I know that moving the pieces was involved in the financial process, as I've got Wild One forty-five minutes down the road, and of course you're going to need all new foundations.
I guess I shouldn't have made the process sound like it was going to be so easy, but, I still don't think a lack of blueprints (if that is the situation) would be a major roadblock. Some of your other concerns definitely could be.
Why did the brilliant Texas Cyclone pass into oblivion? Besides Six Flags trying to get out of Houston as fast as possible, there were the clearance issues. Trust me, I know someone who shattered his elbow into multiple pieces because of that ride. From what I can remember from last year, The Big Dipper didn't have those issues.
But, I still think there's got to be plenty of people within the organization who could've taken this project head-on. I'm sure there's an engineer or two, a lawyer, and whoever else you'd need amongst their ranks to make it happen. ACE members, as well as, all coaster enthusiasts come from all walks of life.
I still say it was due to monetary issues, but also because of location. Where exactly would they have put it, and/or where would they store it if they couldn't convince anyone to put it up in the near future?