TOTAL RECALL: Exuma tragedy sparks order to inspect all commercial vessels

By KHRISNA RUSSELL

Deputy Chief Reporter

krussell@tribunemedia.net

THE fatal 4C’s Adventures boat accident will now be turned over to the Office of the Attorney General, Transport and Local Government Minister Renward Wells said yesterday, adding a scathing report into the tragedy brings to light the need for government to “tighten up where it is slack”.

As he suggested there could be a legal response from the US government or the victims and their families, Mr Wells said he’s already taken steps to clamp down on the sector with instructions to the Port Department to have every ship and boat owner come in for inspection.

In the wake of the release of the Bahamas Maritime Authority’s damning report into the incident, the minister, who is an engineer by profession, expressed “disappointment” with the loose stipulations for those operators who prefer to build craft for commercial use.

There is also concern, he said, of implications internationally to the country’s tourism market with the report turned over to US officials and those affected.

The BMA’s report into the explosion that killed a woman and injured ten others found that the company broke the law by operating a boat that was neither registered nor ever inspected by the Port Authority.

“It is quite alarming as to the lack of manpower that we have in Exuma,” Mr Wells said in response to a question from The Tribune yesterday outside Cabinet. “It is alarming as to how this situation developed and yesterday (Monday) I moved to issue certain instructions to the Port Department to have every ship, every boat owner in Exuma to come in and for us to inspect their vessels so that we’re able to bring the requisite regulations to this industry and not just in Exuma, throughout the country because we understand that this is not just a situation that’s just in Exuma.

“As you know, the report says it cannot say conclusively what caused the accident but we do know that the design of the boat is perhaps an issue that the fuel lines being used was not spec’d for gasoline and you know if hoses are not spec’d they dry rot and gasoline by itself is not explosive (sp).

“Gasoline from the pump goes off into the air and there’s no problem but if it is in a contained space then it becomes a problem and so where he had his fuel tanks encapsulated in those pontoon (flat bottomed-boat) we understand that could have been an issue as well, the overall structural design.”

He continued: “So what I’m looking to do as an engineer I will tell you I am somewhat disappointed because in engineering before you can actually live in a building, ride a vehicle, the design has to be done on paper. That design has to be approved on paper by either an electrical engineer, a mechanical engineer, a structural engineer, a civil engineer (or) an aeronautical engineer for airplanes or a naval architect. In the case of boats, (there) should have been a look at those drawings and say this is a boat that we feel is safe. That is not done in The Bahamas. So we have a number of persons who have built boats.

“And so as a part of the Port Department what I am going to be doing is that before those boats are actually built we do have a naval architect who is going to look at those designs to ensure those designs are actually safe before we let persons construct them especially for commercial purposes.”

Asked if there was a concern the overall industry could suffer now that the report was in the public domain, the minister said: “There is concern and where we’re slack we tighten up, we’re going to tighten up.” However, he did not say whether there would be any penalty for officials who issued Four C’s licences despite the boat never having been inspected.

“Like I said, I am still going through it. I was reading it yesterday, last night I haven’t completed it as yet and it’s going to be turned over to the AG’s Office and so the attorney general is really going to have to weigh in.

“Obviously when the report was released it was also given to both the victims and to the United States government who has this report and so we’ll be waiting I guess to hear what comes of it and the Bahamas would then have to respond.”

He said former Transport Minister Frankie Campbell, now the minister of social services, had done a number of initiatives to try and bring the industry and the Port Department into compliance.

“I am going to be following in that vein to bring in the requisite IT technology, information technology, to know which boats are registered because they’re supposed to be registered and inspected throughout the country and so we’re going to bring in a system whereby we can say for sure that every boat out there, commercial vessel that sails and plows the seas of The Bahamas is safe for commercial traffic.”

“Under no circumstances” should 4C’s have operated the “craft on a commercial basis,” investigators wrote in their report.

Among the findings were that the home-built boat’s “fuel-fill and vent hose did not appear to meet the required specification for its intended purpose; the craft had not been constructed to a recognised standard, or to naval architectural or technical drawings; and the craft’s construction and equipment materials were not verified for suitability of use”.

Investigators also concluded that the Port Department of Exuma has not been “adequately resourced to control and regulate commercial water crafts operating on the island”, noting in their report that a “significant number of commercial crafts operating within the waters of Exuma are not registered with the Port Department despite having submitted valid applications. The mechanical, structural, and safety standards required to be met cannot be verified.”

The explosion scenario could not be reconstructed because of absent “technical drawings, electrical circuit diagram and a schematic of the permanently installed fuel system,” the report said.

Nevertheless, investigators determined with a “high degree of probability” that the explosion originated “in the proximity of the starboard fuel tank resulting in the release of a last wave on the starboard side, beneath the front three rows of seats.”

The captain of the boat, a 42-year-old man, had a valid master’s licence. The first mate on the vessel was a 12-year-old boy, the son of the 4C’s owner, and had no “qualifications or endorsements”. It is not unlawful to have a minor as a first mate.

A Georgia woman, Maleka Jackson, was killed in the June 30 accident. Among the ten other people injured were Tiran Jackson, Mrs Jackson’s husband who lost a leg, and Stefanie Schaffer, a 22-year-old woman from Vermont who had both of her legs amputated.

Comments

Dawes says...

