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Run the Storm

Page 27

by George Michelsen Foy


  ports, 2, 31, 153, 170–72, 187

  prepper beliefs, 144–45

  Puerto Rico

  dependency on merchant ship runs by, 65–66, 81

  Walmart’s stores on, 66n

  Puerto Rico run (Jacksonville–San Juan run)

  crew family life and, 70

  crew’s preference for, 70, 79

  delay clauses in contracts and, 66, 103

  El Faro’s first assignment to, 108

  fuel loaded for, 120

  Joaquin forecasts and, 142–43

  Tote’s LNG/diesel vessels for, 106

  Tote’s management style and safety on, 113

  Tote’s price-fixing activities on, 110

  Tote’s tracking of ships on, 104–5

  Pusatere, Richard J. (chief engineer), xvi

  captain’s relationship with, 68

  cargo loading and, 24

  El Faro’s evacuation and, 217

  engine room routines and, 59, 60, 61, 99, 100, 130

  hurricane conditions and list issues and, 168, 179, 180, 186–87, 190, 205

  Tote’s planned promotion of, 106

  Quammie, Theodore E. (chief steward), xvii, 36, 136, 151, 203

  radar

  loss of, 190, 198, 218

  navigation by, 9, 20, 48, 50, 52, 57, 65n, 74, 104, 137, 161

  Randolph, Danielle L. “Dany” (second mate), xv

  Captain Davidson and, 68, 159–60, 161

  cargo loading and, 24, 29, 30

  coffee-making habit of, 118, 158, 199

  course change suggestions and, 157–58, 160–161

  distress messages from, 198, 201, 223, 224, 230

  doubts about trip expressed by, 29

  evacuation preparations by, 209, 229

  family background of, 27–29, 37, 43–44

  Joaquin forecasts and, 117, 118, 123–24, 126–27, 157–58

  Joaquin’s impact and, 161–64, 167, 169, 173, 189, 190–91, 196, 198–99, 206, 208–9

  last message to mother from, 11, 174

  new third engineer Meklin and, 43–44

  personality of, 69, 78, 80, 107, 118, 127, 158

  sleep between watches and, 158–59, 160

  watches of, 37n, 67, 85, 115–16, 117, 123–24, 157, 159–60, 161, 173, 189

  registries, ship, 9

  rest periods, on watches, 159

  riding gang. See Polish riding gang

  Riehm, Jeremie H. (third mate), xv, 198

  background of, 63

  cargo loading and, 24, 30

  course change suggestion from, 157–58, 160–61

  departure and, 47, 49–50

  inspections by, 67, 96–97

  Joaquin monitoring by, 114, 116–17, 137–43, 157–58, 174

  navigation by, 66, 67, 137, 141

  watches of, 29, 37n, 63, 65, 101, 136

  risk matrix (Coast Guard), 63

  Rivera, Lashawn L. (chief cook), xvii, 10, 170

  arrival and boarding by, 19, 20–21, 22

  background of, 21, 77

  galley and meals and, 35, 36, 77, 203

  hurricane preparations and, 97, 151–52

  roll-on, roll-off (Ro-Ro) container ships

  cargo loading and, 22

  Davidson’s experience with, 184

  El Faro’s conversion from, 22, 96, 108, 155

  rose boxes, 134, 186

  Roth-Roffy, Tom, 113

  routes (runs). See also Old Bahama Channel; Puerto Rico run; Tacoma–Anchorage run

  captain’s authority over, 103–4

  cost and schedule pressures in choosing, 66, 102–3, 144

  runs. See routes (runs)

  rust problems, 30, 32, 92, 93, 156, 186

  safety issues

  Alternate Compliance Program (ACP) on, 154–55, 232

  captain-crew interactions and, 102

  captain’s responsibility for, 47, 70, 105, 106, 107, 120, 136–37, 143, 160, 200–201

  chief mate’s responsibility for, 37n, 43n

  course changes and, 107

  crew whistle-blowers and complaints about, 80–81, 107, 139, 231

  engine room gates and, 31n

  federal regulations on, 81–82

  GM margin and, 49n

  hurricane precautions for, 8, 42, 47

  lifeboat upgrades and, 96, 232

  NTSB’s report on, 232

  Polish riding gang and, 97

  regular equipment inspections and, 9

  Tote’s guidelines on, 47, 66, 105, 232

  Tote’s management style and, 112–13

  Tote’s responses to complaints about, 107–8, 112, 144, 200–201, 231

  Saffir-Simpson scale, 8, 9, 114n

  sail effect of wind, 67, 182, 184

  Saltchuk Resources, 108–9, 110, 111, 113

  San Juan–Jacksonville run. See Puerto Rico run

  SAT-C

  distress messages from, 198, 201

  weather forecasts from, 38–39, 40, 71–72, 87, 113–14, 117, 126, 127, 139, 143, 174, 198

