Final defense bill action expected soon

Wright-Patterson supporters hope to see millions for base construction projects
The Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, in 2023. The school is part of the Air Force Research Laboratory’s 711th Human Performance Wing. (U.S. Air Force photo / Jeremy Dunn)

The Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, in 2023. The school is part of the Air Force Research Laboratory’s 711th Human Performance Wing. (U.S. Air Force photo / Jeremy Dunn)

Final action on the fiscal year 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) is approaching, with reconciliation of the House and Senate versions of the annual defense spending and policy bills expected soon.

Supporters of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base are hoping for inclusion of $45 million for a Human Performance Wing Laboratory, serving as a new home for the Human Effectiveness Directorate of the 711th Human Performance Wing, as well as $15 million in planning and design for a refurbishment of the base’s primary runway.

“I think we’ve been very successful this year for the funding bill in obtaining support for construction projects at Wright-Patt,” U.S. Rep. Mike Turner, a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee, said in a recent interview. “Certainly, the construction funding that has previously been secured is permitting (work) at the base to continue and is ongoing.”

“I believe that the funding bills that are currently pending in Congress that need to be completed before the end of January are likely to be done in time, so there will not be a need for an additional continuing resolution,” he added. “And those bills should also be very beneficial for Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.”

A continuing resolution funding the federal government until Jan. 30 is in force. Military leaders generally dislike such resolutions because they maintain current funding levels and prevent increases in funding and flexibility in policy direction they say are often needed to address emerging threats.

The current resolution ended a recent record 43-day lapse in funding of the federal government. Hundreds of thousands of Department of Defense civilians were furloughed, as were more than 8,000 Wright-Patterson civilians. Priorities such as shipbuilding and research languished during the shutdown.

Also sought in the new bill are us $2.8 million to begin designing a new artificial intelligence (AI) supercomputing center at Wright-Patterson.

711th Human Performance Wing personnel participate in a dress blues uniform inspection at the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force, May 28, 2025. Air Force photo / Ken Lerock

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“This legislation delivers major investments in new infrastructure and technology at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base ... advances cutting-edge research at NASA Glenn in Cleveland and strengthens key national defense assets across our state,” Sen. Jon Husted, R-Ohio, said in October.

“We’re in a better position on this NDAA than we have been for the last two or three years, as far as the narrow number of issues that were still outstanding,” Politico quoted U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., the chair of the House Armed Services Committee, as saying last week.

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