Coast guard's $227M ships rock 'like crazy,' making crews seasick, unable to work - Action News
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Nova ScotiaCBC Investigates

Coast guard's $227M ships rock 'like crazy,' making crews seasick, unable to work

Canada's $227-million fleet of mid-shore coast guard vessels are rolling "like crazy" at sea, making crews seasick and keeping some ships in port during weather conditions where they should be able to operate, CBC News has learned.

'Something needs to be done,' says commanding officer about stability issue that's kept ships from patrolling

The CCGS M. Charles sometimes sets a special 'weather course' based on the swell and the wind direction to keep from rolling too much, according to one federal Fisheries and Oceans Canada supervisor. (CBC/Rafferty Baker)

Canada's $227-million fleet of mid-shore coast guard vessels are rolling "like crazy" at sea, making crewsseasick and keeping some ships in port during weather conditions where they should be able to operate, CBC News has learned.

Canadian Coast Guard records and correspondenceobtained underfederal access to information legislation raise questions about the patrol vessels'seagoing capability and reveal a two-year debate still unresolved on how to address the problem.

At issue is the lack of stabilizer finsblades that stick out from the hull to counteract the rolling motion of waves onnineHero class ships that were built by the Irving Shipyard in Halifax between 2010 and 2014.

Theproblem is reportedlyso bad that a trip along the West Coast required one Fisheries and Oceans Canada supervisor in B.C. to place rolled up jackets under the outer edge of his bunk to keep him pinned against the wall instead of being tossed out by the amount of roll in the ship.

"It goes without saying that the crew [is] infavour of [stabilizers]," wrote supervisor Mike Crottey."Seasickness is felt both by conservation and protection and coast guard personnel and has an impact on vessel operation."

Retrofit debated since 2017

The coast guard decided it did not need stabilizers when the ships were being built, but has beenconsidering retrofitting them since 2017 amid criticism from commanding officers and others who serve on board.

Crottey said that in exposed water, the skipper of theCCGSM. Charles sets a weather course to "keep the ship from really rocking around," which can result in more fuel consumption and increased operating costs.

"This course is based on the swell and the wind direction and is used [to] alleviate excessive ship motion and not based on the shortest distance to destination," Crotteywrote.

The nine Hero class vessels were built at the Irving Shipyard in Halifax. (Robert Short/CBC)

The vessels, which are 42 metres long andseven metres wide, are known as the Hero classsince each is named after an exemplary military, RCMP, Canadian Coast Guard or DFO officer. Their primary mission is fisheries enforcement and maritime security in the Pacific andAtlantic oceans, theGreat Lakes and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The shipsalso provide search and rescue and pollution control.

The coast guard denies there is any problem with the safety and stability of thefleet. However, in a March 2017 "configuration change request" to have stabilizers installed, coast guard project manager David Wyse described"an increased hazard of crew injuries and program failures.

"All vessel operators agree the Hero class vessels require stabilizers in all area of operation," Wysewrote."Program operations can suffer [due]to the fact that the vessels have extreme roll in high sea state conditions."

More than a year later, in May 2018, Wyse relayed an unidentified at-sea testimonial: "I'm rolling 15 degrees port and starboard (30 degrees total) out here today and the winds are less than 10 knots and seas are less than onemetre. We need to make this platform more workable."

'This ship rocks like crazy'

Those concerns were echoed by Sgt. Hector Chaissonof the RCMPMarine Security Enforcement Teams who, in September 2017, wrote "greater stability of the ship would be appreciated by the entire crew and would avoid repeated seasickness."

Fred Emeneau, commanding officer of the CCGS G. Peddle, was more blunt in his assessment.

"All I know is something needs to be done," he said. "They want us to patrol through the nights whenever possible. The crews are getting fatigued trying to achieve this in North Atlantic conditions in the winter. Most 45-foot [13.7-metre] fishing boats we work around are wider thanthe [mid-shore patrol vessels]."

The commanding officer of the CCGS G. Peddle says crews are tired trying to patrol at nighttime in North Atlantic conditions during the winter. (CBC)

In the Gulf of St. Lawrence,Francois Lamoutee, commander ofthe CCGS Caporal Kaebleemailed onAugust 2018 with his opinion.

"By the waystabilizers should never have been removed from the original design. Please put them back ASAP. Losing a few cubic metres of fuel space will be a minor factor compared to the huge gain in stability, safety and comfort for the crew."

The issue of excessive rolling isn't limited to expeditions at sea.

Steve Arniel, commanding officer of the CCGS Constable Carrireon the Great Lakes, emailed in June 2018, saying, "Thisship rocks like crazy tied to the dock!"

