Marine Traffic

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Murray, Larsen seeking federal money for ferries - SeattleTimes


Sen. Patty Murray and Congressmen Rick Larsen are seeking $200 million a year for five years in federal spending for ferry systems.

By The Associated Press
Sen. Patty Murray and Congressmen Rick Larsen are seeking $200 million a year for five years in federal spending for ferry systems.

Half would go to big ferry systems — and Washington has the nation's largest. The U.S. Transportation Department would distribute the rest.

The Washington state ferry system has 22 vessels carrying nearly 23 million riders a year to 20 terminals. State ferries director David Mosely says the maritime highways deserve federal support like roads, bridges and rail.

Murray says the federal government should see the ferry system as a transportation priority.


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Citizens' ferry board in formation; panel would advise state commission - Peninsula Daily News

By Jeff Chew
Peninsula Daily News


PORT TOWNSEND -- Washington State Transportation Commission members are in the process of forming a citizen-based advisory panel that will review and advise them on Washington State Ferries fare proposals and pricing policy.

"The feeling was that there needed to be some public or ferry advisory committee input into it," said Tim Caldwell, chairman of the Jefferson County Ferry Advisory Committee and a longtime advocate for both car and passenger ferry to Port Townsend and the county.

A 2.5 percent fare increase was approved by the commission in 2007, down from the original 4 percent proposed.

The purpose of the 10-member Ferry Fare and Pricing Policy Advisory Committee would be to review Washington State Ferries proposed tariff changes or modifications.


Advise commission

The panel would advise the commission "as to their viability, feasibility and impact on the community or riding public to assist the commission in its decision-making process," according to a draft of the plan to form the advisory committee.

The advisory committee would meet monthly.

As proposed, ferry advisory committee representatives would be appointed to the fares review committee, with eight ferry advisory committee members from Port Townsend, San Juan Island, Clinton, Kingston, Bainbridge, Bremerton, Southworth and Vashon Island.

The fares and policy advisory committee would report its findings to the Transportation Commission, said David Moseley, assistant transportation secretary for ferries and the governor's office.


Began process in May

The transportation commission chose to begin the process of forming the fares and policy panel during a May 21 meeting in Olympia.

"Some legislators have indicated that there is a perception that local elected officials do not participate in Washington State Ferries issues," the draft proposal states.

"The fact that the elected officials appoint qualified personnel they feel represent the community interests and communicate with them regularly should mitigate that concern."


Other members

Besides Caldwell, appointed members to the Jefferson County Ferry Advisory Committee are residents Tim Snider and Tom Thiersch and city Planning Director Rick Sepler.

Jefferson County commissioners made the appointments.

________

Port Townsend-Jefferson County Editor Jeff Chew can be reached at 360-385-2335 or at jeff.chew@ peninsuladailynews.com.


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Sunday, June 28, 2009

MARITIME: SUPREME COURT 5-4 ALLOWS PUNITIVE DAMAGES FOR SEAMEN REFUSED
MAINTENANCE AND CURE
Splitting 5-4, the U.S. Supreme Court held June 25 that injured seamen may
seek punitive damages when their employer willfully fails to pay them for
maintenance--food and lodging--and cure--medical care (Atlantic Sounding Co. v.
Townsend, U.S., No. 08-214, 6/25/09).

Writing for the court majority, Justice Clarence Thomas found that punitive
damages have long been an accepted remedy for common law claims under general
maritime law, including claims for maintenance and cure. He rejected the
argument of Atlantic Sounding Co., the owner of a tugboat on which crew member
Edgar Townsend was injured, that the Jones Act, enacted in 1920, eliminated the
availability of punitive damages.

The Jones Act "created a statutory cause of action for negligence, but it
did not eliminate pre-existing remedies available to seamen for the separate
common-law cause of action based on a seaman's right to maintenance and cure,"
Thomas said. He found that the Jones Act created an alternative statutory claim
for seamen and did not affect existing common law claims and remedies.

Thomas also rejected Atlantic Sounding's argument that the court's prior
means that seamen are limited to remedies that are available under the Jones
Act, which courts have held does not allow for punitive damages. Miles
addressed "whether general maritime law should provide a cause of action for
wrongful death based on unseaworthiness," a claim that was not available before
the Jones Act, Thomas said. He found that unlike in Miles, in the present
case "both the general maritime cause of action (maintenance and cure) and the
remedy (punitive damages) were well established before the passage of the Jones
Act."

