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Space City blues
(Story)
By Andrew Curry with Fawn Germer
U.S. News & World Report, 02/17/2003
Section: Special Report: The Columbia Tragedy
Subsection: Letter from Titusville
Full Text: (Titusville) TITUSVILLE, FLA.--There isn't a place
in America more closely tied to the space program than this town
of 40,670. Before a shuttle launch, tourists flock to the beaches
and causeways that line the placid Indian River between here and
Cape Canaveral, pulling their cars off Route 1 onto the narrow spits
of sand and pointing their binoculars east toward Kennedy Space
Center Launch Complex 39. "No vacancy" signs sprout outside
motels like the Best Western Space Shuttle Inn. And then the tourists
are joined by thousands of locals, whose livelihoods depend on the
shuttle, to watch their bread and butter roar into space.
Landings have their own unique rhythm. Residents and visitors alike
have come to expect the distinctive double-barreled shotgun boom
of a returning shuttle hurtling toward the 2.84-mile runway faster
than the speed of sound.
So for Titusville, the silence on February 1 was deafening. Residents
soon filled the quiet with expressions of grief; billboards were
changed to read "God Bless Columbia."
Lifeblood. Almost as quickly came concern for the future.
Fifteen thousand workers here draw paychecks from NASA or its contractors--and
38,000 are directly or indirectly employed in Brevard County's tourism
industry. "It brings Challenger back like it was yesterday,"
says Jean Wood, who has lived in the area for 25 years, recalling
the layoffs that followed the last shuttle disaster in January 1986.
"Nobody knows what is going to happen in a town this size."
Everyone's hoping the future doesn't look like the past. After
the Challenger exploded, launches were suspended for almost three
years. The local economy went into a tailspin, with unemployment
in the county reaching 7.3 percent in October 1986. "In '86
we had all of our eggs in one basket," says the Space Coast
Office of Tourism's Bonnie King. Officials here have worked hard
to diversify in the years since, emphasizing ecotourism (the Space
Center sits in the middle of a massive wildlife preserve) and the
cruise industry. "Still," King says, "lots of business
here has to do with the space industry."
Eleven miles away, due east down State Road 405, sits the area's
No. 1 tourist destination: the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex.
In a good year, the center sells almost 2 million tickets. Early
last week, the facility was nearly empty. At the center's Astronaut
Memorial, mourners laying flowers were nearly outnumbered by reporters
and news crews. For workers there, the future was as cloudy as the
sky above was blue. "Beaches and the Space Center--that's the
reason people come to the Space Coast," says Dan LeBlanc, the
Visitor Complex's chief operating officer. "We're all waiting
to see what happens."
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