President Kennedy’s Florida Nuke Bunker Faces Uncertain Future

President Kennedy’s Florida Nuke Bunker Faces Uncertain Future
In this photo taken Friday, Feb. 26, 2016, Anthony Miller, who operates the site for the museum, poses for a photo, at the entrance to President John F. Kennedy's bunker, on the right is pet cat Marilyn, on Peanut Island in Riviera Beach, Fla. The once top-secret fallout shelter, code name "Hotel," and the retired Coast Guard station on Peanut Island are now a tourist attraction and the focal point of a long-running legal war between the port, which owns the island, and Palm Beach Maritime Museum, which leases the attraction. AP Photo/Alan Diaz
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RIVIERA BEACH, Fla.—The bunker where President John F. Kennedy would have been whisked if World War III erupted while he vacationed in Florida may face a bigger threat than Soviet missiles ever posed: a battle between its operators and the Port of Palm Beach.

The once top-secret fallout shelter, code name “Hotel,” and the retired Coast Guard station on Peanut Island are now a tourist attraction and the focal point of a long-running legal war between the port, which owns the island, and Palm Beach Maritime Museum, which leases the attraction.

Anthony Miller, who operates the site for the museum, said the port’s commission and Palm Beach County have blocked attempts to make the attraction financially stable. He said the commission thwarted a $500,000 grant last year. The county limited the number of weddings that can be performed at the picturesque Coast Guard boat house to three per year, down from 30, and banned the construction of a restaurant. The site’s $200,000 annual maintenance budget is barely covered by admissions and donations, he said. The maritime museum’s lease ($100 a year, plus 4 percent of gross sales) ends next year.

In this photo taken Friday, Feb. 26, 2016, Anthony Miller, who operates the site for the museum, poses for a photo at the entrance to President John F. Kennedy's bunker on Peanut Island in Riviera Beach, Fla. The once top-secret fallout shelter, code name "Hotel," and the retired Coast Guard station on Peanut Island are now a tourist attraction and the focal point of a long-running legal war between the port, which owns the island, and Palm Beach Maritime Museum, which leases the attraction. (AP Photo/Alan Diaz)
In this photo taken Friday, Feb. 26, 2016, Anthony Miller, who operates the site for the museum, poses for a photo at the entrance to President John F. Kennedy's bunker on Peanut Island in Riviera Beach, Fla. The once top-secret fallout shelter, code name "Hotel," and the retired Coast Guard station on Peanut Island are now a tourist attraction and the focal point of a long-running legal war between the port, which owns the island, and Palm Beach Maritime Museum, which leases the attraction. AP Photo/Alan Diaz