Justices John Paul Stevens, David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and
Stephen Breyer joined in the majority opinion. Justice Samuel A. Alito wrote
the dissenting opinion, which Chief Justice John G. Roberts and Justices
Antonin Scalia and Anthony M. Kennedy joined.

Alito asserted that Miles "provided a workable framework for analyzing the
relief available on claims under general maritime law" and objected that the
majority "abruptly change[d] course." Miles "instructs that, in exercising our
authority to develop general maritime law, we should be guided primarily by the
policy choices reflected in statutes creating closely related claims," Alito
said. He maintained that "if a form of relief is not available on a statutory
claim, we should be reluctant to permit such relief on a similar claim brought
under general maritime law."

The Supreme Court long has recognized that punitive damages are not
available under the Federal Employers Liability Act, Alito said. By
incorporating FELA into the Jones Act, Congress "must have intended to
incorporate FELA's limitation on damages as well," Alito said. He asserted that
under Miles "the rule should be the same when a seaman sues under general
maritime law for personal injury resulting from the denial of maintenance and
cure."

Sailors' Union Attorney Applauds Ruling.

John R. Hillsman of McGuinn, Hillsman & Palefsky in San Francisco
helped prepare an amicus brief filed in the case on behalf of the Sailors'
Union of the Pacific. He applauded the court's ruling, saying it resolves a 15-
year controversy, but said some courts also have used Miles to prohibit
punitive damages for unseaworthiness and negligence claims brought by seamen.
"We won the battle, but we haven't won the war yet," Hillsman said. He argued
that courts should apply the Atlantic Sounding decision to unseaworthiness
and negligence claims.

The lineup of justices in the majority--the conservative Thomas aligned with
the four justices who are considered liberals--is "remarkable," Hillsman said.
Thomas properly acknowledged that the Jones Act was intended to expand remedies
for injured seamen, not restrict them, Hillsman said.

Various attorneys who represented the parties or amici curiae did not return
calls for comment.

Injured While Working on Tugboat.

While working as a deck hand on a tugboat in the port of Miami, Townsend
fell on the steel deck and injured his arm and shoulder. Atlantic Sounding, the
owner of the tugboat, refused to provide maintenance and cure.

The owner filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment. Townsend filed a
separate suit under the Jones Act and general maritime law, alleging
negligence, unseaworthiness, willful failure to pay maintenance and cure, and
wrongful termination. He also brought similar counterclaims in the owner's suit
and sought punitive damages for willful denial of maintenance and cure.

The U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida consolidated the
cases and denied Atlantic Sounding's motion to dismiss the punitive damages
claim. Hearing an interlocutory appeal, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Eleventh Circuit held that punitive damages are available for willful
withholding of maintenance and cure (496 F.3d 1282, 28 IER Cases 611 (11th
Cir. 2007) ). Other federal appeals courts and some state courts had reached
the opposite result.

The Supreme Court granted review last November (213 DLR C-1, 11/4/08) and
heard oral argument in March (39 DLR AA-1, 3/3/09).

Punitive Damages Long Available Under Common Law.

"Punitive damages have long been an available remedy at common law for
wanton, willful, or outrageous conduct," Thomas said. He found that during the
colonial era under English common law, juries were given "broad discretion" to
award damages, including "punitive damages when the circumstances of the case
warranted" and that American courts have permitted punitive damages "in
appropriate cases since at least 1784."

"The general rule that punitive damages were available at common law
extended to claims arising under federal maritime law," Thomas said. He found
that punitive damages "were available in maritime actions for tortious acts of
a particularly egregious nature" and that "[n]othing in maritime law undermines
the applicability of this general rule in the maintenance and cure context."

The obligation under maritime law to provide maintenance and cure
"dates back centuries" and has been recognized by the Supreme Court, Thomas
said. He found that "the failure of a seaman's employers to provide him with
adequate medical care was the basis for awarding punitive damages in cases
decided as early as the 1800's." He concluded that "the pre-Jones Act evidence
indicates that punitive damages remain available" for maintenance and cure
claims "under the appropriate factual circumstances."

Congress enacted the Jones Act in 1920 to overrule a Supreme Court decision
holding that prohibited seamen or their families from recoveries for injuries
or death caused by employer negligence, Thomas said. The statute provides that
an injured seaman or a deceased seaman's personal representative "may elect to
bring a civil action" against the employer (46 U.S.C. Section 30104(a) ).
The Jones Act provision incorporates FELA, which covers injured railway
workers.

