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N.M. spaceport is up in the air<br /><br />By ALICIA CALDWELL, Associated Press Writer <br /><br />UPHAM, N.M. - Billionaire Richard Branson looks at a bleak and featureless expanse of the New Mexico desert and sees the perfect spot on which to build the future — a $198 million launch complex that would blast paying tourists into space.<br /><br />Whether enough folks around here share his vision remains to be seen.<br /><br />Spaceport America, as sketched out by Branson, would be funded by $198 million in state, local and federal money. The first rocket flights would be in 2009 and would initially be suborbital trips that would offer five minutes of weightlessness at about $200,000 per person. Eventually, the spaceport could offer trips into orbit and beyond.<br /><br />But in poor southern New Mexico's ranching country, some say they have no intention of paying for some rich people's thrills.<br /><br />On Tuesday, residents of Dona Ana County voted on a proposed quarter-cent sales tax increase critical to the project. The tax increase, which would raise a projected $49 million, led by a mere 238 votes out of 17,168 cast, with 541 provisional ballots still to be counted. A final count is expected Thursday.<br /><br />"I do not see any reason that every time I buy a dress for my wife I should have to pay more taxes," grumbled George Gandara, a 63-year-old business owner in Las Cruces, about 60 miles south of the spaceport site.<br /><br />Carol Garcia, 52, of Las Cruces, said: "It's just a rich man's dream that he needs us to help pay for. If it's your dream, build it yourself."<br /><br />http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070404/ap_on_re_us/new_mexico_spaceport_2 <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> </div>