Quote
Before the Saratoga is guaranteed dock space at Quonset, its supporters must come up with $10 million and approval from the industrial park.
BY ANDREA L. STAPE Journal Staff Writer | May 4, 2005
Governor Carcieri supports adding a retired Navy aircraft carrier to the Quonset Business Park, even though a state review panel advised against the move last year.
Carcieri recommended last week that the Saratoga, a Navy supercarrier, be established as a museum on Pier 2 at the state-owned industrial park. Since 1998, the USS Saratoga Museum Foundation has been attempting to get the 1,063-foot ship berthed at the North Kingstown industrial park and turned into a tourist attraction.
The governor's recommendation is the first time a top-ranking state official has officially backed the project.
"It is a huge milestone for us," said Frank Lennon, the foundation's president.
But the governor's endorsement has some strings attached. The foundation must raise $10 million to "demonstrate the project's feasibility," according to a letter that the governor sent the foundation last week. All homeland-security and environmental concerns need to be addressed by the foundation, which must develop a strategy for keeping the museum in operation if the ship has to be moved, according to the letter.
The governor is giving the foundation two years -- until May 1, 2007 -- to raise the money and meet the requirements. If the foundation misses the deadline, the Quonset board can lease the pier to other businesses, according to the recommendation. Until then, though, the governor recommends that the board reserve space on the pier for the ship. Carcieri's recommendation also makes clear that he cannot commit money from the state budget for the project, or borrow money to finance the museum.
"This is a project that [Carcieri] believes has a number of advantages," said Jeff Neal, spokesman for the governor. "But he also has a responsibility to assure that it's economically feasible -- and that it won't incur any debt for the state going forward."
Continue reading at: ProJo.com.