  Schoenly, Howard J. (second engineer), xvi, 120, 121, 122, 130, 175–76, 178, 179

  scuttle hatch gaskets, 93–95

  Seafarers International Union (SIU), 77, 79, 82, 233

  Sea Star Lines, 6, 108, 110, 111

  Sea Star and Tote Services. See Tote

  Shapiro, Leonard, 108, 110

  shipping. See also merchant marine

  automated vessels in, 104

  captain’s authority in, 103–4, 160–61

  construction and maintenance regulation loopholes in, 154–56

  cost and schedule pressures in, 102–3, 106

  federal deregulation of, 81–82

  Ship Security Alert System (SSAS), 39, 198, 201, 230

  Shultz, Steven W. (chief mate), xv, 28n

  captain’s relationship with, 68, 106, 129–30

  cargo checks by, 92–93

  cargo loading and, 22, 24, 26, 27, 30

  crew and, 79, 92

  El Faro’s evacuation and, 208, 209, 210

  feelings about Tote’s treatment of, 107, 129–30

  hold flooding and, 205–6, 207

  hurricane and course changes and, 158, 173–76, 182

  Joaquin forecasts and captain’s course change and, 72–74, 104, 107, 117, 126

  list problems and, 176, 182, 185, 187–89, 190, 191, 197, 200, 207

  pilots and El Faro’s departure and, 47

  proposed course change by, 129–30, 138

  responsibilities of, 37n

  stability calculations and, 26, 43, 49, 50

  watches of, 29, 37n, 68, 124, 136, 173

  weather monitoring by, 114, 124–26, 127–29

  work assignments from, 91, 92

  Solar-Cortes, German A. (oiler), xvi, 83

  stability, 14

  components affecting, 25

  computation of, 25–26, 43, 67, 98, 207n

  container load affecting, 24, 67, 155

  El Faro’s construction and, 155

  fuel tanks and, 120–21

  issues affecting, 16, 120–21, 184–85, 207–8

  sail effect of wind and, 67, 182, 184

  Tote’s guidelines on, 207

  sump. See also lubrication system

  list and problems with, 180–81, 182, 189–90, 190, 205

  oil collection in, 62, 131, 179–80, 181

  pump leakage issue and, 132

  Sun Shipbuilding (Sunships), 108–9, 113

  Tabbutt, Mark, 109

  Tacoma–Anchorage run, 11, 56, 99–100, 134, 149

  target list (Coast Guard), 63

  Texas Enterprise (cargo ship), 5

  Thomas, Anthony “Shawn” (oiler), xvi, 82, 122, 133, 179, 185–86, 204

  Thresher (submarine), 13n

  Titanic, 95, 216

  Tote (Tote, Inc., Sea Star, and Tote Services), 6, 107–13, 189

  background of ownership changes and expansion at, 108–9, 113

  cargo loading and, 24, 26, 27<
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  Coast Guard/NTSB hearings and, 231

