Antelope Valley Press

Branson’s flight sparks optimism in New Mexico

- By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

TRUTH OR CONSEQUENC­ES, N.M. — With Virgin Galactic making its highest profile test flight to date with boss Richard Branson aboard, it’s only a matter of time before paying customers get their chance and New Mexico realizes a dream that has been decades in the making.

Former Gov. Bill Richardson is among those who have been watching the progress of the space tourism company, ever since he and his team recruited the British billionair­e to New Mexico. The two shook hands on a promise — Branson would build the world’s first commercial spaceline for tourists, and New Mexico would build the spaceport.

To naysayers who thought it was a boondoggle and a waste of taxpayer money, Richardson said: “You were dead wrong. You have to have a vision for the future, and it’s going to happen, and it’s going to be great.”

The two-term governor was among those who were elated to see Branson and his crewmates rocket to the edge of space on Sunday. About 500 guests — including celebritie­s, Virgin Galactic customers, politician­s and a group of students — watched from just outside the terminal at Spaceport America, while others across New Mexico held watch parties and people around the world tuned in to a livestream.

Rick Homans, the state economic developmen­t secretary who led early negotiatio­ns with Virgin Galactic, was among those in attendance. He acknowledg­ed it has been a long and difficult road that started with many unknowns for both the state and the space tourism company.

Was it worth it? Undoubtedl­y, he said.

“Look around here,” he said Sunday. “The attention of the entire globe is on Spaceport America now and on the industry that could grow here. And I think where we are right now is at the very beginning of something so much bigger, and so that investment is going to pay off in the decades to come.”

Residents of Truth or Consequenc­es, an eclectic desert community about 30 miles away, are excited to be on the map again. The city first gained notary in 1950 when it agreed to change its name from Hot Springs to Truth or Consequenc­es as part of a publicity stunt put on by a radio show of the same name.

Still, many residents are tempering their optimism as the space tourism venture has taken nearly two decades to get off the ground and it’s unclear how often Virgin Galactic will be flying paying customers to the edge of space and whether any spending related to those brief up-and-down trips will trickle down to shopkeeper­s and other businesses in town.

They also questioned how many space fans and other spectators would be drawn to the area since security is high at the spaceport and guided tours are considered pricy by some.

Others have mixed feelings about having paid extra taxes to help bankroll the spaceport, saying their community is still in dire need of infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts, namely a better drinking water system. There’s also a lack of housing for residents, much less adequate accommodat­ions for tourists.

“Our tax dollars are paying for the roads to go out there and everything so it would be nice if we could actually benefit from that,” said Patty Lane, who helps run a gift shop in the town of roughly 5,900 people. “We’re a small community. We need that.”

Lane said it’s clear that developing a viable commercial spaceline has become a competitio­n, and she’s hopeful that will drive more innovation and more aerospace companies to consider moving to the state. Only then, with more private investment, can the industry really take off in New Mexico, she said.

Top state officials are looking for the same thing. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and Economic Developmen­t Secretary Alicia J. Keyes said the next step will be a push to get Virgin Galactic to relocate its manufactur­ing operations to New Mexico as more rocket planes will be needed for the future.

While Sunday’s flight helped to promote Virgin Galactic, state officials said it also gave millions of people around the world a look at New Mexico.

Lujan Grisham claimed there are potentiall­y billions of dollars at stake as the space industry grows — from science and technology investment­s to tourism spending.

“We absolutely want more companies identifyin­g New Mexico as their corporate headquarte­rs,” she said, adding that the space industry could help to stabilize the state’s economy.

 ??  ??
 ?? ANDRES LEIGHTON/AP ?? Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson waves to school children while heading to board the rocket plane that will fly him to space from Spaceport America near Truth or Consequenc­es, New Mexico, Sunday.
ANDRES LEIGHTON/AP Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson waves to school children while heading to board the rocket plane that will fly him to space from Spaceport America near Truth or Consequenc­es, New Mexico, Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States