The Prague Post - Bid to relocate US Space Shuttle Discovery faces museum pushback

EUR -
AED 4.239245
AFN 72.116169
ALL 95.251878
AMD 425.017039
ANG 2.066765
AOA 1059.667159
ARS 1668.600407
AUD 1.635038
AWG 2.080664
AZN 1.96334
BAM 1.957285
BBD 2.322913
BDT 141.5656
BGN 1.927624
BHD 0.434924
BIF 3440.351406
BMD 1.154321
BND 1.486328
BOB 7.99807
BRL 5.992056
BSD 1.15325
BTN 110.323295
BWP 15.652812
BYN 3.235956
BYR 22624.692746
BZD 2.31951
CAD 1.609013
CDF 2654.938292
CHF 0.919787
CLF 0.026927
CLP 1059.955215
CNY 7.809732
CNH 7.830089
COP 4160.450132
CRC 532.192375
CUC 1.154321
CUP 30.589508
CVE 110.348748
CZK 24.208187
DJF 205.374977
DKK 7.473877
DOP 67.180695
DZD 154.309362
EGP 60.082183
ERN 17.314816
ETB 185.940217
FJD 2.557285
FKP 0.864902
GBP 0.8648
GEL 3.070308
GGP 0.864902
GHS 13.626342
GIP 0.864902
GMD 84.265618
GNF 10109.453504
GTQ 8.792521
GYD 241.292081
HKD 9.045843
HNL 30.839871
HRK 7.536793
HTG 150.791829
HUF 355.834493
IDR 20982.959621
ILS 3.381041
IMP 0.864902
INR 110.270502
IQD 1510.820443
IRR 1587335.745617
ISK 143.401352
JEP 0.864902
JMD 182.068179
JOD 0.818416
JPY 184.79014
KES 149.427361
KGS 100.945026
KHR 4630.494202
KMF 494.049139
KPW 1038.721863
KRW 1764.240959
KWD 0.357089
KYD 0.961125
KZT 561.686554
LAK 25357.805656
LBP 103280.283365
LKR 388.808345
LRD 210.477004
LSL 19.055932
LTL 3.40841
LVL 0.698238
LYD 7.333566
MAD 10.665294
MDL 20.091161
MGA 4853.578449
MKD 61.645858
MMK 2423.265687
MNT 4131.070709
MOP 9.308744
MRU 46.085978
MUR 55.288441
MVR 17.834596
MWK 1999.909145
MXN 20.117486
MYR 4.701781
MZN 73.772266
NAD 19.055932
NGN 1571.5039
NIO 42.441475
NOK 10.914146
NPR 176.519203
NZD 1.982939
OMR 0.443844
PAB 1.153355
PEN 4.003469
PGK 5.126891
PHP 71.019025
PKR 320.997827
PLN 4.2404
PYG 7097.386479
QAR 4.2163
RON 5.242577
RSD 117.370108
RUB 84.207348
RWF 1693.678061
SAR 4.333089
SBD 9.290649
SCR 15.458572
SDG 693.1573
SEK 10.869439
SGD 1.486575
SHP 0.861817
SLE 28.399787
SLL 24205.537866
SOS 659.097359
SRD 43.069446
STD 23892.115346
STN 24.518077
SVC 10.09144
SYP 127.589528
SZL 19.041121
THB 37.869237
TJS 10.789342
TMT 4.040124
TND 3.392475
TOP 2.779328
TRY 53.216398
TTD 7.811759
TWD 36.390893
TZS 3030.090497
UAH 51.483773
UGX 4348.281242
USD 1.154321
UYU 46.455458
UZS 13816.186406
VES 649.403811
VND 30410.588286
VUV 136.532616
WST 3.14785
XAF 656.452363
XAG 0.016885
XAU 0.000267
XCD 3.11961
XCG 2.078532
XDR 0.817728
XOF 656.466592
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.449816
ZAR 19.037638
ZMK 10390.275805
ZMW 20.269383
ZWL 371.69091
  • CMSC