The Jones Act's use of the word "elect" shows that although the statute
created a statutory claim for negligence, the Jones Act did not eliminate
already existing common law claims, including maintenance and cure, Thomas
said. He found that "the only statutory restrictions expressly addressing
general maritime claims for maintenance and cure were enacted long after the
passage of the Jones Act." Congress limited the availability of maintenance and
cure claims for foreign workers on offshore oil and mineral production
facilities and for students and instructors at sailing schools, he said.

The Supreme Court consistently has recognized that the Jones Act was
intended to "enlarge" protection for seamen, "not to narrow it," Thomas said.
"Nothing in the text of the Jones Act or this Court's decisions issued in the
wake of its enactment undermines the continued existence of the common-law
cause of action providing recovery for the delayed or improper provision of
maintenance and cure," he said.

Miles Inapplicable to This Case, Thomas Says.

Atlantic Sounding also argued that the court's 1990 decision in Miles
limits remedies for injured seamen to those available under the Jones Act and
the Death on the High Seas Act. That interpretation of Miles "is far too
broad," Thomas said. He found that Miles did not address claims for maintenance
and cure or the availability of punitive damages for such claims and instead
addressed "the entirely different question whether general maritime law should
provide a cause of action for wrongful death based on unseaworthiness."

"By providing a remedy for wrongful death suffered on the high seas or in
territorial waters, the Jones Act and the DOHSA displaced a general maritime
rule that denied any recovery for wrongful death," Thomas said. He found that
the Supreme Court "was called upon in Miles to decide whether these new
statutes supported an expansion of the relief available under pre-existing
general maritime law to harmonize it with a cause of action created by
statute." The court recognized a general maritime claim for wrongful death of a
seaman but followed the example of the Jones Act and DOHSA by prohibiting
damages for loss of society and for lost future earnings, Thomas said.

"Unlike the situation presented in Miles, both the general maritime
cause of action (maintenance and cure) and the remedy (punitive damages) were
well established before the passage of the Jones Act," Thomas said. He also
found that because the Jones Act "does not address maintenance and cure or its
remedy," it is "possible to adhere to the traditional understanding of maritime
actions and remedies without abridging or violating the Jones Act."

Atlantic Sounding's "contention that Miles precludes any action or remedy
for personal injury beyond that made available under the Jones Act was directly
rejected" by the Supreme Court in Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Corp. v.
Garris, 532 U.S. 811, 69 USLW 4410 (2001), Thomas said. He found that Garris
"recognized a maritime cause of action for wrongful death attributable to
negligence although neither the Jones Act (which applies only to seamen) nor
DOHSA (which does not cover territorial waters) provided such a remedy."

Thomas recognized that "the negligent denial of maintenance and cure may
also be the subject of a Jones Act claim" and that "seamen commonly seek to
recover under the Jones Act for the wrongful withholding of maintenance and
cure." But that "does not mean that the Jones Act provides the only remedy for
maintenance and cure claims," Thomas said. He found that the court in Cortes
seaman's right to choose among overlapping statutory and common-law remedies
for injuries sustained by the denial of maintenance and cure."

"The laudable quest for uniformity in admiralty does not require the
narrowing of available remedies to the lowest common denominator approved by
Congress for distinct causes of action," Thomas said.





Thursday, June 25, 2009

Waiting for a ferry at Orcas Island and pondering our incompetence - The Seattle Times

The threadbare Washington state ferry system is where a mechanical problem on one or, God forbid, several boats at the same time can render the entire schedule a work of fiction.


ORCAS FERRY LANDING — "Island Time." It's the logo on T-shirts and hats in a market near the ferry dock. "Island Time: Orcas Island," as if there's some degree of cache involved.

We've been sitting here, living on Island Time, waiting for a ride to Friday Harbor, for four hours. But who's counting?

About two hours after taking my place in line, in a car with Emjay and visiting friends from Colorado, the pointed questions began arriving from the back seat.

"Where is our ferry?" wondered Connor, with that impeccable logic every 5-year-old possesses.

"It's coming, buddy," said Dad, from behind the wheel. And it was coming. Just not anytime soon.

I grimaced and launched into The Explanation — the mea culpa I offer every guest who arrives in the Evergreen State and wonders why nothing seems to work around here.

"It's a long story," I always say. "We have a fascinating revenue system. Sales-tax driven, boom or bust. When it booms, we don't invest in infrastructure. When it busts, we don't invest in anything. We just close stuff down."

Exhibit A: The threadbare state ferry system, where a mechanical problem on one or, God forbid, several boats at the same time can render the entire schedule a work of fiction.

