mustangdriver wrote:
My deal is that anything belonging to the pilot and crew including remains be dealt with in a respectful manner.
Agreed.
Quote:
After that it should be like Gettysburg Civil War battle Field. If you find something in the field that is a relic, you are supposed to bring it to the museum there. After the museum looks at if and photos it, it is decided if it is needed for the collection. If it is needed, an honest deal is worked out, if it is not needed, then the person that found it can keep it. Why won't this work for aircraft? People need to understand that if you find a TBM from Midway, that if might be best to restore it at the NMNA. However if you find a TBM in Lake Michigan or wherever that is not a combat vet, then it should be pulled up, photoed by the museum, and left with the person that raised it, and restored to whatever status they wish. Does this sound fair?
No. First, it's not quite the same situation as at the ACW battlefields. They are designated National Parks and you are not supposed to search or dig for artifacts per federal law. Second, say someone were to come across 5 Midway birds... The Navy made NO attempt to recover them and has not maintained the aircraft on their inventory - which is why some would argue that they should no longer have claim to them. As far as I can see it, the big costs with recoveries are hiring persons and equipment in the first place, transportation, doing the search for the items, and stabilizing the items after they're brought up. Economy of effort would indicate that it shouldn't be to much harder, and in fact might be more economical to bring up multiple aircraft at once, rather than one at a time. Personally, if I found five Midway aircraft and if Pensacola was willing to help with the costs, I would be pretty happy to let the Navy have 3 or even 4 of them. After all, I like museums as well, and would like the story to get out. On the other hand, why should they mooch off of my time, effort, search, and money to hire the recovery and restoration teams when they don't have any current intentions of recovering it in the first place? I think that the Navy should have to prove either that the aircraft is still on their inventory legally, or that they know where the relatively accurate location of the aircraft they want is, their intentions for the aircraft, and a reasonable recovery strategy in order to claim ownership - within a budget (ie. there's no way that even the US Government could recover 1000 aircraft next year)! Then, let folks go after the rest.
The real problem now is a bad law that some bad apples at NHC that got into a Congressional bill that passed. That currently ties even Pensacola's hands with recovery efforts. Hopefully some folks will eventually find a resolution to this problem in the near future.
Ryan
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