|
TM
The Travel Critic
Should tax pay for blunder?
By Christopher Elliott
Key Largo's heroic efforts to salvage the U.S.S. Spiegel
Grove, the world's biggest and most expensive artificial reef, is weighted
down by a troubling and largely overlooked fact: Much of the estimated $1.2
million that it will cost to scuttle the vessel isn't really its money alone
to spend. The funds belong to the taxpayers and, to some extent,
the tourists who visit the Keys.
As all of South Florida knows by now, the Navy landing-dock
ship sank halfway and rolled over a few hours before she was supposed to go
down last week. If she settles on the bottom in her current position, the
vessel will be unusable as an artificial reef for sport diving and thus
incapable of bringing an estimated $14 million a year in new business to the
area.
So project leaders at the Key Largo Chamber of Commerce
launched an ambitious plan to float the vessel and re-sink her. The
operation will reportedly cost a minimum of $250,000, but some think that
the bill could come to as much as half a million dollars.
Who's paying for it? Some of the money is being donated by
private groups, such as the Ocean Reef Club and the Friends of the National
Marine Sanctuary. But it's not enough to settle the whole bill. About
$250,000 has already come from loans backed by area dive shops in
anticipation of selling special medallions that will be required to dive
one of Key Largo's artificial reefs. If they have to borrow even more money
it will represent a huge gamble that could backfire if the salvage operation
flops.
Maybe the most troubling part of this story is that some of
the money collected through Monroe County's 4 percent bed tax -- money that
comes out of your pocket every time you spend a night in a Keys hotel --
will be used to cover the Spiegel Grove's costs. The Tourist Development
Council, which distributes a portion of the bed-tax proceeds, has
allocated about $500,000 for the project.
Not that it's automatically an inappropriate use of these
funds; it might be a good investment. But neither the visitors who paid the
bed tax nor the electorate of Monroe County have been adequately represented
in the decision to pay for this ship to be put down. The TDC is regarded by
some in the Keys as a Byzantine and immutable bureaucracy that resists any
pressure to reform -- it fought efforts to allocate more money to
much-needed capital projects, for instance -- and it's gambling with other
people's money in financing the Spiegel Grove project.
What if the salvage operation fails? What will they tell the
divers holding worthless medallions? What about Monroe County voters? And
disappointed visitors?
It is time to prepare for the possibility that the forces of
nature and fate will keep the Spiegel Grove in her current position, and
that she'll settle on the bottom as a hunk of useless metal. That would be a
massive disappointment to the tenacious volunteers who have given their time
and enthusiasm to the project. It would be a huge loss to the local diving
community. And it's all but unthinkable to the planners who have spent the
better part of the eight years trying to secure the necessary permits to
move the ship.
If the Spiegel Grove fails in her final mission, she could
take more than the dreams of the Key Largo dive community to the bottom with
her. She also could expose a system of funding tourism-related projects that
is often incomprehensible, where few distinctions are made between special
interests and the public interest and where there is little if any
accountability to voters and visitors. (Just try to explain the TDC's
labyrinthine decision-making process, involving multiple committees made up
of appointees, to an outsider, and you get the idea.)
No one wants the planned salvage operation to fail. It would
be one of the worst things to happen to Key Largo's tourist businesses in
recent memory. But it might not be such a bad thing for Keys residents if it
forces a second look at the community's dysfunctional relationship with the
TDC.
Christopher Elliott is a travel writer based in Key Largo,
Fla. E-mal him at chris@elliott.org
Back to
TravelLady Magazine |