That's what happened this week, when the Barbie-sized ferry Hiyu — a proud little 42-year-old boat, but one that carries only 33 cars — replaced a broken-down 90-car vessel, the Sealth, as the "inter-island" ferry in the San Juans.

You will get no visible nor verbal warning about this switcheroo when you leave Anacortes — no indication that you'd better allow half a day to cover, say, the 5 minutes of open water between Shaw and Lopez. You'll find out soon enough.

Island Time! Just lay back and enjoy it.

When the Hiyu finally pulled away from Orcas Wednesday, well past its scheduled departure time, a ferry employee gave those of us stuck on the beach the grim news.



"We've reached our quota," she said, explaining the small-boat problem. "You can wait for the next boat [nearly four hours away, as it turned out], or you can come back tomorrow."

Tomorrow?

Someone asked her what seemed a logical question. When a run's capacity is reduced by two-thirds because of a breakdown, why can't the state just add a couple extra runs for the smaller boat? After all, we've already paid our money — more than $100 for a small car and five passengers to get from Anacortes to Friday Harbor via Orcas.

She looked at us like we were from a solar system far, far away, and sighed.

"The state," she said through a saccharin smile, "is pretty darn broke."

And there you have it. Washington: The No-We-Can't State. Broke and broken, no fix in sight.

It occurred to me at that instant that I rarely visit the San Juans anymore, and this trip reminded me why. It's just not worth it, either in terms of money or time. That ratio of three hours in ferry lines for every one hour relaxing tends to stick with you.

Who do you blame? Washington State Ferries. The governor. The Legislature. Maybe even yourself, if you've ever voted for a knee-jerk tax measure that pulls money directly away from transportation.

But it's not all about money. In a lifetime of ferry riding, I don't recall the system being a lot more efficient back before tax revolts. And what Washington State Ferries has, it doesn't use well. For the half a day we were marooned on Orcas, the ferry slip sat empty for hours. But on the two occasions when one boat actually used it, another magically appeared to wait in line behind it — in one case up to a half-hour — to slide in when it was finished.

Have these people not heard of two-way radios? The entire thing reeks of mismanagement.

And it's embarrassing.

We got in line to go to Friday Harbor before 4 p.m. on Wednesday. Got there right around 9. Big deal? Maybe not. But it's just one example of what seems an enduring trend in these parts. Believe it or not, some of us still have medium- to high expectations of our state government. And one of them is that it should not take five hours to move people from Orcas Island to Friday Harbor.

Island Time: A pleasant spin on gross incompetence.

Get used to it. And for any of you out there who think life is too short to be living it, two words of advice: Stay home.

Ron Judd: 206-464-8280 or at rjudd@seattletimes.com.


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Seattle foundation puts ferry up for sale on eBay


Seattle's Pacific Marine Foundation is offering the 72-year-old M/V Olympic, one of the state's first vehicle ferries, for $199,500 on eBay.

By Blythe Lawrence
Seattle Times staff
Anybody wanna buy a slightly used ferry?

Seattle's Pacific Marine Foundation is offering the 72-year-old M/V Olympic, one of the state's first vehicle ferries, for $199,500 on eBay.

What would a person do with it? Possibilities abound, said Rich Wallace, director of charters and sales for Pacific Marine. His ideas include turning the vessel into a floating hotel (a group in Stockholm recently did that with a ferry, he noted), using it as a base for a sport-fishing camp.

It also could be an expedition boat, or, for the wealthy or eccentric, a second home.

But whatever happens to the Olympic has to happen soon, Wallace said. The vessel is moored in Eagle Harbor next to the Bainbridge Island ferry terminal, but it will be evicted later this summer when construction begins on a harbor expansion.

The Olympic was built in Baltimore in 1937 and served Chesapeake Bay as the M/V Gov. Harry W. Nice before being bought by the Washington State Ferry System and re-christened Olympic in 1954.

The 207-foot vessel, which has a capacity of 605 passengers and 55 vehicles, served mainly on the Port Townsend-Keystone, Southpoint-Lofall and Clinton-Mukilteo circuits. It was retired in 1997.

In recent years, the Olympic has idled in Eagle Harbor, where it has become a fixture. There was some talk of keeping it in the harbor and converting it for use as offices or as a tourist attraction, but that would require long-term moorage, Wallace explained.

Not to mention money. Wallace estimated that whoever buys the Olympic will have to find financing for about $1 million in conversion work. Pacific Marine has advertised that it would be open to joint-venture offers.

