The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Will Eisenhower memorial be ready for D-Day anniversar­y?

Effort has been entangled in D.C. bureaucrac­y.

- By Curtis Tate

WASHINGTON — The hope of Republican Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas was that a memorial near the National Mall to the state’s favorite son, Dwight Eisenhower, would be ready for the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day, the Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied France, which Eisenhower led.

But getting the memorial done by June 6, 2019, will be tough, even though Congress and the White House are squarely behind the project.

President Donald Trump put money for the memorial in his 2018 budget proposal last week. Congress provided funds in a spending bill this month. But Washington bureaucrac­y has many layers, and new snags could delay the project.

Roberts, chairman of the Eisenhower Memorial Commission, now hopes the memorial to the supreme allied commander and 34th president will be at least partly complete by 2019.

“Here’s a man who saved Western democracy and Europe in World War II and gave us eight years of peace and prosperity here at home,” Roberts said in an interview. “There should have been a memorial for him a long time ago.”

But even the muscle of the legislativ­e and executive branches of government isn’t enough.

The U.S. Commission of Fine Arts raised fresh concerns this month about one of the most fought-over aspects of the memorial’s design: tall, stainless steel mesh screens that depict the scenes from Normandy, where the 1944 invasion force landed.

Commission­ers worried that the public might not be able to understand exactly what it’s seeing. They didn’t reject the design but asked the Eisenhower Memorial Commission to see more. The memorial commission is now waiting for the arts body to explain in greater detail what it wants to see.

Roberts said he hoped the developmen­t wouldn’t delay the project any longer.

“The great majority of us on the commission say, ‘Hey, look, let’s get this built,’ “he said.

Congress originally authorized the memorial in 1999 to be built on a 4-acre site a few blocks from the U.S. Capitol. It was held up for years because of a disagreeme­nt between architect Frank Gehry and the Eisenhower family design.

After years of squabbling, progress finally seemed imminent.

Back in September, former Secretary of State James Baker intervened to broker a compromise between Gehry and Eisenhower family members.

Roberts and former Kansas Republican Sen. Bob Dole have raised $10 million in private funds for the project on their way toward a goal of $25 million for the approximat­ely $150 million project.

Congress helped, releasing $45 million in constructi­on funds in a spending bill that passed earlier this month. Trump got behind the project in his budget, including $85 million in his fiscal 2018 plan — in spite of his past confrontat­ion with Gehry over Manhattan real estate.

There’s more bureaucrac­y ahead. Constructi­on can’t begin without final approval from the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts and the National Capital Planning Commission. Approval from the planning commission first requires approval from the arts commission.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY ?? Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower meets with U.S. Army paratroope­rs from the 101st Division in England prior to the Normandy Invasion, which took place June 6, 1944.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower meets with U.S. Army paratroope­rs from the 101st Division in England prior to the Normandy Invasion, which took place June 6, 1944.

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