Or would it be more accurate to describe it as "a very lucky operation over the years"?but also sad for what has been a very good operation over the years.
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Or would it be more accurate to describe it as "a very lucky operation over the years"?but also sad for what has been a very good operation over the years.
the definition of roving watch will likely be the cornerstone of both the prosecution and the defense.
No compliance for the specific charges. He didn’t keep a rover up, he didn’t perform drills, and he didn’t provide training. Whether the boat was in compliance has no bearing, -although- the CG always checked my drill log during annual safety inspection and always had us run a fire drill and get underway for a man overboard drill. Oscar usually lost his pants.The difference is the Grove deliberately hid and blocked exits, conception was in compliance with the regulations as far as structurally required. New regulations are needed but application to boats makes things that sound simple actually can be quite complicated.
Emotions aside this is not a slam dunk prosecution, the documentation shows compliance.
the CG always checked my drill log during annual safety inspection and always had us run a fire drill and get underway for a man overboard drill.
Every inspection sector is different and have the nits they like to pick.Being inspected every year and apparently passing seems to contradict being charged with not running drills? I could imagine being able to passably complete a drill during the inspection but the info in the thread says logbook had to exist to pass the inspection.
So they must have falsified the logbook and the charges are based on the crew saying they never did drills or were specifically trained?
The more we hear the worse it gets because it's says some basic safety issues that anyone could recognize would be important on a boat were not done. I'm sure that running a boat is lots of work but the yearly inspection would be a reminder to do required things. Complacency. Everything was fine until it wasn't.
To the earlier post about the company running again, we saw people on the board willing to go on the boat either because they thought the crew was safe or even for reasons too common these days which is they didn't care about their safety enough to not go despite being advised of the problems. As Dr Bill said, at least some people felt the boat was well run and the crew watching their safety but as an education to us all, there is more to it than what you see and those things aren't so important until you hit a major problem when all that collapses.
My point is that the inspectors may never have reviewed the log for crew training or for drills. And of course, the log went with the ship.
To the earlier post about the company running again, we saw people on the board willing to go on the boat either because they thought the crew was safe or even for reasons too common these days which is they didn't care about their safety enough to not go despite being advised of the problems.
In my opinion, the inspection isn’t meant to be a check for 100% compliance, it’s a spot check to ensure the operator, officers, and crew know what they are doing. I’ve seen things slide through other inspections that I would never get away with, only to be busted in a following year when a new or different (or trainee) inspector comes along. If drill compliance was not a priority in that sector, it wouldn’t have been checked. I’d love to hear from other boats running similar trips and how they were inspected.Whoever signed off on the inspections ...