Raytheon Company () is a major
American defense contractor and industrial corporation with core
manufacturing concentrations in
weapons and military and commercial
electronics. It was previously involved in corporate and special-mission
aircraft until early 2007. Raytheon is the world's largest producer of
guided missiles.
Established in 1922, the company reincorporated in 1928 and adopted its present name in 1959. The company has around 72,000 employees worldwide and annual revenues of approximately US$25 billion. More than 90% of Raytheon's revenues were obtained from military contracts and, as of 2007, it was the fifth-largest military contractor in the world, and is the fourth largest defense contractor in the United States by revenue.
Raytheon Headquarters was moved from Lexington, Massachusetts to Waltham, Massachusetts on October 27, 2003. The company was previously headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts from 1922–1928, Newton, Massachusetts from 1928–1941, Waltham from 1941–1961, Lexington from 1961–2003, and back to Waltham from 2003 onwards.
History
Early years
In 1922, two former Tufts engineering college roommates Laurence K. Marshall and
Vannevar Bush, along with scientist Charles G. Smith, founded the American Appliance Company in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. Its focus, which was originally on new
refrigeration technology, soon shifted to
electronics. The company's first product was a
gaseous (
helium)
rectifier that was based on Charles Smith's earlier
astronomical research of the star
Zeta Puppis. The electron tube was christened with the name ''Raytheon'' ("light of/from the gods") and was used in a
battery eliminator, a type of
radio-receiver power supply that plugged into the
power grid in place of large
batteries. This made it possible to convert household
alternating current to
direct current for radios and thus eliminate the need for expensive, short-lived batteries.
In 1925, the company changed its name to Raytheon Manufacturing Company and began marketing its rectifier, under the ''Raytheon'' brand name, with great commercial success. In 1928 Raytheon merged with Q.R.S. Company, an American manufacturer of electron tubes and switches, to form the successor of the same previous name, Raytheon Manufacturing Company. In 1933 it diversified by acquiring Acme-Delta Company, a producer of transformers, power equipment, and electronic auto parts. By the 1930s, it had already grown to become one of the world's largest vacuum tube manufacturing companies.
During WWII
Early in
World War II,
physicists in the
United Kingdom invented the
magnetron, a specialized microwave-generating electron tube that markedly improved the capability of
radar to detect enemy
planes. American companies were then sought by the U.S. government to perfect and
mass-produce the magnetron for ground-based, airborne, and shipborne radar systems, and, with support from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology's
Radiation Laboratory (recently formed to investigate
microwave radar), Raytheon received a contract to build the devices. Within a few months of being awarded the contract, Raytheon had already begun to mass manufacture
magnetron tubes for use in
radar sets and then complete
radar systems. At war's end in 1945 the company was responsible for about 80 percent of all magnetrons manufactured. During the war Raytheon also pioneered the production of shipboard radar systems, particularly for submarine detection.
Raytheon's research on the magnetron tube revealed the potential of microwaves to cook food. In 1945, Raytheon's Percy Spencer invented the microwave oven by discovering that the magnetron could rapidly heat food. In 1947, the company demonstrated the Radarange microwave oven for commercial use.
After WWII
In 1945, the company expanded its electronics capability through acquisitions that included the Submarine Signal Company (founded in 1901), a leading manufacturer of maritime safety equipment. With its broadened capabilities, Raytheon developed the first
guidance system for a missile that could intercept a flying target. In 1948, Raytheon began to manufacture
guided missiles. In 1950, its Lark missile became the first such weapon to destroy a target aircraft in flight. Raytheon then received military contracts to develop the air-to-air
Sparrow and ground-to-air
Hawk missiles—projects that received impetus from the
Korean War. In later decades, it remained a major producer of missiles, among them the
Patriot antimissile missile and the air-to-air
Phoenix missile. In 1959, Raytheon acquired the marine electronics company Apelco Applied Electronics, which significantly increased its strength in commercial marine navigation and radio gear, as well as less-expensive Japanese suppliers of products such as marine/weather band radios and
direction-finding gear. In the same year, it changed its name to
Raytheon Company.
During the post-war years, Raytheon also made radio and television transmitters and related equipment for the commercial market in the U.S. and got into the educational publishing business with the acquisition of D.C. Heath. In the 1950s, Raytheon began manufacturing transistors, including the CK722, priced and marketed to hobbyists.