Dozens of missed days at sea

Anotherconcern is the time the vessels spend holding up the wharfbecause of weather.

In the 2016-17 season, the Nova Scotia-based CCGS Corporal McLaren lost 44 per cent of ship time allotted to fisheries patrols 112 of 252 days because the vesselcould not sail due to weather, according to its commanding officer.

Greg Naugle reported that "87 days of those weather days were in seas less than threemetres, which is inside the TSOR [technical statement of operational requirements]operational envelope." The year before, 107 days were lost when seas were under threemetres, he said.

The coast guard sent CBC News records of weather delaysfor the 2017-18season for the two mid-shore patrol vesselsbased in the Atlantic.

The Nova Scotia-based CCGS Corporal McLaren lost 112 of 252 days at sea meant for fisheries patrols because of weather in the 2016-17 season, according to its commanding officer. (CBC)

It said the CCGS G. Peddle had 96 weather delaydays out of a planned 302 operational days, while theCorporal McLarenhad 97 weather delaydays out of 309 planned operational days. It did not say how many weather delay days involved seas under three metres.

A satellite tracking comparison of fishing activity versus patrol coverage in southwestern Nova Scotia was redacted on the grounds disclosure jeopardized security.

But Michael Grace, a DFO Maritimes offshore surveillance supervisor, wrote in that report there are "several examples" of a mid-shore patrol vessel staying in port due to weather "while significant on-water activity is taking place offshore."

Ottawa looking into issue

None of this is a surprise to Jeff Irwin, a recently retired 33-year federal Fisheriesofficer who heard complaints as a member of the national executive of the Union of Health and Environment Workers. The union represents DFO conservation and protection officers.

"They can't go out to sea and do the fisheries patrols when the fishermen are on the fishing grounds because they can't handle the wave action, they can't handle the sea. So as a result they lose a lot of patrol time," hetold CBC News in an interview.

Documents released to CBC News blank out cost estimates on retrofitting the vessels with stabilizers.

Federal Fisheries Minister Jonathan Wilkinsontold CBC Newsthe government is "definitely looking into" the issue. "It's obviously not great if we're losing sea time," he said.

The mid-shore patrol vessels were built without stabilizers. (Robert Short/CBC)

An analysis of options prepared for the coast guard by a Dartmouth, N.S., naval architecture firm said stabilizerswere intended as original equipment.

"Due to many changes to the original design the vessel had become too heavy and it was decided to drop the stabilizers to save weight and reduce hull resistance," saidan assessment byLengkeekVessel Engineering prepared for the coast guard.

Stabilizers would add weight

MarioPelletier, deputy coast guard commissioner,disputes that, and saidstabilizers were never dropped because the coast guard never asked for them.

He saidthey are now being considered as part of planning for a mid-life modernization. In the meantime, the coast guard is grappling with the added weight and space that would be required to put them on.

"We're going to do the feasibility study and I think it looks promising but there will be trade-offs that fleet will have to agree to (carry less fuel, vessels that go slower because of the appendages) so I don't know that you'd be in a position to promisestabilizers," wrote DFO naval architectTraceyClarke in a May 2017emailto DavidWyse.

Nearly two years later, the coast guard and its managers have not made the decision.

Mario Pelletier, the deputy coast guard commissioner, says the quicker a ship rolls, the more stability it has. (CBC)

Irving Shipyard did not respond to a request for comment on the issue of installing coast guard stabilizers.

CBCNews reported three years ago that the mid-shore patrol vessels have been the subject of numerous warranty claims by the coast guard, including some for faulty wiring, polluted water tanks, premature corrosion and a gearbox failure.

At thetime, Irving Shipbuildingsaid the ships were built and inspected according to international andTransport Canada safety requirements, warranty issues were being addressed and the ships performed extremely well.

'No stability issues on those ships'

Pelletiertold CBC Newsthe vessels meet the operational standard set by the coast guard.The ships can operate in seas ofmore than three metres, but certain activities including launching rigid hull inflatable boats and hauling lobster or crab pots may not be safe in severe seas, he said.

As forthe wave riding of mid-shore vessels, Pelletier said that'sa question of comfort, not stability. Occupational health and safety records show nothing out of the ordinary in terms of seasickness on the ships, he said.

"The quicker a ship rolls and comes right up, the better stability it has, it's less comfortable. That's the difference," he said.

"If a ship rolls slowly and doesn't come right up properlythat's a huge stability concern. To be clear,there are no stability issues on those ships."

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