beltman713
11-01-2006, 07:29 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061101/ap_on_re_us/school_strafed_settlement
School hit by F-16 gets $500,000
LITTLE EGG HARBOR, N.J. - The Air Force will pay more than $500,000 to an Ocean County elementary school that was mistakenly shot by an F-16 on a training maneuver two years ago.
Under a settlement announced Wednesday, the Air Force will pay $519,070 in compensation to the Little Egg Harbor Intermediate School. The building was damaged by 27 rounds of inert 20mm ammunition from an air cannon mounted on the plane during a Nov. 3, 2004 nighttime mission over the New Jersey Pinelands.
The military blamed the pilot for the accident, but also said poorly designed controls in the F-16 played a role.
"The Air Force has done the right thing," said state Rep. Jim Saxton (news, bio, voting record). "Their agreement goes a long way towards repairing the actual damages to the school building as well as keeping their relationship with the community healthy."
School officials did not immediately return a call seeking comment Wednesday.
No one was injured in the mishap, which rattled the southern Ocean County region surrounding the Warren Grove Gunnery Range. Eight of the 2-inch lead rounds punched through the school's roof, knocking down ceiling tiles.
At least one round struck a child's desk, and others scuffed the asphalt in the parking lot. The rounds explode on impact when they are live.
School hit by F-16 gets $500,000
LITTLE EGG HARBOR, N.J. - The Air Force will pay more than $500,000 to an Ocean County elementary school that was mistakenly shot by an F-16 on a training maneuver two years ago.
Under a settlement announced Wednesday, the Air Force will pay $519,070 in compensation to the Little Egg Harbor Intermediate School. The building was damaged by 27 rounds of inert 20mm ammunition from an air cannon mounted on the plane during a Nov. 3, 2004 nighttime mission over the New Jersey Pinelands.
The military blamed the pilot for the accident, but also said poorly designed controls in the F-16 played a role.
"The Air Force has done the right thing," said state Rep. Jim Saxton (news, bio, voting record). "Their agreement goes a long way towards repairing the actual damages to the school building as well as keeping their relationship with the community healthy."
School officials did not immediately return a call seeking comment Wednesday.
No one was injured in the mishap, which rattled the southern Ocean County region surrounding the Warren Grove Gunnery Range. Eight of the 2-inch lead rounds punched through the school's roof, knocking down ceiling tiles.
At least one round struck a child's desk, and others scuffed the asphalt in the parking lot. The rounds explode on impact when they are live.