If the Olympic is not sold before the beginning of August, the company will seek a new temporary home for it, closer to Tacoma or elsewhere on Puget Sound. Wallace just hopes to keep the vessel afloat.

"If we can't find someone to convert her and let her live, eventually she'll go to a scrap yard," Wallace said. "Not soon, I hope. Not ever, I hope."

Blythe Lawrence: blawrence@seattletimes.com

Added ebay listing site info

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Monday, June 22, 2009

Four aging Washington state ferries sold for scrap - Seattle Times


Washington state has sold all four of its aging "Steel Electric" ferries to a salvage operator for $200,000 — a fraction of what consultants said the boats were worth as scrap a year ago.

By Jack Broom
Seattle Times staff reporter
Washington state has sold all four of its aging "Steel Electric" ferries to a salvage operator for $200,000 — a fraction of what consultants said the boats were worth as scrap a year ago.

"Scrap steel prices plummeted and have never really recovered," said Marta Coursey, ferries spokeswoman.

State officials today announced that the Illahee, Klickitat, Nisqually and Quinault, which have been out of service since 2007, have been sold to Eco Planet Recycling of Chula Vista, Calif.

Coursey said the boats, all more than 80 years old, will be towed later this summer to Ensenada, Mexico, where they will be scrapped. All four are now moored at the ferry maintenance yard in Bainbridge Island's Eagle Harbor.

A year ago, two companies, Vigor Marine and Metro Metals Northwest, hired by the state to estimate the value of the boats, reported that scrap value of the vessels could be $450,000 to $475,000 apiece.

But Coursey said prices have dropped dramatically since then, due to a global downturn in construction. In addition, the state needed to complete a deal soon to move the boats before the fall weather sets in, she said.

The boats were pulled out of service because of corrosion and extensive hull damage.

Earlier this year, state officials were in discussion with a Tacoma company, Managing Green, which had proposed purchasing the boats for $650,000 and preserving them, possibly as floating businesses.

But Coursey said a deal was never reached with Managing Green, which had been unable to locate space to moor the boats.

The four sister ships, built in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1920s, were sold to Puget Sound Navigation, also called the "Black Ball" line, in July 1940. In 1951, the state purchased the company's terminals and ferries and began operating the ferry system.

The boats' class name, "Steel Electric," came from the fact that the boats hulls are steel — an earlier class was "Wooden Electric" — and their diesel engines powered electric motors to propel the boats.


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355-ton ferries on Craigslist Vancouver

VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 17 (UPI) -- Two used 355-ton ferry boats are for sale on the Craigslist Internet sales site by a western Canadian company whose services are being replaced by a bridge.
The two TransLink ships have traversing the Fraser River west of Vancouver, British Columbia, between Maple Ridge and Fort Langley every day since 1985, but a new six-lane bridge opened Tuesday making for a quicker trip, the Globe and Mail reported.

The Craigslist Vancouver site lists the ships as 155-feet long car and passenger ferries whose hulls and cabins are in very good condition.

The asking price is $1.1 million each, the report said.

Gary Harlow, broker at Harlow Marine International Inc., said he is also advertising the ships in more traditional ways, but thought the online posting would garner more attention.

"It gets conversation going and brings more people to the table," he said.

Harlow said it's not unusual for such ships to end up carrying freight or being turned into floating fishing lodges, the Globe said.


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Senator Murray on ARRA Funds for Washington State Mass Transit Projects

Funding will boost economy, support purchase of buses, maintenance of ferry vessels and terminals


June 19, 2009 -- (Washington, D.C.) – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) announced that $20,501,842 has been released in grants by the U.S. Department of Transportation for mass transit projects in Washington state. The grants were funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, and will be put to use improving transportation and creating jobs in Washington state.

“Recovery funds continue to flow into Washington state, and are being put to good use in our communities creating jobs and boosting the economy,” said Senator Patty Murray. “This mass-transit recovery funding will put people to work today, help our commuters, and keep businesses moving to sustain economic growth in the future.”

This funding comes from the nearly $700 million for Washington state transportation infrastructure that Senator Murray fought to include in the recovery package.

As the Chairman of the Transportation and Housing Appropriations Subcommittee overseeing funding for the Department of Transportation, Senator Murray worked to ensure that investments in transportation were included in the Recovery Act. Senator Murray voted to pass the Recovery Act on February 13th. The bill was signed into law by President Obama on February 17th.

