Calgary Herald

B.C. coroner calls for changes in wake of 2015 whale-watching fatalities

- LINDA GIVETASH

VICTORIA The drowning deaths of six people during a whale watching trip off British Columbia have been classified as accidental by the province’s coroner’s service.

The Leviathan II capsized near the resort community of Tofino on Oct. 25, 2015, sending all 27 aboard into the water, killing five Britons and a man from Australia.

The coroner’s service is making two recommenda­tions to Transport Canada based on its investigat­ion aimed at preventing fatalities in similar circumstan­ces.

It found not all passengers were wearing flotation aids, which is optional for passengers on an outer deck according to Transport Canada regulation­s. The coroner’s report said the emergency radio beacon on board was delayed in sending a distress call.

“Following the capsizing of the Leviathan II, approximat­ely 20 minutes elapsed before a distress signal could be successful­ly transmitte­d, during which time the passengers were in the cold water without flotation aids, hindering their chances of survival,” the report said.

The service is recommendi­ng life-jackets be worn by all passengers on the outer decks of vessels larger than 15 gross tonnes and carrying more than 12 passengers.

It is also calling for a review of regulation­s to determine whether to expand the class of vessels that are required to carry emergency position radio beacons.

The Transporta­tion Safety Board concluded in June of last year that a large, breaking wave caused the vessel to flip.

The board said it was only by chance that a crew member was able to spot a flare in the wreckage and use it to draw attention from nearby fishing boats that notified search-and-rescue crews.

The board made three recommenda­tions, including that all commercial passenger vessels operating beyond sheltered waters carry emergency radio beacons that activate automatica­lly to transmit a boat’s position.

It also recommende­d that passenger vessels across Canada adopt risk-management processes that identify hazards, such as areas known to have large, breaking waves.

The coroner said the ship’s owner, Jamie’s Whaling Station, began initiating changes to its procedures and practises to prevent further incidents ahead of the transporta­tion board’s report.

Those changes include mandatory radio check-ins every 30 minutes, improved access to lifejacket­s on vessels and the addition of emergency position-indicating radio beacons to all vessels, the report said.

The coroner said there had been two previous incidents involving whale watching vessels in the same area in 1992 and 1998, each of which resulted in two fatalities.

Those deaths led to recommenda­tions that vessels carry emergency radio beacons and implement a buddy system with another vessel to prevent further fatalities.

The Leviathan II was using a reporting schedule that resulted from those recommenda­tions, the coroner’s report said.

The coroner said while delays in signalling distress were apparent, the most significan­t factor contributi­ng to the deaths on the Leviathan II was the lack of access to flotation devices.

“Given all six of the fatalities involved passengers on outer decks and the fact that witness statements indicate five of the six were unresponsi­ve within two to three minutes of the capsizing occurring, the only variable that could have prevented their deaths would have been the use of life-jackets, (personal flotation devices) or buoyant exposure suits,” the report said.

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