In 1961, the British electronics company A.C. Cossor merged with Raytheon, following its sale by Philips. The new Company's name was Raytheon Cossor. The Cossor side of the organisation is still current in the Raytheon group as of 2010.
In 1965, it acquired Amana Refrigeration, Inc., a manufacturer of refrigerators and air conditioners. Using the Amana brand name and its distribution channels, Raytheon began selling the first countertop household microwave oven in 1967 and became a dominant manufacturer in the microwave oven business.
The 1980s
In 1980, Raytheon acquired
Beech Aircraft Corporation, a leading manufacturer of general aviation aircraft founded in 1932 by
Walter H. Beech. In 1993 the company expanded its aircraft activities by adding the Hawker line of business jets by acquiring Corporate Jets Inc., the business jet product line of
British Aerospace (now
BAE Systems). These two entities were merged in 1994 to become the Raytheon Aircraft Company. In the first quarter of 2007 Raytheon sold its aircraft operations, which is now operating as
Hawker Beechcraft. The product line of Raytheon's aircraft subsidiary included
business jets such as the
Hawker 800XP and
Hawker 4000, the
Beechjet 400A, and the
Premier I; the popular
King Air series of twin turboprops; and piston-engine aircraft such as the
Bonanza. Its special-mission aircraft included the single-turboprop
T-6A Texan II, which had been chosen to be the primary
training aircraft for the
United States Air Force and
United States Navy.
The 1990s
In 1991, during the
Persian Gulf War, Raytheon's
Patriot missile received great international exposure, resulting in a substantial increase in sales for the company outside the United States. In an effort to establish leadership in the defense electronics business, Raytheon purchased in quick succession Dallas-based
E-Systems (1995),
Chrysler Corporation's defense electronics and aircraft-modification businesses (1996) (portions of these businesses were later sold to
L-3 Communications), and the defense unit of
Texas Instruments -
Defense Systems & Electronics Group (1997). Also in 1997, Raytheon acquired the aerospace and defense business of
Hughes Aircraft Company from
Hughes Electronics Corporation—a subsidiary of
General Motors, which included a number of product lines previously purchased by Hughes Electronics including the former
General Dynamics missile business, the defense portion of
Delco Electronics (Delco Systems Operations), and
Magnavox Electronic Systems.
Raytheon also divested itself of several nondefense businesses in the 1990s, including Amana Refrigeration. On October 12, 1999 Raytheon exited the personal rapid transit (PRT) business as it terminated its PRT 2000 system due to high-cost of development and lack of interest. The PRT 2000 prototype now sits idle at their Marlboro, Massachusetts facility.
The 2000s
In September 2009, Raytheon entered into an agreement to acquire
BBN Technologies. The acquisition was completed on October 29, 2009.
Company structure
Businesses
Raytheon is composed of six major business divisions:
Integrated Defense Systems—based in Tewksbury, Massachusetts; Thomas A Kennedy, President
Intelligence and Information Systems—based in Garland, Texas; Lynn Dugle, President
Missile Systems—based in Tucson, Arizona; Taylor W. Lawrence, President
Network Centric Systems—based in McKinney, Texas; Dan Crowley, President
Raytheon Technical Services Company LLC—based in
Dulles, Virginia; John Harris, President.
Space and Airborne Systems—based in
El Segundo, California; Rick Yuse, President.
Raytheon’s businesses are supported by several dedicated international operations including: Raytheon Australia (Managing Director, Michael Ward); Raytheon Canada Limited; operations in Japan; Raytheon Microelectronics in Spain; Raytheon UK (formerly Raytheon Systems Limited); and ThalesRaytheonSystems, France.
Strategic Business Areas
In recent years, Raytheon has expanded into other fields while redefining some of its core business activities. Raytheon has identified four key 'Strategic Business Areas' where it is focusing its expertise and resources, including:
Homeland Security
Missile Defense
Precision Engagement
Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance (ISR)
Process Improvement (Raytheon Lean6)
Leadership
William H. Swanson is the
Chairman and
CEO. Other members of the
board of directors of Raytheon are:
Barbara Barrett,
Vernon Clark, Ferdinand Colloredo-Mansfeld,
John Deutch,
Thomas Everhart, Frederic Poses,
Warren Rudman, Michael Ruettgers, Ronald Skates, William Spivey, and Linda Stuntz.