Washington state recovery funding total: $20,501,842

* TACOMA: PIERCE COUNTY PUBLIC TRANSPORATION BENEFIT AREA AUTHORITY: $11,371,075
Purchase 6 40 ft. buses, CNG Compressor and Preventive Maintenance
* WENATCHEE : CHELAN-DOUGLAS PTBA DBA LINK: $1,019,843
Replace 12 vehicles, 1 lift, shop lights, paint intermodal center, upgrade software
* KITSAP COUNTY: KITSAP TRANSIT: $2,861,382
Facility Expansion, Passenger Vessel and Vans
* WASHINGTON STATE DEPT. OF TRANSPORATION: $3,456,735
Vessel and Terminal Preservation
* WASHINGTON STATE DEPT. OF TRANSPORATION: $1,792,807
Preventive Maintenance and Ferry Vessels

Source: Senator Patty Murray


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Friday, June 19, 2009

Stimulus Funds on Way to Kitsap Transit, State Ferries - Kitsap Sun

By Ed Friedrich (Contact)
Friday, June 19, 2009


Washington, D.C.

Transportation stimulus funds are making their way across the country.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash, announced Friday that $20 million has been released for Washington state mass transit projects, including $2.8 million for Kitsap Transit and $5.2 million for Washington State Ferries.

Kitsap Transit, as determined in early March, will get $1.9 million for new vans, $875,000 for a small ferry for its Port Orchard-Bremerton route, and $95,000 for its Charleston-base expansion.

In April, the transit board approved spending $1 million in stimulus funds for 46 Toyota Sienna vans off the state list and in May authorized buying 31 larger vans from Bay Ford of Port Orchard for $844,000. They’ll replace old vans in the Rideshare program.

The $875,000 for the Port Orchard ferry would go toward buying and enlarging the Admiral Pete, which Kitsap Transit now leases from Kitsap Harbor Tours. The total cost is estimated at about $1.3 million, executive director Dick Hayes said.

Murray also said Friday that about $5.2 million of the $8.4 million designated for Washington State Ferries vessel and terminal preservation has been released.

Ferries director David Moseley said last week that the federal government has set aside another $5 million in non-stimulus money for boat preservation and $950,000 for propulsion systems for new vessels.

He said WSF has also applied for $26 million to replace the Anacortes terminal, $9 million to refurbish the Hyak, $7.6 million for projects to make boats more energy-efficient and $2.1 million to retrofit ferry engines to reduce air pollution.


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Thursday, June 18, 2009

WSF: Mistakes on Ferry Tickets Won't Affect Service to Bremerton - The kitsap Sun

BREMERTON — Bremerton ferry customers, envious of the fancy boats and frequent departures up north, often squawk when their tickets say “Bainbridge Island” on them.

Though Bainbridge and Bremerton tickets are interchangeable from Seattle, some believe Washington State Ferries is purposely skewing traffic counts to justify poorer Bremerton service.

That’s not true, ferry officials said Thursday.

Walk-on passengers are counted as they go through the turnstiles, so they can’t be miscounted even if their ticket is for the wrong destination, said Steve Rodgers, WSF director of operations. Only at the toll booths can mistakes be made, and sometimes they are, he said. But they cut both ways, for Bremerton and against it.

Here’s how it happens:

Bremerton and Bainbridge cars come through the same ticket lines. After a sale is made, the cash register stays on that destination until it is changed. If 10 straight Bainbridge cars are in line, the ticket seller won’t have to change it until a Bremerton car comes along, so the set-up can speed things up. They call it “throughput efficiency.”

The problem, explained Rogers and ferries spokeswoman Marta Coursey, is that some ticket sellers think getting the customer a speedy ticket is more important than getting one with the right destination on it.

“They’re instructed to always punch in the right destination,” Coursey said. “The issue is that our ticket sellers are very oriented toward customer service and trying to help the customer get through the line and get on the dock and get on the vessel.”

If it happens when there’s no rush, one can only assume the seller is too lazy to punch in the proper city.

Customers should clearly state their destination, Rogers said. If they get the wrong ticket, they can keep the receipt and report it. The seller can be identified from the receipt and will get a talking to. That’s usually sufficient, Rogers said. If not, they can climb the discipline ladder.

The ferry system has no way to track how often tickets are issued with the wrong destination, or whether it happens more often to Bremerton customers than Bainbridge. WSF gets four or five written complaints a year, Coursey said. As far as they can remember, none have come from Bainbridge.

The traffic counts are used for ridership forecasts and revenue projections, but not to make boat assignments and service decisions.

