A city-commissioned study finds no elevated levels of lead or asbestos caused by the fire that burned the historic hangar in November. Meanwhile, recovery costs near $90 million.
The Navy could pay up to $137 million to clean up the site of a World War II blimp hangar in Southern California destroyed in a fire in November, local officials estimate.
The Navy has committed $11 million to the cleanup of the fire that destroyed a long-shuttered World War II blimp hangar at the former Tustin air station in Southern California, but local officials said much more is needed from the service.
The city of Tustin is worried about its financial solvency after spending more than half its annual budget to respond to a fire at a historic WWII hangar in.