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Jay Barrett/KMXT
A retired U.S. Coast Guard Cutter with a long
history in Alaska
has been added to the National Register of Historic Places.
The cutter Storis, which was stationed in Kodiak for
50 years, has been mothballed in California
since being retired in 2007. Since that time, a group has been lobbying the
government to make the ship a floating museum in Juneau.
Alaska Senator Mark Begich said last week that he's
working to bring the Storis back to Alaska by inserting language into the Coast
Guard reauthorization bill, though another senator has so far blocked his
efforts.
-- (Storis
1 :21 “We had one member on the other ...
into the bill we passed.”)
With the new session underway, Begich says
he'll be working with the Coast Guard to keep the Storis from being turned into
scrap.
-- (Storis 2 :17 “The Coast
Guard clearly ... turned into a chunk of metal.”)
The Storis, known as the "Queen of the
Fleet" when it was stationed in Kodiak, was the first U.S. vessel to circumnavigate North America when
it and two other Coast Guard cutters sailed the Northwest
Passage. Being named to the National Register of Historic Places
is a designation that the Storis is a property deemed worthy of preservation.
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