Restoration of the Statue of Liberty National Monument

Gao ID: 129686 April 22, 1986

Testimony was given concerning the restoration of the Statue of Liberty National Monument, specifically whether: (1) the project has met its restoration and fundraising goals; and (2) the Department of the Interior has monitored and maintained oversight of the project. GAO found that: (1) the effort to restore the Statue of Liberty and parts of Ellis Island is exceeding original fundraising and restoration goals; (2) Interior has monitored and maintained oversight of the project; (3) although the amounts of money raised and the different types of fundraising campaigns differed from the goals that the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation originally established, the Foundation has received cash, pledges and commitments for $255 million of the $265 million it hoped to raise; (4) merchandising programs which include commemorative coin, book, and stamp sales account for 17 percent of the firm commitments; (5) although Interior originally estimated that restoration would cost $103 million, the project was subsequently expanded and the total went up to $250 million; (6) despite the increase in exhibit costs, Interior cut $20 million in celebration and public awareness costs when it dropped plans for a Fourth of July celebration around the country; and (7) as of February 1986, actual expenditures amounted to about 46 percent of the $265 million budgeted for the project. GAO also found that: (1) although the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Centennial Commission was appointed to provide advice and guidance on the restoration effort, it has done very little; (2) the Foundation has prepared and published annual financial reports that list sources of funds and how they were spent; (3) although there were two instances where the Foundation did not submit promotional materials for Interior review, it subsequently took corrective action; and (4) even though the Foundation submitted its initial plan of operations a month late and lacked required information on administrative support structures, timetables for the first 3 years, and projected staffing costs, the delay and lack of information did not affect Interior's ability to monitor the restoration effort.



The Justia Government Accountability Office site republishes public reports retrieved from the U.S. GAO These reports should not be considered official, and do not necessarily reflect the views of Justia.