
Feds Clarify Oswego LH options
From 6/2
www.pall-times.com :
FEDS: IT'S ALL A MISUNDERSTANDING
GSA says it wants to give away Oswego's historical lighthouse
By ADELE DELSAVIO, Staff Writer
The Oswego lighthouse is not up for sale. At least, not yet. It was just presented that way on a U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) Web site. And it's definitely not up for demolition.
A notice on the GSA Web site appears to offer the lighthouse for sale.
“It was poorly worded,” GSA realty specialist Meta Cushing admitted Thursday. She said the GSA will reword the notice.
The lighthouse is actually being offered by the GSA under the national Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act of 2000, to federal, state and local agencies and non-profit, educational and community development organizations.
The selected agency would become the steward of the lighthouse, acquiring it at no cost but assuming responsibility for its upkeep.
Although there is 60-day deadline for agencies to send a letter of interest to the GSA, Cushing said letters went out to city and state leaders, not-for-profits and agencies Thursday after The Palladium-Times reported the errant Web posting.
If no one expresses an interest, according to the GSA, the lighthouse will be put up for sale.
The lighthouse issue went public Wednesday night, after H. Lee White Marine Museum associate director Mercedes Niess announced at a children's award ceremony at the museum that the lighthouse is on a federal demolition list.
Her announcement was based on a telephone message her assistant took from a representative of the N.Y. State Historic Preservation Office.
When she checked a U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) Web address the representative had left, there was no mention of demolition.
“My assistant heard the word ‘disposal' and took it to mean ‘demolition,'” Niess said Thursday.
Still, even though the lighthouse will remain standing, there is cause for concern, Niess said.
“Sixty days is not a lot of time,” she said.
She said the museum will probably be willing to “partner with an entity like the city or the Port Authority.”
Would the city be willing to partner with a local non-profit agency?
“Absolutely,” said acting mayor Randy Bateman Thursday.
“This is an opportunity for the community to band together,” said Port Authority director of operations Jim Cloonan.