Safety knowledge, maintenance partly to blame for deadly sinking in B.C.: report - Action News
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British Columbia

Safety knowledge, maintenance partly to blame for deadly sinking in B.C.: report

An investigation by the Transportation Safety Board into the sinking of a fishing boat in which two of the three crew members died identifies several "systemic safety issues.''

Captain, crew member died after fishing boat went down off Vancouver Island in 2020

The Arctic Fox II is pictured in Cowichan Bay on Aug. 2, 2020, several days before it sank between Vancouver Island and Washington state. (Tibbie Adams via the Transportation Safety Board)

An investigation by the Transportation Safety Board into the sinking of a fishing boat in which two of the three crew members died has identifiedseveral "systemic safety issues.''

TheArcticFoxII reported taking on water off the west coast of Vancouver Island in August 2020. With its main engine shut down, the crew prepared to abandon ship.

The crew partially put on their immersion suits, but the life raft they were trying to deploy went into the ocean without being inflated. The report said the captain and a crew member went into the ocean after it.

The crew member inflated the raft and scrambled inside, but the other two men didn't make it, and their bodies were later recovered with their immersion suits only partially done up.

The survivor in the raft was later rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard.

The report released Tuesday madenumerous findings, including that the master and crew weren't prepared for emergencies, they were tired after long hours of fishing, and there was insufficient vessel maintenance.

The safety board notedcommercial fishing safety has been on its watchlist for over 10 years.

"Commercial fishing continues to be one of the most dangerous occupations in the country. Every year, the same safety deficiencies on board fishing vessels continue to put at risk the lives of thousands of Canadian commercial fish harvesters,'' the safety board said in a statement.

It said a strong safety culture is a shared responsibility and necessary to save lives.

"Regulators, vessel owners and fish harvesters each must take ownership of safety to reduce accidents and preventable loss of life.''