International
In addition to its US domestic facilities, Raytheon has offices in countries worldwide, including
Australia,
Belgium,
Brazil,
Canada,
Chile,
China,
Czech Republic,
Egypt,
France,
Germany,
Greece,
India,
Italy,
Japan,
Kuwait,
Malaysia,
Marshall Islands,
New Zealand,
Norway,
Republic of Korea,
Singapore,
Saudi Arabia,
Spain,
Sweden,
Taiwan,
Thailand,
Turkey,
United Arab Emirates, and the
United Kingdom.
Products and services
Overview
:''See
Raytheon products for products manufactured and sold by Raytheon Company''
Raytheon's electronics and defense-systems units produce air-, sea-, and land-launched
missiles, aircraft radar systems, weapons sights and targeting systems, communication and battle-management systems, and satellite components.
Air Traffic Control Systems
FIRSTplus Air Traffic Control Simulator
AutoTrac III ATM System
Radars and sensors
Raytheon is a developer and manufacturer of
radars (including
AESAs), electro-optical sensors, and other advanced electronics systems for airborne, naval and ground based military applications. Examples include:
APG-63/APG-70 radars for the F-15 Eagle
APG-65/APG-73/APG-79 radars for the F/A-18 Hornet
APG-77 radar for the F-22 Raptor (joint development with Northrop Grumman )
ALE-50 towed decoy
ALR-67(V)3 and ALR-69A radar warning receivers
AN/APQ-181 (AESA upgrade currently in development), for the B-2 Spirit bomber
Integrated Sensor Suite (ISS) for the RQ-4 Global Hawk UAV
ASQ-228 ATFLIR (Advanced Targeting Forward-Looking Infrared) pod
TPQ-36/TPQ-37 Firefinder and MPQ-64 Sentinel mobile battlefield radars
SLQ-32 shipboard EW system
Large fixed-site radars such as PAVE PAWS, BMEWS, and the Missile Defense Agency X-band Radar (XBR)
Satellite sensors
Raytheon, often in conjunction with
Boeing,
Lockheed Martin or
Northrop Grumman, is also heavily involved in the satellite sensor business. Much of its Space and Airborne Systems division in
El Segundo,
CA is devoted to this, a business it inherited from
Hughes. Examples of programs include:
Space Tracking and Surveillance System (STSS), being developed for the
Ballistic Missile Defense. Raytheon is building the sensor payload. Additionally, the El Segundo site is the company center of excellence for the development and production of
laser products.
Raytheon company's Navy Multiband Terminal (NMT) is the first advanced, next-generation satellite communications (SATCOM) system to successfully log on to and communicate with the U.S. government's Milstar SATCOM system using low and medium data rate waveforms. The system provides naval commanders and sailors with greater data capacity, as well as improved protection against enemy intercept and jamming.
Communications
Raytheon's
Universal Control System (UCS) is an
unmanned aerial system (UAS) "cockpit" that improves operator awareness and efficiency, while providing the ability to control multiple unmanned aircraft, and reduce potential accidents.
The company also makes several software radio and digital communication systems for military applications such as Cooperative Engagement Capability (CEC), is participating in Navy-Marine Corps Intranet (NMCI), ECHELON and the Joint Tactical Terminal (JTT) programs.
Radioactive materials detection system
As part of the company's growing
homeland security business and strategic focus, Raytheon has teamed with other contractors to develop an
Advance Spectroscopic Portal (ASP) to allow border officials to view and identify
radioactive materials in vehicles and
shipping containers more effectively.
Semiconductors
Raytheon also manufactures
semiconductors for the
electronics industry. In the late 20th century it produced a wide range of
integrated circuits and other components, but as of 2003 its semiconductor business specializes in
gallium arsenide (GaAs) components for radio communications. It is also making efforts to develop
gallium nitride (GaN) components for next-generation radars and radios.
Missile defense systems
In the framework of
Ground-Based Midcourse Defense, Raytheon is developing a
Ground Based Interceptor (GBI) which includes a booster missile and a
kinetic Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle (EKV), along with several key radar components, such as the
Sea-Based X-Band Radar (SBX) and the
Upgraded Early Warning Radars (UEWR).
Missiles
Raytheon is a developer of missiles and related missile defense systems. These include:
AGM-65 Maverick
AGM-88 HARM
AGM-129 ACM (Advanced Cruise Missile)
AGM-154 Joint Standoff Weapon
AIM-7 Sparrow
AIM-9 Sidewinder
AIM-120 AMRAAM
BGM-109 Tomahawk
MIM-23 Hawk
MIM-104 Patriot
RIM-7 Sea Sparrow
RIM-162 ESSM
Small Tactical Munition
Hi-tech simulators
In a jointly managed project with Hughes Aircraft Co., Raytheon developed the Air Warfare Simulation (
AWSIM2), currently used by the USAF for battle staff training at simulation centers worldwide.
