Gallagher said a ‘MacGyver’ solution, which is using existing components and older Harpoon missiles already in our inventory, may help get much-needed weapons to Taiwan at a ‘significantly lower cost per round.’

‘The United States currently has hundreds of Harpoon missiles that are being considered for demilitarization, destruction, or long-term stowage. Taiwan may be able to use these missiles with a land-based launch system with only minor modifications,’ Gallagher proposed.

‘Missile launch support structures and Harpoon Ship Command-Launch Control Systems could be taken off decommissioned Navy ships. Communications systems and data links could come from existing Taiwanese systems. Power generators and ground platforms, such as steel plates or Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Trucks, could come from either American or Taiwanese stocks,’ he explained.

Gallagher also pointed to Joint Direct Attack Munitions, or JDAMs, which he said were used extensively by the United States in both Iraq and Afghanistan.

‘The ‘Powered’ JDAM – an innovative concept that would allow a standard 500-pound bomb to travel several hundred miles as a cruise missile – could provide a cheaper, near-term solution to complement the more expensive PGMs that take years to build,’ he said, adding that they may be able to attack targets at both land and sea.

Gallagher stressed that ‘reviving and rebuilding an arsenal of deterrence will require a generational investment and mobilization.’

‘At the same time, we must be realistic about how quickly the munitions industrial base will be able to produce our most essential weapons. We must be creative and think outside the box to come up with solutions,’ he said. ‘The urgency of the moment requires nothing less.’

Gallagher requested a classified briefing from the Pentagon next month regarding the agency’s plans it has to pursue the weapons systems he has proposed.

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In the high-dollar, high-tech world of chipmaking, $35 million is a pittance.

But the Biden administration’s first CHIPS Act grant, to BAE Systems’ semiconductor plant in Nashua, New Hampshire, could still bring significant changes for the city of 91,000 people.

“We have a really great workforce right now that’s underemployed,” said Liz Hannum, Nashua’s economic development director, who said the funding influx will jump-start workforce upskilling. “Getting them the training that they need to get higher-paying jobs is going to be absolutely amazing.”

BAE, a British military contractor, is New Hampshire’s largest private employer, Hannum said. It’s already the U.S. armed forces’ main supplier of monolithic microwave integrated circuits, which are critical for many defense technologies, including the systems used in F-35 fighter jets.

The federal grant is set to finance upgrades to BAE’s microelectronics center in Nashua that has long provided semiconductors for military aircraft, allowing it to quadruple its output of MMIC chips, officials said.

To do that, Hannum added, “they’re going to need a lot more jobs.”

BAE Systems’ Microelectronics Center in Nashua, N.H.BAE Systems

The initial gains, though, will be incremental. Relative to other types of manufacturing, chipmaking is highly automated and doesn’t typically require vast workforces; initial projections for nationwide job gains spurred by the CHIPS Act were in the mid-five digits. And Nashua already has a long history of high-tech employment, including in defense applications, that predates BAE’s presence by decades.

The microelectronics site is one of several BAE operations in and around the city. A low-slung brick building of 110,000 square feet (an area just shy of two football fields), it employs only 200 or so of the company’s 3,700-person workforce in southern New Hampshire, according to Cheryl Paradis, vice president and general manager of BAE’s Fast Labs unit.

The facility’s head count is expected to grow by at least 12%, she said, and BAE has committed to hiring at least six new technicians a year for the next five years.

“We’ll get to do new advanced designs on this new equipment, because it can handle more details, more capacity, more capability,” Paradis said of the impact of the grant, a sliver of the massive $52.7 billion pool created by last year’s bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act.

Cheryl Paradis, general manager of BAE’s Fast Labs.BAE Systems

“The modernization of this foundry is really what’s going to secure our nation’s ability to continue providing the most situational awareness and the most survivability” for important defense technologies, she said, adding that BAE’s electronic warfare systems protect around 80% of U.S. fixed-wing military aircraft.

Tightening domestic control of supply chains for these sensitive tools was a key goal for lawmakers who backed the measure.

“This proposed investment aligns with the core objective of the CHIPS Program to help fill specific needs in the national security ecosystem,” Michael Schmidt, director of the CHIPS Program Office, said in a statement.

Like other disbursements to follow, the grant isn’t yet a done deal, a CHIPS Program spokesperson said. Next steps include an in-depth review by federal administrators, with grantees assessed according to confidential milestones, akin to a “commercial diligence” process, before receiving the award.

While the extent of the CHIPS grants’ job creation remains to be seen, people with chipmaking skills are already in demand. After decades of sending semiconductor production overseas, the U.S. doesn’t yet have enough trained workers to immediately fulfill its reshoring push.

Hence municipal leaders’ planned eight-to-10-week course at Nashua Community College on the basics of chipmaking — one of dozens that the White House said this summer the CHIPS Act has spurred. Among other things, Nashua students will learn how to operate in “clean rooms,” the highly controlled environments where chips are fabricated, since contact with even small particles can cause damage.

The training program is part of a $200,000 municipal incentive package — funded with money the city received from the American Rescue Plan, which Democrats passed in 2021 — that Nashua’s mayor said earlier this year was key to BAE’s securing the grant. Hannum said the local funding will cover tuition for at least 180 students over the next five years, with a range of employers standing to benefit.

“BAE has lots of those needs, but so do some other companies around,” she said.

In addition to other defense-sector employers such as Marmon Aerospace & Defense in Manchester, Southern New Hampshire boasts other high-tech firms in fields including life sciences, like the diagnostic test maker Thermo Fisher Scientific with operations in Portsmouth and Newington.

The Nashua training program is partly modeled on previous workforce development efforts between BAE and the city. An earlier microelectronics boot camp, established in 2016 at the community college, has graduated 300 students with a 98% job placement rate, said Paradis.

And demand — for advanced chips and workers to produce them — is only set to grow.

“If you look at where we are as a nation and where we need to go,” she said, “there are volume increases coming.”

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