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Statue of Liberty
reopening soon

Security upgrade due
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March 30: Interior Secretary Gail Norton tells "Today" host Matt Lauer about plans to reopen the Statue of Liberty "later this summer."

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updated 1:17 p.m. ET March 30, 2004

NEW YORK - The Statue of Liberty, closed immediately after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, will reopen to the public this summer, officials said Tuesday.

Pledges of $7 million in donations, including a $100,000 gift from New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, will finance upgrades that were necessary at the national monument before it could be reopened.

“Safety of our citizens and preservation of the statue are our main goals,” said Secretary of the Interior Gail Norton, acknowledging that the 118-year-old statue was “an attractive terrorist target.”

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The billionaire mayor, who joined Norton at a news conference on the island, said he was “proud to have played such a small role” in getting the statue available to the public once again.

According to Norton, an examination of the national monument revealed potential for fire problems and a lack of exits. Screening procedures, much like those at airports, and a reservation system to reduce long lines will be implemented once the monument reopens in late July, Norton said.

She said after the upgrades are completed, the public will be allowed to climb the 354 steps to the statue’s crown, or observation deck.

The 151-foot-high Statue of Liberty National Monument sits on a 58-acre island in New York Harbor.

The island was closed for 100 days after Sept. 11, 2001. Airport-type metal detectors were installed to screen visitors boarding the ferry from lower Manhattan before the island was reopened in December 2001.

Since the terrorist attacks, officials have said the number of visitors to Liberty Island have dropped by 40 percent.

The Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation is overseeing the upgrade project.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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