Raytheon also produces and runs the ABACUS (Advanced BAttlespace CompUter Simulation) or Higher Formation Trainer (HFT) for training HQs from small specialist units up to corps level.
Training Services and Learning Outsourcing
Raytheon Professional Services (RPS) is a global leader in training services and learning outsourcing for over 75 years. Clients are offered training tailored to their needs. The scope of each contract can vary from short-term training initiatives and projects to multi-year outsourcing engagements for some or all of a client’s training function. Services include: (1) Performance Consulting & Learning Strategy Development, (2)Training Design, Development & Delivery, (3) Learning Technologies and (4)Training Administration
Controversies
As the vast majority of Raytheon's revenues have been obtained from defense contracts, there has been a tight relationship of cooperation between itself and the
U.S. Department of Defense and other U.S. government departments and agencies (e.g. in the Fiscal Year 2007 the
National Science Foundation awarded Raytheon $152 million dollars in grants, more than to any other institution and organization in the country, for managing NSF
South Pole Station). This, along with heavy lobbying, has led to perennial charges of influence peddling. Raytheon, for instance, contributed nearly a million dollars to various defense-related political campaigns in the presidential election year of 2004, spending much more than that on lobbying expenses. And there are many tight ties between the company and all levels of government. For example,
Richard Armitage, a former United States Deputy Secretary of State, is linked to the company through consultancy work.
John M. Deutch, a former U.S.
Director of Central Intelligence, sits on the board of directors, along with
Warren Rudman, a former Senator. On the other hand, Raytheon has also been involved in several
contract disputes with the
U.S. Government.
Case of Illegally obtaining classified information in a bidding process
In March 1990, Raytheon pleaded guilty to one felony count of illegally obtaining classified
Air Force budget and planning documents. U.S. District
Judge Albert V. Bryan, Jr. imposed a
$10,000 criminal fine for one
felony count of "conveyance without authority" and $900,000 in civil penalties and damages. The documents allegedly gave Raytheon an unfair advantage against its competitors in bidding for weapons contracts. Although the plea only involved 1983 Air Force documents,
United States Attorney Henry Hudson said Raytheon also illegally obtained a wide range of secret
Pentagon documents.
Disputed claims of the Patriot missile
During the 1991
Gulf War, Raytheon received widespread publicity in the United States in connection with its manufacture of the Patriot missile (
MIM-104 Patriot). The Patriot missile is an
anti-aircraft missile that was upgraded to have some capability against
ballistic missiles. The Patriot had allegedly intercepted
Scud missiles launched by
Iraq in its defense against the U.S.-led invasion. When President
George H. W. Bush traveled to Raytheon's Patriot manufacturing plant in
Andover, Massachusetts during the
Gulf War, he declared, the ""Patriot is 41 for 42: 42 Scuds engaged, 41 intercepted!" After the Gulf War had concluded, the staff of the House Government Operations Subcommittee on Legislation and National Security reported,
:"The Patriot missile system was not the spectacular success in the Persian Gulf War that the American public was led to believe. There is little evidence to prove that the Patriot hit more than a few Scud missiles launched by Iraq during the Gulf War, and there are some doubts about even these engagements. The public and the
United States Congress were misled by definitive statements of success issued by administration and Raytheon representatives during and after the war."
Contract disputes
In October 1994, Raytheon paid $4 million to settle a U.S. government claim that it inflated a defense contract for antimissile radar. The
PAVE PAWS (Precision Acquisition Vehicle Entry Phased Array Warning System) system was designed to detect incoming submarine-launched ballistic missiles. The government claimed in a federal lawsuit that Raytheon inflated a contract to upgrade two of four PAVE PAWS sites by proposing to hire higher-skilled employees than were necessary for the job.
Just one year earlier, on October 14, 1993, Raytheon paid $3.7 million to settle allegations that it misled the U.S. Defense Department by overstating the labor costs involved in manufacturing Patriot missiles. "The recovery of this money is yet another warning to contractors that the Truth in Negotiations Act's information disclosure requirements will be strictly and sternly enforced," Frank Hunger, assistant attorney general, said in a statement.
