S-3490-119
Held at the desk.
Sponsored by Josh Hawley (R-MO)
What it does
This bill would establish the Fort Ontario Holocaust Refugee Shelter National Historical Park in New York, commemorating the 982 World War II refugees housed there from 1944 to 1946. It would also designate America's National Churchill Museum at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri as a National Historic Landmark, and direct the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a special resource study to evaluate whether the Churchill Museum site should become a full unit of the National Park System.
Who benefits
Visitors and tourists to both sites, who would gain federally supported interpretive and educational programming. Descendants of the 982 Holocaust refugees sheltered at Fort Ontario, who would see that history formally recognized. Westminster College and the city of Fulton, Missouri, which could receive federal technical and financial assistance. Local economies near both sites, which may benefit from increased tourism. Historians, educators, and students focused on World War II, the Holocaust, and Winston Churchill's legacy. The National Park Service, which would gain a new unit and expanded interpretive mission.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers, who would bear costs of land acquisition, park administration, management plan development, and the special resource study — though the scale is modest relative to the overall NPS budget. Existing NPS units competing for limited maintenance and operational funding, as a new park unit adds to the system's well-documented deferred maintenance backlog. State and local governments that currently manage these sites may face administrative adjustments under new cooperative agreements.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Fort Ontario represents a singular and underrecognized chapter in American history — the only instance during World War II when the U.S. government admitted Holocaust refugees as a group — and that federal designation ensures this story is preserved and taught for future generations. They contend that the Churchill Museum, site of Churchill's famous 1946 "Iron Curtain" speech, holds clear national significance and that a National Historic Landmark designation, paired with a feasibility study, is a measured, low-cost step toward determining appropriate long-term federal stewardship.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the National Park System already faces an estimated $22 billion deferred maintenance backlog, and that adding new units without dedicated, sustained funding worsens that structural problem. They contend that both sites are already managed by state and private entities — Fort Ontario by New York State and the Churchill Museum by Westminster College — and that federal designation duplicates existing stewardship while imposing new administrative costs on the NPS without a clear funding mechanism to support them.