Melissa in the Morning: The Trickle Down Effect

Undated file photo showing the Lockheed Martin US101 test helicopter. The U.S. Navy on Friday said it had chosen a transatlantic team led by Lockheed Martin Corp. to build a new U.S. presidential helicopter fleet in a deal valued at $1.7 billion. The decision was a setback for Connecticut-based United Technologies Corp.'s Sikorsky Aircraft unit - which for nearly 50 years has built and maintained the green and white "Marine One" helicopters that fly the president. REUTERS/HO/Lockheed Martin GN

Melissa in the Morning: The Trickle Down Effect

Sikorsky Aircraft is laying off hundreds of workers in the state who were involved with the canceled Army scout helicopter project. Around 400 Connecticut employees are losing their jobs, mostly engineers and digital technology workers in the scout program. The layoffs reportedly involve 350 Sikorsky workers in Stratford. We got some business perspective from Dan Onofrio, President of the Bridgeport Regional Business Council. How do the layoffs impact surrounding town businesses who rely on those workers? And when Sikorsky loses a military contract, what does that mean for the Connecticut businesses supplying Sikorsky with material to build their aircrafts?

Image Credit: Reuters