Times Colonist

Glitches on new Salish vessels are par for course: B.C. Ferries

- ANDREW A. DUFFY

B.C. Ferries says the few glitches and snags — including trouble fuelling one of its new Salish-class vessels — experience­d since the ships went into service this summer are nothing out of the ordinary.

“It’s very typical and quite normal,” said Mark Wilson, B.C. Ferries vicepresid­ent of community engagement. “These are first-in-class ships we’re building for B.C. Ferries. The new ships we have are a prototype for B.C. Ferries and a prototype for the industry and you’re going to come up with some snags and stuff like that.”

There have been complaints from customers about the steepness of staircases on the ships and elevators not functionin­g, as well as a new kind of fire door that some have said is needlessly complicate­d and slow to open.

The Salt Spring Island Ferry Advisory Committee addressed what it called “teething problems” at its fall meeting, noting there were air-conditioni­ng problems that affected the galleys on the Salish vessels, elevator reliabilit­y issues and door problems.

Wilson said all of the problems are being dealt with, and none of them will cost B.C. Ferries or its fare payers a dime.

“All of these things we are experienci­ng are covered under our contract,” he said, noting all elements of the vessels are covered under a one-year warranty, with some systems being covered under a two-year program. “Our customers aren’t paying for this as this is a fixedprice contract and the contractor is honouring the warranty.”

The three Salish-class ferries arrived in B.C. and were put into service this summer after sailing 10,440 nautical miles from the shipyard where they were built in Gdansk, Poland.

They were built at an overall cost of $200 million and have the capacity to run on either liquefied natural gas or diesel.

Wilson said the Polish shipyard that built the ships has people here, as well as agreements with contractor­s in B.C. to do some work.

Other repair work will be contracted out to local shipyards.

Wilson said B.C. Ferries experience­d small warranty-covered issues with the German-built Coastal-class vessels and the locally built cable ferries.

 ??  ?? The Salish Eagle arrives at Ogden Point from Poland in March, prior to the applicatio­n of First Nations art on the exterior. B.C. Ferries says that a few glitches with the new Salish-class vessels are common.
The Salish Eagle arrives at Ogden Point from Poland in March, prior to the applicatio­n of First Nations art on the exterior. B.C. Ferries says that a few glitches with the new Salish-class vessels are common.

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