Syracuse, NY – Geoff Parkhurst has been promoted to the role of director of life cycle management at SRCTec. As a director, Parkhurst will lead the life cycle management, sustainment, and service activities for all SRCTec’s products and programs. He will also be instrumental in expanding the sustainment support we provide our customers. "With Geoff’s help we have made great strides with our company’s logistics and sustainment efforts, especially during the design of new SRC products,” said Tony Stewart, general manager of SRCTec. "He has extensive background in life cycle management, and as a veteran, he understands our military customers and their mission.” Parkhurst started at SRCTec in 2019 as the senior manager of integrated logistics support. He served on active duty in the U.S. Air Force for 26 years, achieving the rank of Colonel as Commander of the 56th Maintenance Group, which was the Air Force’s largest field maintenance unit at the time, where he led 2,800 military and civilian employees who maintained 186 F-16 fighter aircraft and launched 150 pilot training flights each day. Parkhurst holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical/aerospace engineering from Illinois Institute of Technology and master’s degrees in business administration from the University of Rochester and in administrative service from Northern Michigan University.
About SRCSRC, Inc. (@SRCDefense), a not-for-profit research and development company, combines information, science, technology and ingenuity to solve “impossible” problems in the areas of defense, environment and intelligence. Across a family of companies, SRC applies bright minds, fresh thinking and relentless determination to deliver innovative products and services that are redefining possible® for the challenges faced by America and its allies. Since 1957, SRC’s commitment to the customer and the best solution — not the bottom line — has remained a core value that guides its efforts. This passion for quality carries through to the technologies the company invents and manufactures, the laboratories and facilities it builds, the people they hire, and communities where they work. Today, nearly 1,400 engineers, scientists and professionals work together at SRC to protect people, the environment and our way of life.
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