On Jack's recent P-47 thread that got so far off topic

there were some interesting comments and allusions to possible new directions. For instance -
RickH wrote:
The matter of historical artifact recovery has now been written into public law. In the past there was no mechanism to allow recovery of an aircraft, certainly not with uniform guidelines.
Congress fixed that, now, all recoverys must be permitted by the service that originally owned the aircraft. A permit process has now been created.
You must now apply to Maxwell or the NHC for a permit to recover. You must also disclose the serial or BuNo as part of the permit process. There the similiarity ends. Maxwell rubberstamps your permit and off you go. The NHC, however, will look at the permit application and determine if the BuNo submitted has historical significance to the Navy. I mean if you find a generic Hellcat that wasn't David McCampbell's you will probably be issued a permit to recover.
The guy at NHC who was such a pain is gone. The retired Admiral now running NHC appears to be taking a much more practical approach to this matter.
Anyway, there do seem to be indications that Pensacola is going to be able to start recovering aircraft again very soon.
After some changes at NHC the people there have apparently been trying to get permission for recoveries from Lake Michigan and perhaps other sites and may have finally received that permission. Of course, no details yet.
Ryan
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