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The USS Saratoga — the legendary aircraft carrier that played a key role in the Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam and Gulf wars and made Libyan strongman Muammar Qaddafi back down — is destined for dismantling after the Navy paid one penny to a Texas firm to recycle the 81,101-ton behemoth.
The once-mighty vessel is the second of three conventionally-powered carriers to set to sail to the scrapyard, following another one-cent deal involving the USS Forrestal in October. ESCO Marine, of Brownsville, will pay to tow, dismantle and recycle the ship, which was decommissioned in 1994 after more than 38 years of service. Efforts to spare the ship failed, as they did with the Forrestal last year.
“[It is] emotional in that we who served on ‘Sara’ feel that our ‘surrogate mother’ is passing from our lives,” Sammy King, secretary of the USS Saratoga Association, told FoxNews.com in an email. “We owe her a lot. We went aboard as ‘snot-nosed kids’ and left as ‘men.’ Some of us are very sad and some are very angry at the decision to scrap her.”
originally posted by: seeker1963
a reply to: Metallicus
What gets me is the 1 cent thing!
If I have a car and it breaks down and isn't worth fixing, I get it to a "Scrap Yard" and get paid a minimum of $300!!!! Just depends on the prices at the time....
Now as broke as this country is, why can't the government recycle it and break it down for scrap????
1 cent????
Hell! How about using it as a homeless shelter??????
originally posted by: seeker1963
a reply to: Metallicus
1 cent????
Hell! How about using it as a homeless shelter??????
Breaking up the carriers presents unique industrial and security issues, and estimates of the cost to scrap them ranges from nearly nothing — according to the Navy — to as much as a half-billion dollars per ship.
The cost will depend on the price of scrap steel; the worst-case scenario for the Navy would be $2 billion to $3 billion to make all the ships go away. But with scrap steel trading at almost historically high levels, the government's disposal costs could be far less.
(Source)
One generation earlier than the supercarriers that began with the Forrestal, Coral Sea remains the largest warship ever scrapped — and it wasn't easy.
The carrier's disposal stretched over seven years, bankrupted the original scrapper — who was sent to jail for environmental violations — exposed problems with the ship-scrapping industry, prompted several congressional hearings and led to federal regulations prohibiting the disposal of U.S. government ships to foreign countries.
originally posted by: seeker1963
a reply to: Metallicus
What gets me is the 1 cent thing!
Now as broke as this country is, why can't the government recycle it and break it down for scrap????
1 cent????
Hell! How about using it as a homeless shelter??????