The crown of the
Statue of
Liberty will
reopen July 4
for the first
time since the
Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist
attacks,
Interior
Secretary Ken
Salazar
announced
Friday.
"On July 4, we
are giving
America a
special gift,''
Salazar said at
a news
conference on
nearby Ellis
Island.
The statue was
closed to the
public after
9/11 because of
security
concerns. The
base, pedestal
and lower
observation deck
have since been
reopened.
Salazar said he
based his
decision on an
analysis of the
structure
completed last
month by the
National Park
Service,
including
recommendations
on reducing risk
for visitors.
Thirty visitors
an hour, chosen
by lottery, will
be allowed to
visit the crown,
which is
accessible only
by a narrow
168-step
double-helix
spiral
staircase.
Eventually that
30-visitor-an-hour
number will go
up, Salazar
said. Visitors
will be brought
to the crown in
groups of 10,
guided by a park
ranger.
``We cannot
eliminate all
the risk of
climbing to the
crown, but we
are taking steps
to make it
safer,'' Salazar
said.
Safety measures
include raising
the handrails on
the spiral
staircase and
stationing
rangers
throughout the
statue to aid
visitors.
Salazar also
announced that
$25 million in
stimulus funding
will be used for
improvements at
Ellis Island,
the historic
immigration
center in New
York Harbor. The
work will
include
stabilizing a
1908 building
and making
repairs to the
island's
crumbling
seawall.
The Interior
Department said
40 percent of
American
citizens can
trace a family
connection to
Ellis Island.
The Statue of
Liberty will be
open for the
next two years.
Then it will be
closed again for
more safety
work.
Copyright Associated Press / NBC New York






