Where's the cash?
Bet Chuck Schumer isn't smirking now: Columnist begs New Yorkers to pony up forspace shuttle home
New York may have won the battle for the space shuttle Enterprise, but it remains to be seen if it's won the war.
In a column in Wednesday's New York Post, writer Adam Brodsky worries about the hurdles New York must surmount before the Enterprise lands in the Big Apple. He enumerates all the good things about having the space shuttle in NYC, but then ominously warns:
Officials need $85 million — about $45 million from government and $40 million from private donors. That won’t be easy. Plus, the state, which owns the parking lot (where the shuttle is now scheduled to go but wasn't in the original plans), has to agree to hand it over. And the city needs to OK zoning changes. Meanwhile, cities that lost out on shuttles during NASA’s competition (Houston, Seattle and Dayton, for example) see the new plans as grounds to reopen the contest. Officials in Ohio, Texas and Washington have called on NASA to review its decision. This week, a petition got the required 5,000 signatures needed to trigger an official review.
While Brodsky warns it would be "a tragedy of galactic proportions" if New York has to give the shuttle back because it can't meet its obligations, it seems like a logical opportunity for Houston to get back in the race to get what rightfully belongs in Space City.
New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, who was gloating after the decision was handed down in April, seems unusually quiet now.