  Coast Guard risk matrix and target list and, 63

  cost and schedule pressures on, 66, 102–3, 144

  crew’s treatment by, 107

  Davidson’s being passed over for promotion by, 105

  Davidson’s feelings about treatment by, 106–7, 129–30, 144

  Davidson’s hurricane notifications to, 6, 101–2, 117, 199–201, 202

  Davidson’s management style and, 69–70, 106

  Davidson’s need for route approval from, 102, 105–6

  Davidson’s route planning for return northbound trip and, 101–2, 105

  delay clauses in contracts and, 66, 103

  El Faro’s structural conversion by, 22, 96, 108, 155

  families’ hearing about El Faro’s loss from, 10–11

  families’ lawsuits against, 112

  families’ treatment by, 112

  hurricane recommendations from, 8, 42, 47, 143

  Joaquin’s underestimation by, 8

  lashing guidelines of, 27, 30n, 93, 177

  liability of, 229

  lifeboat updating and, 96, 155

  LNG/diesel vessels of, 56, 60, 100, 106, 112

  maintenance requests to, 66–67, 111

  overtime limits by, 79

  penalties assessed on, 233

  personnel and workload issues at, 112

  price-fixing activities of, 110, 113

  profit pressures on, 111–13

  Puerto Rico’s dependency on regular runs by ships of, 65–66

  regular runs and profits of, 65

  renovations for Alaska run by, 99–100

  response to El Faro’s distress by, 223

  rest period violations by, 159

  safety coordinator position at, 112

  safety guidelines from, 47, 66, 105, 232

  safety issues and, 80, 96, 97, 102, 105, 106, 107–8, 112–13, 143, 144, 200–201

  safety record of, 80n

  salvage tug hired by, 13

  stability guidelines from, 207

  statement on El Faro’s sinking from, 229

  Tacoma–Anchorage route and, 11, 56, 99–100, 134

  tracking of El Faro’s route and weather changes by, 104–5, 113

  whistle-blowers and complaints to, 80–81, 107, 139, 231

  Totem Ocean Trailer Express (TOTE), 108

  TOTE Resources, 108

  Tropical Analysis and Forecast Branch high seas forecast (TAFB), 38–39, 87

  Tropical Storm Erika, xiii, 41, 42, 74, 143

  Truszkowski, Andrzej R. (Polish worker), xvii

  unions, 70, 77, 79, 82, 83, 109

  unlicensed crew members, 21, 35, 36, 79–80, 91

  VHF channel emergency calls, 12, 124

  voyage data recorder (VDR, or black box), xix, xx, 72n, 115, 139n, 156, 160, 186, 213, 219, 229, 231, 236, 238

  voyage plan, 37n, 68

  Walashek Industrial & Marine, 122, 123

  Walgreens, 65, 110

  Walmart, 65, 66, 103, 110

  watches, 138

  activities during, 137

  cargo loading and, 21, 29, 47

  change routine during, xx, 68, 115–16, 157

  crew assigned to, 37n, 52

  El Faro’s flouting of rules on, 159–60

  fatigue during, 29, 159–60, 169n

  hours worked on, 159–60

  hurricane preparations and, 119, 167, 203

  Joaquin’s growing strength and, 168, 172, 173, 175, 179, 203, 228

  night lunches for, 70, 151

  regulations on rest periods with, 159

  requirement for, 138

  riding gang not part of, 36

  shifts during, 50, 57, 58, 63, 67, 68, 70, 83, 91, 122, 124, 127, 130, 132, 136, 165, 167–68, 202

  sleep between watches and, 29, 158–59

  wave changes noticed during, 101

  watch status of hurricanes, 124

  Weather Channel, 40

  weather forecasts

  captain’s authority in route choices and, 104

  Captain Davidson’s monitoring of, 38–41, 42, 114–15, 127, 136, 139–41, 143, 174

  crew’s monitoring of, 71–74, 75, 113–14, 116–17, 137, 139–41, 157

  direction predictions in, 165

  inaccuracies about Joaquin’s strength and course in, 86–87, 88, 114–15, 165

  Joaquin’s early development on, 71–74, 75

  lag between data and prediction in, 115

  models used in, 87

  predictive models on Joaquin’s growth using, 46

  range of sources consulted in, 38–41

  Tote’s guidelines on, 47

  Tote’s tracking of El Faro’s route and, 104–5

  Weather Underground, 137

  Westward Venture (cargo ship), 108, 134

  wheelhouse. See bridge of El Faro

  wind shear, 34, 86, 165, 195

  World Meteorological Organization, 46

  “Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald, The” (Lightfoot), 134, 203

  Wright, Mariette (deckhand), xv, 27, 76, 79, 84, 91, 93, 203

  Zdobych, Rafal A. (Polish worker), xvii

  END NOTES

  Part I

  I. Emerald Express’s crew later claimed to have heard VHF calls from El Faro, but those calls were not recorded. It could be that El Faro’s officers used handheld VHF sets to make distress calls while abandoning ship; there is no way to verify this.

  II. One nautical mile, corresponding to one minute of latitude, is equal to 1.15 standard miles.

  III. Two worse or comparable civilian disasters occurred in inland waters: a small car ferry, the George Prince, sank in 1976 on the Mississippi, killing seventy-eight; and an ore carrier, the Carl Bradley, sank in a 1958 storm on Lake Michigan with the loss of thirty-three crew. Several military ships, including the nuclear submarine USS Thresher, sank with significantly greater casualties.