Brazilian SIVAM project
Allegations of
bribery were made against Raytheon in 1995 in connection with its efforts to win a 1.4
billion dollar radar contract from
Brazil for the
SIVAM project. SIVAM, the acronym for "System for Vigilance over the
Amazon," was a complex radar
surveillance system for use in monitoring the
Amazon rainforest, allegedly to curb the trafficking of
narcotics and to curb illegal
logging or burning of the forest. Brazilian police wiretapped a telephone conversation between a special advisor to the
Brazilian President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, and Raytheon's operative in Brazil, Jose Afonso Assumpcão. According to transcripts published in the Brazilian national weekly ''Isto É'', when Assumpcão told Gomes dos Santos that Brazilian Senator Gilberto Miranda might block the Raytheon contract, Gomes dos Santos responded, "Damn, did you already pay this guy?". Gomes dos Santos and Brazil's aviation minister resigned because of allegations that this conversation suggested that bribes were paid. Nonetheless, Raytheon ultimately was awarded the contract after
lobbying by the administration of U.S. President
Bill Clinton.
AGES lawsuit
In 1996, a corporation called AGES Group filed a lawsuit against Raytheon in a
federal court in
Alabama over a $450 million contract to service
C-12 Huron and
U-21 military aircraft. The
Boston Herald reported that AGES alleged that the security firm
Wackenhut Corporation, hired by Raytheon, used video and audio
surveillance to
spy on a consulting firm hired by AGES to help it prepare its bid. AGES also alleged that stolen confidential pricing documents were turned over to Raytheon. Both Raytheon and AGES had been vying for the contract, which Raytheon had held for decades but which AGES won in 1996. On May 12, 1999,
Reuters reported that Raytheon would pay $3 million to AGES Group and purchase $13 million worth of AGES aircraft parts to settle the AGES lawsuit. The settlement was exceptional in that the parties agreed that
judgment would be entered against Raytheon, legally establishing the validity of AGES' allegations.
Securities litigation
In October 1999, Raytheon was the subject of a number of securities
class action lawsuits alleging it had issued a series of materially false and misleading statements including overstating the company's 1997 and 1998 revenues, concealing cost overruns and inflating its financial results. The suits were brought in response to a massive drop in value of Raytheon's common stock as traded on the
New York Stock Exchange. On Tuesday, October 12, 1999, Raytheon shares were trading at about 45% below the level at which they had been traded on October 11, 1999. The plunge in stock prices was triggered by a ''
Wall Street Journal'' report that Raytheon was over cost or behind schedule on more than a dozen fixed-price defense contracts. This crash represented a loss of about $8 billion in market value in a single day. On May 13, 2004 Raytheon reported that it had reached a preliminary agreement to pay $410 million in cash and securities to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging it misled investors by not disclosing difficulties on various Pentagon and construction projects five years before.
Swanson's Unwritten Rules of Management
On April 24, 2006 in a statement released by Raytheon, CEO Swanson admitted to
plagiarism in claiming authorship for his booklet, "Swanson's Unwritten Rules of Management," after a report by ''
The New York Times''. On May 2, 2006, Raytheon withdrew distribution of the book. The following day, the company's board of directors announced that "In response to this matter, the Board has decided not to raise Mr. Swanson's salary above its 2005 level, and will reduce the amount of
restricted stock for which he is eligible in the coming year by 20 percent."
Ray Gun Testing
In August 2010, the U.S. weapons manufacturer Raytheon announced that it had partnered with a jail in
Castaic, California in order to use prisoners as test subjects for a new non-lethal weapon system that "fires an invisible heat beam capable of causing unbearable pain." This was reported by the left-leaning news media Democracy Now and is highly biased against the company.
Environmental Record
Two lawsuits were filed against a Raytheon Company plant in St. Petersburg, Florida due to concern with health risks, property values, and contamination in April 2008. Raytheon was given until the end of the month to independently test whether or not the groundwater that originated from its area was contaminated. According to the
Florida Department of Environmental Protection(DEP), the groundwater contained
carcinogenic contaminants, including
trichloroethylene,
1,4-dioxane, and
vinyl chloride. The DEP also reported that the clouds contained other toxins, such as lead and
toluene.
