The preservation of the Confederate submarine Hunley already
exceeds the $10 million originally envisioned and could cost as much
as $100 million -- with most of that burden borne by taxpayers,
according to an analysis by The (Columbia) State newspaper. But the
actual price tag is not certain, and that's why state leaders should
demand an independent audit.
The newspaper reported also that Senate President Pro Tem Glenn
McConnell has used his power to direct state money toward the
project without public scrutiny and debate by elected officials.
McConnell's original estimate for preserving and promoting the
Hunley was between $5 million to $10 million. Much of that money was
supposed to come from private donors. A huge increase in the cost to
taxpayers should prompt immediate attention from lawmakers.
Even if the cost of the Hunley turns out to be far less than $100
million, the lack of accountability for public money is cause for
deepest concern. McConnell's ability to steer money to the project
is "obviously outside the framework the state has provided for
disbursement of public funds," said state Comptroller General
Richard Eckstrom. Members of the Hunley Commission were unable to
say how much the Hunley was costing.
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The Hunley sank on Feb. 17, 1864, after ramming a spar with a
black powder charge into the Union blockade ship Housatonic off
Charleston. The 40-foot, hand-cranked submarine was lost for more
than a century after becoming the first submarine to sink a ship in
warfare. It was located off Sullivan's Island in 1995, raised five
years later and brought to a conservation lab.
About $17 million has been spent since 1998 on raising,
excavating, preserving and promoting the Hunley, according to The
State. The Associated Press reported that Clemson University has
taken over the Hunley preservation lab with 90 full-time workers and
a $5 million payroll. A proposed Hunley museum, meanwhile, would
cost $42 million. About $3.5 million is being spent to buy a Civil
War collection of 10,000 paintings, maps, books and other objects
for the museum. Clemson, meanwhile, would spend $35 million on the
first phase of a Hunley-centered campus in North Charleston,
according to the State. A number of six-figure miscellaneous
expenses are adding to the cost of the project as well.
The Hunley's preservation is certainly a worthwhile endeavor and
deserves taxpayer support as an important part of this state's
history. But the project should never have been allowed to escape
the public scrutiny expected of every state expenditure. It's
possible that the project's ultimate cost might even be acceptable
to many South Carolina taxpayers. But an audit is needed to put a
more exact price tag on plans for the Hunley. |