Well we shall wait and see whether this is the normal, all talk and no action from Government after a tragedy. A tragedy that could have been avoided had everyone done their job. There have been countless deaths and serious injuries over the years to both tourist and Bahamians due to our lackadaisical attitude, and no punishment should you be found out, after which whoever was in power would say some grandiose words about things changing and then nothing would change. Hope i am wrong but the realist in me doesn't think anything will change.

Posted 3 October 2018, 9:52 a.m. Suggest removal

sheeprunner12 says...

Did Glenys Martin not bring the commercial boat registration & inspection legislation during the last PLP regime???????? .............. Enforce it!!!!!!!!!

Posted 3 October 2018, 10:04 a.m. Suggest removal

bogart says...

Here in the Bahamas one hand there is now becoming one of the worlds top mostest educational institute .....international major boating registry.......international major shiprepairing industry in Freeport.......an on the other hand there is govt affiliated wid boating disaster of also international renoun....The fullest effects of the law must be brought to bear in dealing wid this matter leaving no stones unturned.....!!!!,

Posted 3 October 2018, 10:38 a.m. Suggest removal

bogart says...

....."It is quite alarimg as to the lack of manpower we have in Exuma"...according to the Minister..
This is no excuse.....it goes up further to the salaried govt official above...and further up to the next salaried govt official.....Govt officisl(s) somewhere have to be accountable....such alarming discreptance should not just appear...!!!
2,500 govt employees an many hired should not be let go....when critical lack of manpower exists....again some salaried govt official responsible....

Posted 3 October 2018, 11:17 a.m. Suggest removal

DDK says...

Which begs the age old question. Who actually runs the Government? The Cabinet Ministers elected every five years or the senior civil servants who often remain in place with every change of Government? In either case, it is more than apparent that The Bahamas Government is run atrociously. Running a Government is tantamount to running a business with branches and staff spread out all over the place. Our system is simply not working. It possibly COULD, if everyone did what they were paid to do, and not more, but alas...........

Posted 3 October 2018, 2:59 p.m. Suggest removal

ohdrap4 says...

Well, they sent the Standard Bureau folks to inspect cars in Japan, of all places, so that the Bahamas would not be a dumping ground for unworthy vehicles.

They should have sent them to Exuma to inspect boats instead.

The Tribune, Thursday, August 2, 2018.

> Mr Sumner, who also serves as deputy
> chair of the Bahamas Bureau of
> Standards and Quality (BBSQ), told the
> Rotary Club of South East Nassau that
> the agency’s trip to Japan in January
> had assessed pre-export inspection
> processes for used vehicles shipped to
> the Bahamas. It focused on one vehicle
> testing company, EAA Company, to
> determine whether its facilities were
> compliant with International Standards
> Organisation (ISO) 1725 certification.

Posted 3 October 2018, 11:21 a.m. Suggest removal

Socrates says...

so all over the Bahamas boats are licensed that may, or may not, meet any kind of standard. how does that happen? how can a boat be built and licensed for use if there exists no regulations regarding construction of boats in the first place? how is a boat that meets no standard insured or was it insured? if not insured, how does one get a tour business licence to use a boat built to no known standard? its all rubbish. Andros BAMSI all over again. sounds very similar to the local aviation scene too. what a mess we are in in this country...

Posted 3 October 2018, 12:16 p.m. Suggest removal

DDK says...

Just a rubbish heap, really.

Posted 3 October 2018, 3:01 p.m. Suggest removal

DWW says...

Knee jerk?

Posted 3 October 2018, 12:26 p.m. Suggest removal

geostorm says...

Please leave the politics out of this. It was an unfortunate situation. A life was lost and many persons were injured. The government needs to move with haste to regulate this industry so that something like this never happens again. We can not afford to loose another life nor can we afford for our tourism product to be jeopardized. Too many lives depend on it.

Posted 3 October 2018, 2:35 p.m. Suggest removal

DDK says...

The Government is made up of politicians. It is Government policy or lack thereof that caused this horrible, unnecessary tragedy

Posted 3 October 2018, 3:06 p.m. Suggest removal

Gotoutintime says...

When the horse is out of the barn, now you close the gate??

Posted 3 October 2018, 3:14 p.m. Suggest removal

The_Oracle says...

When the port inspector comes around you just give him some fish and he gone!
But notice how we all gripe about "Government"or "the Port Dept"
We should be calling names, the names that hide behind their appointed office or Government Job.
And what is this babbling?
“As you know, the report says it cannot say conclusively what caused the accident but we do know that the design of the boat is perhaps an issue that the fuel lines being used was not spec’d for gasoline and you know if hoses are not spec’d they dry rot and gasoline by itself is not explosive (sp).

“Gasoline from the pump goes off into the air and there’s no problem but if it is in a contained space then it becomes a problem and so where he had his fuel tanks encapsulated in those pontoon (flat bottomed-boat) we understand that could have been an issue as well,"

Posted 3 October 2018, 9:58 p.m. Suggest removal

bahamas12345 says...

Having owned a boat in the Bahamas, the inspection process is quite lax
Interesting that Rental cars need to be inspected twice a year and commercial boats only once.
You cant tell me the water taxis are up to the Coast Guard standard which is what we are to follow??

Posted 4 October 2018, 6:54 a.m. Suggest removal

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