In 1995, Raytheon acquired Dallas-based E-Systems, including a site in St. Petersburg, Florida. In November 1991, prior to Raytheon's acquisition, contamination had been discovered at the E-Systems site. Soil and groundwater had been contaminated with the volatile organic compounds trichloroethylene and 1,4-Dioxane. In 2005, groundwater monitoring indicated polluted groundwater was moving into areas outside the site. According to DEP documentation, Raytheon has tested wells on its site since 1996 but had not delivered a final report; therefore, it was given a deadline on May 31, 2008 to investigate its groundwater. Contamination in the area has not affected anyone's drinking water supply or health, yet due to negative local media coverage lawsuits are being filed with claims against Raytheon citing decreases in property values.
In another case, Raytheon was ordered by the Environmental Protection Agency(EPA) to treat groundwater at the Tucson Plant (acquired during the merger with Hughes) in Arizona since Raytheon used and disposed metals, chlorinated solvents, and other substances at the plant since 1951. The EPA further required the installation and operation of an oxidation process system to treat the solvents and make the water safe to drink.
On 9 August 2006, The Stream Contact Centre in Derry, Northern Ireland, which had a contract with Raytheon at the time, was attacked by protesters. They destroyed the computers, documents, and mainframe of the office, and proceeded to occupy it for eight hours prior to their arrest.
The activists were charged with criminal damage and affray. The trial of six of the accused began May 19, 2008, in the Laganside Courts in Belfast. Colm Bryce, Gary Donnelly, Kieran Gallagher, Michael Gallagher, Sean Heaton, Jimmy Kelly, Paddy McDaid and Eamonn O'Donnell were acquitted of all charges on 11 June, with Eamonn McCann found guilty of the theft of two computer discs.[7]
Corporate stewardship
Mathematics and science education
In September 2010, Raytheon and the Business-Higher Education Forum (BHEF) announced three new activities to help policymakers and educators tackle the challenges associated with improving science, technology engineering and math (STEM) education in the U.S. Central to this effort is the release of a new STEM modeling effort, for which Raytheon and BHEF will target regionally-specific models.
In October 2009, Raytheon opened
The Sum of all Thrills at
Innoventions at Epcot at the Walt Disney World Resort. The exhibit lets park guests custom-design their own ride using mathematical tools, a touch-screen table and a robotic simulator. Sum of all Thrills is the first ride to be located within Innoventions.
In 2009, Raytheon developed the U.S. STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) Education Model and donated it to the Business-Higher Education Forum (BHEF) (Also see
STEM fields.)
In November 2005, Raytheon launched 'MathMovesU', an educational initiative intended to make math and science more interesting and accessible for young people, funded by $1 million in annual grants.
Raytheon has taken a role in promoting math and science education to develop future engineers. In 2004 the company announced a $850,000 grant to
Tuskegee University.
Raytheon is also a leading sponsor of the FIRST Robotics Program, both on the national and local scale.
Raytheon also sponsors the mathematics competition MathCounts.
Raytheon is also sponsoring
Aberfoyle Park High School to purchase new computers for
IGNITE, Science and Math students at the school to the amount of A$450,000 over the next 3 years
Philanthropy
Raytheon employees contributed $8 million to the
United Way of America in 2000. In addition, there is also a program in which Raytheon will match donations from an employee to any
non-profit organization up to a certain amount.
Raytheon Space & Airborne Systems has hosted the national JROTC drill team competition at its El Segundo, California facility for seven straight years.
In November 2006, Raytheon Integrated Defense Systems (IDS) was honored by Special Olympics Massachusetts (SOMA) for its continued support of the organization through funding and support of more than 700 volunteers in 2006.
Workplace diversity
In 2005, Raytheon adopted equal employment opportunity policies regarding
transgender and
transsexual employees.
On October 26, 2006, Raytheon was recognized by U.S. Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao as a recipient of the 2006 New Freedom Initiative (NFI) Award for the company’s commitment to recruit, train, hire and promote individuals with disabilities.
Advocacy
Raytheon is a leading member of the
U.S. Global Leadership Coalition, a Washington D.C.-based coalition of over 400 major companies and
NGOs that advocates for a larger International Affairs Budget, which funds American diplomatic, humanitarian, and development efforts abroad.
See also
Raytheon products
List of United States defense contractors
Raytheon 9
Top 100 US Federal Contractors - $16.1 billion in FY2009
References
External links
Raytheon Company
Raytheon Company Semiconductor Division Files Kept to Monitor the Electronics Industry, 1965–1986(call number M0661; 11.5 linear ft.) are housed in the Department of Special Collections and University Archives at Stanford University Libraries
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