“Why people are complaining is because they’re concerned they’re treated differently from Bainbridge customers in terms of the vessels they get and the service provided,” Coursey said. “Our point is, there’s no correlation whatsoever.”

Usually, something like a newspaper letter to the editor rekindles this decades-long squabble, Coursey said. Paul Baumgaertner’s letter got it going this time.

The Rocky Point man said he recently got a ticket marked for Bainbridge, and it wasn’t the first time. But it was the first time he went back to the seller and asked for a new one. The seller told him it didn’t make any difference, but punched out a new ticket. It was also for Bainbridge. After a déjà vu discussion, the third time was the charm.

“I think it does make a difference,” Baumgaertner said of keeping accurate counts. “It’s important to have accurate data to properly allocate your equipment.”

Carlos Jara, who owns a store near the ferry dock, said a ferry official told him recently that Bainbridge was the default setting on the registers. According to Rogers, that’s true only when Bainbridge was the last sale made. Jara, who’s running for mayor, said he would press to get an accurate count, which might be as simple as laying down a hose vehicle counter.

Bainbridge Vs. Bremerton

How the Bainbridge Island and Bremerton ferry runs stack up against each other:

Vessels: Wenatchee (202 vehicles/2,500 passengers), Tacoma (202 vehicles/2,500 passengers)

Daily Departures: 23

2008 Ridership: 6,186,078 (1,951,316 vehicles, 4,234,762 passengers)

Bremerton

Vessels: Hyak (144 vehicles/2,500 passengers), Kitsap (124 vehicles/1,200 passengers)

Daily Departures: 14

2008 Ridership: 2,529,121 (664,771 vehicles, 1,864,350 passengers)


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Letter Bob Distler sent to State Officials



Dear Senator Ranker and Representatives Morris and Quall,

posted 06/15/2009
At a series of community meetings this month, Washington State Ferries discussed the status of its long-range plan, the tariff process and the next steps in exploring the feasibility of a reservations system. WSF senior management also outlined what it termed the legislature’s direction coming out of the 2009 session, including one that endorsed a scenario to fund “existing service levels.”

As it turns out, we in the San Juans will not be so fortunate.

As part of the San Juan County agenda, David Moseley reviewed a letter he received from the United States Coast Guard, dated August of last year, requiring WSF—among other things—to ensure that "all WSF deck watches . . . meet the 12 hours work in 24 hours [requirement] by September 30, 2009" based on concerns regarding crew endurance issues.

What that means for our Fall/Spring and Winter schedules is that the mainline boat that currently remains overnights in Friday Harbor instead will have to originate and terminate in Anacortes, along with other adjustments affecting the entire route’s schedule.

At the meeting, WSF discussed two alternative draft timetables to become effective in September—one that presumes no change to crew work rules in existing collective bargaining agreements and another based on some relaxation of those rules; both conform to the USCG direction of “not more than 12 in any 24.”

Either schedule will result in a significant degradation of intrastate service impacting everyone here in the San Juans, including interisland commuters to and from jobs and schools along with those of us making day trips to the mainland.

In fact, the only island unaffected by either of the draft alternatives will be Vancouver Island; service at Sidney BC would not be impacted.

This issue, which quickly became the focus of the meeting, was conducted on board the interisland ferry Sealth so as to afford residents of all islands a chance to participate, and the agenda was repeated so as to give everyone access to the discussion.

Some questions that come to mind:

If by August of last year WSF learned that it would be mandated to conform its operating schedules to new directives from the Coast Guard, did the Department of Transportation (WSDOT) provide for that requirement with a request for incremental funding as part of its 2009 submission so as to in fact ensure that “existing service levels” would be maintained?

Did this particular issue arise in any discussions between WSDOT, including WSF, and any of you or your respective staffs?

And finally, despite the very late hour—with WSF nearing its deadline to finalize the Fall schedule and the Coast Guard unlikely to essentially reverse its ruling of last year—is there anything that you, as our representatives in Olympia, can do, either fiscally or administratively, to preclude the significant hardships that either of these alternative schedules will impose on our island community?
Thank you for your consideration of these comments.

Bob Distler


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Carol Moser elected as State Transportation Commission Chair


Posted 6.17.09

Transportation Commission Office - PO Box 47308 - Olympia, WA 98504-7308
(360) 705-7070

Date: June 17, 2009

Contact:
Reema Griffith, Transportation Commission Executive Director, 360-705-7070

OLYMPIA – Richland’s Carol Moser has been elected to serve as Chair of the Washington State Transportation Commission. Member Bob Distler, who is from the San Juan Islands, will serve as Vice-chair. Commission members elect new officers every year; their terms become effective on July 1.