    -0.0250

    22.445

    -0.11%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3300

    16.52

    -2%

  • VOD

    0.1250

    14.825

    +0.84%

  • RBGPF

    1.4900

    61.5

    +2.42%

  • GSK

    -0.8200

    50.7

    -1.62%

  • RELX

    -0.5300

    34.62

    -1.53%

  • BCE

    -0.3100

    24.1

    -1.29%

  • RIO

    0.7100

    101.4

    +0.7%

  • NGG

    -1.5500

    80.31

    -1.93%

  • BTI

    -0.1150

    59.605

    -0.19%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.48

    -0.18%

  • BP

    0.6600

    43.63

    +1.51%

  • AZN

    -2.7050

    183.245

    -1.48%

  • BCC

    0.6500

    68.73

    +0.95%

  • JRI

    -0.1250

    12.475

    -1%

Bid to relocate US Space Shuttle Discovery faces museum pushback
Bid to relocate US Space Shuttle Discovery faces museum pushback / Photo: Marc Avino - Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum/AFP

Bid to relocate US Space Shuttle Discovery faces museum pushback

Tucked inside President Donald Trump's flagship tax and spending bill last month was a little-noticed provision to relocate the iconic Space Shuttle Discovery from a museum outside Washington to Houston.

Text size:

The plan now faces legal uncertainty, with the Smithsonian Institution arguing Congress had no authority to give away what it considers private property -- even before accounting for the steep logistical and financial challenges.

"The Smithsonian Institution owns the Discovery and holds it in trust for the American public," the museum network, which receives substantial federal funding yet remains an independent entity, said in a statement to AFP on Friday.

"In 2012, NASA transferred 'all rights, title, interest and ownership' of the shuttle to the Smithsonian," the statement continued, calling Discovery one of the museum's "centerpieces" that welcomes millions of visitors a year.

The push to move Discovery from the Air and Space Museum's site in northern Virginia began in April, when Texas Senator John Cornyn, a Republican who faces a tough primary challenge next year by state attorney general Ken Paxton, introduced the "Bring the Space Shuttle Home Act," naming Discovery.

The legislation stalled until it was folded into the mammoth "Big Beautiful Bill," signed into law on July 4.

Its passage allocated $85 million for the move, though the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service has projected a far higher cost of $325 million, adding that the NASA administrator's power over non-NASA entities is "unclear."

To comply with Senate rules, the bill's language was modified such that Discovery is no longer named directly. Instead, the bill refers to a "space vehicle," though there is little doubt as to the target.

NASA's administrator -- currently Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, serving in an acting capacity -- was given 30 days to identify which spacecraft is to be relocated, a deadline coming up on Sunday.

- End of an era -

NASA's Space Shuttle program ended in 2011, after a 30-year run that carried America's post-Apollo space ambitions.

The four surviving orbiters -- Atlantis, Endeavour, prototype Enterprise, and Discovery -- were awarded to Florida, California, New York, and Virginia through a ranked selection process.

Discovery, the most flown, was chosen as a vehicle-of-record in a near-complete state, intended for study by future generations.

"There was not a lot of support within Houston to want a shuttle," space historian Robert Pearlman told AFP, adding that a proposal to house it at Space Center Houston was relatively weak.

But after the announcement, Texas -- home to the Johnson Space Center, which oversees NASA's human spaceflight -- felt snubbed, and allegations of political interference by then-president Barack Obama swirled.

A NASA inspector general probe found no evidence of foul play.

- Enormous challenges -

Relocating Discovery now would pose major technical hurdles. NASA had modified two Boeing 747s to ferry retired shuttles -- one is now a museum piece, and the other is out of service.

That leaves land and water transport. "The nearest water entrance to the Potomac River is about 30 miles away," Pearlman said -- but it may be too shallow for the orbiter and required barge, requiring a 100-mile journey instead.

A water transport would require a massive enclosed barge, he added.

The US government owns only one such vessel, controlled by the military. Loaning it to a civilian agency would require another act of Congress, and the alternative would involve building one from scratch.

Dennis Jenkins, a former shuttle engineer who oversaw the delivery of retired orbiters to their new homes, told the Collect Space outlet he could see costs reach a billion dollars.

Nicholas O'Donnell, an attorney at Sullivan & Worcester with expertise in art and museum law, told AFP that assuming Smithsonian has valid paperwork, "I don't think Secretary Duffy or anyone in the federal government has any more authority to order the move of Discovery than you or I do."

The government could invoke eminent domain -- seizing private property for public use -- but it would have to pay fair market value or try to sue.

The Smithsonian is unlikely to want a court battle, and while it's legally independent, its financial reliance on federal funds leaves it politically vulnerable, said O'Donnell.

I.Mala--TPP