Michael3826
Registered
$100 a day. I paid better than most boats as 1. Living in Key West is expensive and 2. I wanted someone with quality who would do the job and not fall asleep. The real question is, where would they bunk down? We were out of bunks with a full crew onboard.
Most watches can/should be done in shifts. 2100-2300, 2300-0100, 0100-300,0300-0500.Then each night your shift changes. If I started the first shift 2100-2300 then I would be responsible for the 2300 the next night, then the 0100 shift the next. You don’t technically need more crew to have a night watch. Or more bunks. Throw the captains in there to do just an hour watch each and you’re covered from 2100-0700. Set up those shifts at the start of the trip and have a schedule so that everyone knows the expectations to follow. Having one person to be roving the entire night alone sounds rough. Work in shifts and everyone gets some decent sleep. And maybe a nap during the day. Then if you have the rotation set up then individuals won’t be too pissed about always getting the crappy shift.
That’s how it’s generally done In the maritime industry. I didn’t understand how that didn’t transfer over to scuba liveaboards. but after hearing the ntsb board meeting it make’s sense now. They didn’t follow rules ever and that became normal for them. “Normalcy of deviance.” They never practiced safely and lied to everyone. They never got in trouble or maybe never caught. The only way they would it would have been known that they worked without a watch was if someone reported it. Without evidence how can they get punished? So why would they ever follow rules?
The need of a roving watch is plainly written as a requirement in their COI. COI has 3 requirements to be a coast guard certified vessel. That’s what the owner, captain, and crew knew. It was written and posted in the galley behind the counter of the galley. Tucked away from the normal roving areas of the passengers. It gets renewed every 5 years.
The conception, truth, and vision may have passed safety inspection but every time they operated without a fire watch should be considered a failure. In a given year that’s at least 52 failures if they have one trip a week. Does a vessel/company with safety 50 failures in a year sound safe now?
In ntsb interviews captains said they refused to do night watch because it’s below their pay grade. Brings up the question if you are required to have a second captain on board when a shift exceeds 12 hours, then what is the purpose of that second captain if they aren’t working during the hours the first captain is asleep?