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‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ bolsters Coast Guard shipbuilding programs | Alabama

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Steve Wilson | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-08-07 07:00:00


The “Big, Beautiful Bill” has significantly boosted the U.S. Coast Guard’s shipbuilding, addressing delays and cost overruns in the Heritage class Offshore Patrol Cutter (OPC) program, now funded with $4.3 billion. Austal USA received a $273 million contract option for the second OPC, while the Department of Homeland Security canceled a contract with Eastern Shipbuilding but plans to build 25 OPCs to replace aging cutters. The bill also fully funds Polar Security Cutters, the first heavy icebreakers built in 50 years, and supports new smaller icebreakers through a partnership with Finnish and Canadian shipyards. Additionally, Bollinger Shipyards is negotiating for 10 more Sentinel-class fast response cutters, expanding the fleet to 77 ships, enhancing long-range patrol capabilities for law enforcement and search and rescue missions.

(The Center Square) — Passage of the “Big, Beautiful Bill” this summer has provided a jolt to the U.S. Coast Guard’s shipbuilding program as it seeks to replace most of its aging fleet.

The service’s most important shipbuilding program, the Heritage class Offshore Patrol Cutter, is years behind schedule and its cost has ballooned from $12.5 billion in 2012 to $17.6 billion by 2022. The “Big Beautiful Bill” provides $4.3 billion for OPC procurement.

Austal USA, located in Mobile, Ala., announced on Wednesday that it had received a $273 million option for the second of 11 possible OPCs, the future USCGC Icarus. Its first OPC, the future USCGC Pickering, is already under construction along with six other ships and if all of the contract options are taken up, it could be worth $3.3 billion. 

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security cancelled a contract last month with Eastern Shipbuilding in Panama City, Fla. for the third and fourth OPCs. The department says it still plans to build 25 of the ships, which will replace medium endurance cutters that, in some cases, date from the mid-1960s. 

The first ship, the Argus, was due to be commissioned by June 2023 but the department says it will now be completed by the end of 2026 at the earliest. It was launched in October 2023. The second OPC was supposed to be delivered by April 2024, but no delivery date has been revealed. 

The 360-foot ships are a step below the service’s largest white hulls, the National Security Cutters, and will be used for maritime law enforcement, fisheries, drug and migrant interdiction, search and rescue and other core Coast Guard missions. 

The “Big Beautiful Bill” appropriated $4.3 billion for icebreaker procurement, along with $3.5 billion for a smaller, yet-to-be awarded Arctic Security Cutter icebreaker and $816 million for light and other medium icebreakers.

Bollinger’s shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss. announced this week will lead a partnership with several international shipyards with decades of experience building icebreaking ships in Finland and Canada to design and construct a new class of smaller icebreakers than the three-ship Polar Security Cutter class.

The shipyard said the strategic partnership would transfer knowledge, technology and experience from Finland’s Rauma Shipyards and two builders in Canada, Seaspan Shipyards and Aker Arctic, to Bollinger. 

The shipyard says the partnership would help deliver the lowest-risk, fastest delivery solution of best-in-class Arctic Security Cutters to the Coast Guard.

The “Big Beautiful Bill” fully funded the oft-delayed Polar Security Cutters, the first heavy icebreakers built in the U.S. in 50 years. The Coast Guard authorized full production of the heavy icebreakers in May. It’s a critical program since the service is down to one heavy icebreaker built in the 1970s and one medium icebreaker commissioned in the 1990s. 



The Sentinel-class fast response cutter USCGC Oliver Henry (WPC-1140) arrives in Port Moresby for a port visit on Aug. 23, 2022, following a patrol in parts of the Coral Sea, and the Solomon Islands and PNG Exclusive Economic Zones. 




Bollinger Shipyards, which builds the Sentinel class fast response cutter at its yard in Lockport, La., announced last week that it is in negotiation for 10 more of the cutters that would bring the program to 77 ships after $1 billion was outlaid in the “Big Beautiful Bill.” The plan was initially 71 ships and $1 billion was appropriated in House Resolution 1 for continued procurement of the FRCs. 

The FRC is 154 feet long, more than 44 feet longer than the cutters it replaced. Since these cutters have a 10,200 nautical mile range at 14 knots and can deploy for up to 60 days, these cutters have been deployed for longer-range patrols. FRCs based in Guam are deploying to New Guinea and Australia, something that the 110-foot cutters they replaced were unable to do.

These ships are used for law enforcement, search and rescue and other missions. 

The post ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ bolsters Coast Guard shipbuilding programs | Alabama appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This article primarily provides factual reporting on the U.S. Coast Guard’s shipbuilding programs, contract updates, and the funding provided under the “Big, Beautiful Bill.” The tone is neutral and informational, focusing on budget numbers, project statuses, and strategic partnerships without language that promotes a particular ideological stance or political viewpoint. It outlines the actions and decisions made by government entities and private contractors without endorsing or criticizing any policy or political actors, thus maintaining an objective and centrist approach to the subject matter.

News from the South - Alabama News Feed

Final steel girders placed on new Gulf Shores bridge, completion on track

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www.alreporter.com – Staff – 2025-08-18 07:33:00

SUMMARY: The Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) recently completed setting the final steel girders for the new Intracoastal Waterway Bridge in Gulf Shores, marking a major milestone in the $52 million project slated to open by summer 2026. The bridge will add two lanes in each direction alongside the existing Beach Express Bridge, increasing total lanes from seven to ten and easing congestion. With the steel and substructure complete, work now focuses on the concrete deck and approaches. This new span, along with the $30 million SR-161 connector and plans to widen SR-180, aims to enhance traffic flow, emergency access, evacuation routes, and local economic growth.

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The post Final steel girders placed on new Gulf Shores bridge, completion on track appeared first on www.alreporter.com

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A Minute with Drexel: Being an influencer for good

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www.youtube.com – WKRG – 2025-08-17 06:47:36

SUMMARY: In this segment, Drexel Gilbert reflects on the role of social media influencers, often promoting products or destinations. Instead of following the typical influencer path, Drexel suggests a new kind of influence—one focused on positive actions and character. Drawing on the definition of an influencer as someone who inspires others, and referencing 1 Timothy 4:12, she encourages being examples of honesty, generosity, encouragement, and kindness. Drexel urges everyone to become influencers for good by embodying positive traits and making a difference in others’ lives. She hopes her message inspires viewers to spread goodwill every day.

Ways to influence people to be better and do better

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ALL ABOARD: Amtrak returns to Mobile after 20 years

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www.youtube.com – WKRG – 2025-08-16 22:56:58

SUMMARY: Amtrak returned to Mobile, Alabama, after 20 years with its Mardi Gras Service from New Orleans, sparking a festive celebration on Water Street. Amtrak President Rodger Harris highlighted the decade-long effort to restore passenger rail on the Gulf Coast, praising the enthusiastic community response. The train offers Coach and Business class seats, traveling about 79 mph with four stops in Mississippi, completing the trip in roughly four hours. Tickets start at $15 one way. Congressman Shamori Figures expressed hopes for service expansion and federal support to ensure its success. Commercial passenger service begins Monday, reconnecting communities along the Gulf Coast.

A homecoming 20 years in the making, as city and state leaders gathered in downtown Mobile Saturday to welcome Amtrak’s special arrival.

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