A new WARN notice filed with the Texas Workforce Commission shows Lockheed Martin plans to lay off 17 employees at its Fort Bliss Army Training Aids Maintenance Program (ATMP) site on June 30..

The notice adds to a growing list of workforce reductions by the aerospace giant across Texas and the country. It was received by the commission on June 17 and later added to the state database.

The Fort Bliss location is part of the Army Training Aids, Devices, Simulators, and Simulations (TADSS) Maintenance Program, or ATMP—a significant contract operation that supports the U.S. Army’s training systems worldwide.

ATMP is “a seven year Single Award ID/IQ contract for maintenance, sustainment, operations, and support of Army Training Aids, Devices, Simulators, and Simulations (TADSS), Live-Fire Ranges, and Instrumentation Systems,” according to an archived job listing.

The program approximately 250,000 assets across 422 global sites and names PEO STRI in Orlando, Florida, as its primary customer—tasked with providing “one-stop, world-wide maintenance and sustainment” for Army training technologies, according to the listing.

The Fort Bliss layoffs follow a January 2024 announcement that Lockheed Martin would lay off 300 workers, including 200 from its Fort Worth plant, as part of a broader effort to streamline operations.

“We are taking proactive steps to improve the efficiency of our operations… and position our business for growth,” a company spokesman said in a statement to WFAA. “We are pursuing multiple cost-reduction actions, which include the difficult decision to conduct a very limited reduction in force.”

At the time, a company spokesman said the layoffs affected locations in Fort Worth, Texas; Marietta, Georgia; and Palmdale, California.

“We are working with all impacted employees to help them identify other opportunities with Lockheed Martin,” the spokesman added.

Lockheed Martin remains one of the largest employers in Tarrant County, with approximately 18,700 employees, according to county data. The job cuts follow a turbulent 2024 marked by supply chain disruptions, according to Reuters.

In a separate development on June 20, Lockheed Martin announced a 10% workforce reduction at its Greenville, South Carolina, facility after the U.S. Air Force declined to renew a $900 million F-16 Depot Sustainment Program contract.

“As a result of the Air Force’s decision not to extend the F-16 CONUS Depot contract… we made the difficult decision to conduct a limited reduction in force at our Greenville site,” a company spokesman said in a statement to WSPA.

The Greenville plant, which employed more than 1,800 people in 2024, expected to lose approximately 180 jobs.The layoffs come as Lockheed Martin continues to expand its real estate footprint, having recently leased over 136,000 square feet of industrial space in west Fort Worth, according to the Dallas Business Journal.

The company employs approximately 122,000 people worldwide.