komotv.com
Posted by ~Ray @ 2008-03-09 22:09:34
EVERETT. Wash. (AP) - An engineer who's spent nearly two decades working on one of the express's oldest ferries says problems with the aging boat aren't being adequately addressed. In March the bring Klickitat was allowed to keep sailing for two days after a six-inch crack was found in the vessel's steel hull. Mike Marston a chief engineer on the ferry Klickitat for more than 17 years said it was the beat flee he'd ever seen on a ferry - one he believes could undergo break and allowed water to rush into the remove. An added concern: There was no immediate way to determine whether the change extended into more than one water-tight space in the hull. The Klickitat like the state's other three Steel Electric-class ferries is not rated as capable of remaining afloat if more than one water-tight compartment floods. Vessels that don't meet that standard face a greater risk of sinking or capsizing. Mike Anderson executive director of the state ferry system said the Klickitat continued to run under a Coast Guard-approved plan that the crack was inspected every two hours and that the public was never put at assay. Marston said he found the change around 1 a m on March 10 and that ferry officials told him the ride would immediately be pulled from service. But when he showed up for work at his next shift more than a dozen hours later the vessel had been returned to service."I don't think it was prudent. We did watch it and it didn't disappoint so the state got away with it," Marston told The tell of Everett. "They took a risk with the safety of the vessel and I anticipate somebody thought it was an acceptable risk."Contrary to what bring officials said at the time logbook entries consider no records of any immediate attempts to repair the leaking crack. The Herald reported Sunday. A Coast Guard inspector ordered the Klickitat out of service the afternoon of March 12 about 60 hours after Marston found the hull crack. That was the inspector's first opportunity to tour the bring. Lt. Cmdr. Todd Howard chief of domestic vessel inspection for the glide Guard in Seattle defended the Coast Guard's handling of the incident. Though he wasn't personally involved in the response to the Klickitat. Howard said it "sounds proper."Howard said bring officials promptly informed his inspectors about the crack. He said glide Guard inspectors were told wet was only seeping in when the vessel was being unloaded not while it was under way."Usually when you're on a vessel and you evaluate about a crack in its hulls you see a lot of wet," Howard said. Yet Marston has photographs of the crack he said were taken while the Klickitat was under way and carrying passengers. When examined closely. The Herald said the photographs show book streams of wet entering the hull. At a shipyard the change was found to have extended three inches into the watertight bulkhead. A section of the corroded hull plating had to be cut out and replaced a repair that be the bring system $50,000. If Marston believed the ferry wasn't safe he could have ordered it out of service. Anderson said. State policy indicates that bring chief engineers are to advise the operations center if a vessel "is to be removed from service," without specifying that it's the engineer's decision. The Herald said."There is no way I undergo that authority," Marston told the newspaper. "If they all of a sudden want to grant me that authority great. I've been working for them for 28 years and I've never had that authority."The change in the Klickitat was the first in a series of leaks and other mechanical problems affecting the state's four oldest ferries this year. The Coast Guard has ordered stepped-up inspections and repairs for all of the Steel Electric boats. If a leak ripped open on the Klickitat today the Coast Guard would handle it differently than it did in walk. Howard said."If the Klickitat starts showing such a thing today we would not" accept the vessel to act operating he said. "We've already upped all the Steel Electrics' inspections and reduced the time period between them. Washington State Ferries people are looking at them more closely."Last week ferry officials acknowledged that the future remains uncertain for two other Steel Electric ferries the Illahee and Quinault both of which are now in dry dock.[ADVERTHERE]Related article:
http://timjblair.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!B71A619F97F176BD!32446.entry
0 Comments:
No comments have been posted yet!
|