  Part II

  I. Traditionally spelled boatswain, pronounced bo’sun: the highest-ranking deckhand, essentially foreman for all deck-related work aboard ship.

  II. The lower its center of gravity and the farther away from the centerline its buoyancy center can travel, the more resistant a ship will be to rolling too far or capsizing in rough seas. Stability in merchant ships is therefore reckoned—you can see this as an elegance of graphics, without needing to follow the math—by measuring how far to one side the center of buoyancy shifts at a given angle of tilt. The lower the center of gravity, the farther away from the centerline the buoyancy center can move, the longer will be the “righting arm” that fights to keep the ship upright. The goal is to maintain the minimum length of righting arm necessary to keep the ship from rolling too far or even capsizing in rough seas. Minimum righting arm is called GM, where G stands for the center of gravity and M for a geometric point defining the center of buoyancy; GM margin is the extra margin of stability mariners require before departure (or the difference between the minimum and actual GM). For El Faro the average GM margin at departure is around 0.5, diminishing to 0.25 at arrival due to fuel burn-off. On this trip El Faro leaves with a margin of 0.64, which burn-off will reduce to 0.3.

  III. El Faro’s ballasting options were reduced during her 1992 and 2006 conversions, when four of her ballast tanks were permanently filled with iron slurry, which lowered her center of gravity; another effect was to reduce her officers’ ability to counteract a list by emptying extra ballast tanks on one side and filling them on the other, a problem that will have a bearing on the ship’s ultimate fate.

  IV. CargoMax—which is not required to be and has never been officially approved as a stability-calculating program by the Coast Guard or any other official agency—is the child of a joint venture between Herbert Engineering, a California marine-software company, and the American Bureau of Shipping, or ABS, a nonprofit, New York–based “classification society.” A classification society is a company that promulgates marine safety standards and ins
pects ships according to those standards worldwide. The involvement of ABS in the software Tote uses might not be a coincidence. ABS, which boasts yearly revenues of over $1 billion, is also the outfit that, for a fee, inspects Tote ships for regulatory compliance.

  V. Despite family skepticism as to how she would make money selling makeup on a ship full of men, she once scored her “biggest order ever” with Chief Mate Shultz, who bought almost $500 worth of cosmetics for his wife.

  VI. A one-page “guideline,” the authorship of which is uncertain, details minimum lashing requirements for El Faro; by this document’s standards, according to Captain Philip Anderson of the industry group National Cargo Bureau, most of the ship’s container stacks would be deemed compliant. But Anderson also will state in testimony that by normal NCB standards some of the cargo stacks and “a significant” number of the trailers carried below would be considered unsatisfactorily lashed down. Inspectors will later determine that anywhere between three and forty of the trailers on 2nd Deck are stowed off-button. The lashing guideline requires that cars be secured individually to D rings, which is not the case on El Faro. Anderson later will judge loose cargo to have had a “domino effect” on other cargo, and to have become a problem during the ship’s final voyage.

  VII. The engine room (technically 4-hold) lies under the house; 5-hold, where steering and propulsion machinery reside, is all the way aft, against the stern, and does not extend to Tank Top level. Regulations require that all gates be shut before sailing, since they are part of the system of watertight compartments that contributes to the ship’s overall safety.

  VIII. Sahara sand can weaken the wave by causing a dry haze that screens solar heat, eventually impeding the storm’s growth at sea.

  IX. The bottom two levels of the house are narrow compared to the upper four; they mostly consist of the boiler-exhaust casing, plus (off a corridor running port and starboard) the main stairs, a fire-control room, a cargo office, and a toilet. The rest of the area, a semi-open “breezeway” sheltered under the roof of wider upper decks, holds three dedicated containers full of bosun’s supplies, paint, and other ship’s stores.

  X. Each mate runs the ship individually, with the assistance of one or two ABs on lookout or general backup duty during his, or her, respective watch. On El Faro the eight-to-twelve watch is assigned to Jeremie Riehm, the third mate; the twelve to four is Randolph’s; the four to eight belongs to Chief Mate Shultz. In addition, the chief mate is responsible for implementing safety regulations and general inspection; the second mate’s remit is navigation and communications systems, supervising the voyage plan, and keeping the wheelhouse (or bridge) in efficient operating order; the third mate usually takes care of hands-on maintenance and inspection duties such as sounding (or measuring the contents of) bilges and ballast and fuel tanks, and checking that emergency supplies on the ship’s two lifeboats are up-to-date.

 

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