MIDDLETOWN, R.I. -- A vote last week by the Middletown Town Council in support of the concept of bringing the retired aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy to Rhode Island to use as a museum will help move the project forward, according to the president of the Rhode Island Aviation Hall of Fame.
The 6-1 vote doesn't commit the town but it shows the Navy, which will decide if the group can have the ship, that the local government is in support of the effort, says Frank Lennon, the president of the non-profit Rhode Island Aviation Hall of Fame.
Lennon says the group which has been working since 2010 to bring the aircraft carrier to Rhode Island, hopes to dock the ship on federal land at the naval station. The plan is to locate the carrier at the Navy's northernmost pier so they can move the fence line to land that is accessible to the public. This plan would allow visitors not have to go through the strict security of the Navy base.
The next step for the group is to come up with a proposal to move the fence line, Lennon said. He said the group expects to have a proposal within about two months or so.
Lennon said that bringing the aircraft carrier to Rhode Island will bring jobs and attract visitors to spend money in Rhode Island and will not cost residents.
Lennon said $10.5 million in a conditional federal loan guarantee and pledges have been identified from money that was to go to the USS Saratoga project at Quonset Point before the Navy decided to scrap the Saratoga. He said $25 to $35 million would be needed to pay for the project and that the group will commence to raise money.
The USS JFK, known as Big John, was the last conventionally powered aircraft carrier built by the Navy and once carried 4,600 crew members and 70 combat aircraft. It was active in both Iraq wars and the war in Afghanistan and decommissioned in 2007.
With AP reports