From Military.com:
“Arlington National Cemetery
Reopens to Public, But Most-Visited Sites Still Off-Limits”
Arlington National Cemetery will
reopen to the general public Wednesday after a six-month shutdown due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. But its most visited sites, such as the Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier, will remain off-limits, the cemetery said in a release Tuesday. Beginning
Wednesday, the hallowed cemetery in Virginia, across the Potomac from
Washington, D.C., will be open to the public from 8 a.m. to noon for visits to
gravesites only. Face coverings and social distancing will still be required at
all times, the cemetery said. However, "several places of interest will
remain closed to assure health protection conditions," it added.
"These sites include the John F. Kennedy gravesite, the Memorial
Amphitheater and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier." Exhibits in the Welcome
Center will also remain closed. "As conditions in the National Capital
Region have continued to improve, our goal is to provide increased access for
the public to visit a loved one's gravesite. We hope this limited reopening
will better accommodate our visitors," said Karen Durham-Aguilera,
executive director of the cemetery. The Women in Military Service for America
Memorial at one of the cemetery's entrances also will remain closed. Arlington
House, the former Custis-Lee Mansion, is the former home of Confederate Gen.
Robert E. Lee and Mary Custis Lee. Managed by the National Park Service and
currently undergoing renovation, it will also remain closed to the public, the
cemetery said.
The lifting of the restriction on
the public is expected to lead to an increase in burials at Arlington. Many
families of veterans eligible for burial there, including several Medal of
Honor recipients who died in recent months, put off burial until larger
gatherings could attend the services. "Arlington National Cemetery staff
will be monitoring all aspects of the cemetery in order to prepare for a full
opening in the near future," said Charles "Ray" Alexander Jr.,
the cemetery's superintendent.
^ This is long over-due. Arlington
is a National Cemetery, but it is also the center-piece National Cemetery (with
the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, etc.) Being a Cemetery and being outdoors it
is easier to maintain social distancing and so should not have been allowed to
be closed foe 6 whole months. That shows a complete lack of respect for those
Soldiers and Veterans buried in the Cemetery, for those who wanted to visit those
buried in the Cemetery and for those Soldiers and Veterans that wanted to be
buried in the Cemetery and couldn’t because of these restrictions. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.