Moser has been a member of the Transportation Commission since 2006. She brings a local government perspective to the Commission having served for 10 years on the Richland City Council. She has also served on a variety of transportation boards including the Freight Mobility Strategic Investment Board, Board of Directors for the Association of Washington Cities, Ben-Franklin Transit Board of Directors, Benton-Franklin Council of Governments, and is currently Chair of the Governor’s State Aviation Planning Council.

Distler came to the Commission in 2005 with an economics background and a career spanning several areas of transportation management – marketing, planning, operations, and government and industry affairs. Since moving to Orcas Island in 1972, Distler’s volunteer efforts have focused on transportation and growth management issues involving Washington State Ferries and San Juan County.

The Washington State Transportation Commission is an independent state agency that provides a public forum for transportation policy development. It reviews and evaluates how the entire transportation system works across the state and issues the state’s 20-year Transportation Plan. As the State Tolling Authority, the Commission sets tolls for state highways and bridges and fares for Washington State Ferries. The seven-member board is comprised of private citizens who are appointed by the Governor for six-year terms.


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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Ranker lobbies members of Congress in D.C. for relief for San Juan ferry route - San Juan Islander



Citing the adverse impacts to commuters and the working families of the San Juan Islands, Sen. Kevin Ranker, D-San Juan Islands, recently met with several members of Congress in Washington D.C. and followed-up with letters urging them to reconsider a Coast Guard directive that changes the way Washington State Ferries has operated the San Juan Route for years.

"I fear this new directive, though well intentioned, will unleash many negative impacts on the quality of ferry service not only to the passengers of the San Juan route, but ferry routes all across Puget Sound," Ranker said.

Washington State Ferries redesigned the fall sailing schedule to accommodate the Coast Guard directive, which prohibits touring watches. Touring watches, where crews work two shifts with an on-board rest in between, have been an integral part of ferry service for the San Juan Islands. Shifting to a schedule without touring watches is intended to decrease crew stress and fatigue, but carries with it other costs.

By not using touring watches, which allows for more boats more often on the San Juan route, the new schedule must accommodate ferries no longer being moored in Friday Harbor overnight, which will decrease the availability of ferries. The diminished capacity will greater affect Eastbound traffic, impacting those who commute to jobs on the mainland.

"I'm hoping we can work together with the Coast Guard, WSF, and our congressional delegation to ensure crew and passenger safety, as well as providing the service levels to sustain the needs of our ferry-dependent communities," Ranker said.


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Friday, June 12, 2009

Plan C's next meeting

Hi All,
This is just to give you a "heads up" in preparing for July's meeting.
Walt Elliott of the Executive FAC Board called me a couple of days ago. He is putting an announcement in regarding the July 18th meeting in his article for his ferry community. We got to talking about the discussion the FAC Board had with the TC regarding the tariff committee. Seems the TC wants to pre-empt and set it up themselves and have it under their auspices. Their reasoning is that there isn't enough time to create legislation around this and they need a group to function this fall. Their (TC's ) consensus is that it would take too long.
I have some concerns about this. I don't want to see this group 1) under the sway of the TC - smacks too much of being assimilated into their bureacracy; 2) disbanded at the whim of the TC if the group does not agree; and 3) should be a legislated group to maintain it's independence from the TC and report to the governor or such. Walt has some concerns regarding this as well and this a continued discussion at their next meeting. Not all FAC board members feel this way and don't see a conflict of interests under the auspices of the Transportation Commission. Walt feels that in the interim, if the TC wants to set up something, that's fine, but that there should be some sort of legislation enacted moving forward after the Legislative session of 2010 that gives additional legitimacy to this group.
Since this is an on-going conversation at the FAC Executive level, I asked Walt if I could just relay this info to you, as well as the draft proposal for a Tariff committee written by Dennis Cziske Please note this is a working document well worth considering as a basis for upcoming legislation. I think it should be one of our topics when we meet on 7/18 and I hope Dennis and Walt can join us in Bremerton on that day.
PS. Is there any way we can also find out how/when members of the Transportation Commission are selected, how long their terms are and what constitutes qualifications? We have some members that are out of touch with ferry transportation issues - one track minds.
See all of you on 7/18!
Kari Ulatoski
Ferry Community Partnership
Chair, VMICC Ferry Outreach and Advocacy Committee
Plan C
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