Daily Press

Coast Guard faults pilot in Chesapeake Bay ship grounding

- By Rebecca Santana

WASHINGTON — A Coast Guard investigat­ion into the March grounding of a cargo ship in the Chesapeake Bay faulted the pilot tasked with helping the ship navigate the waterway, saying he relied too much on one piece of equipment to navigate and was on his cellphone in the run-up to the grounding.

In a news release Tuesday the Coast Guard specifical­ly cited “the pilot’s failure to maintain situationa­l awareness and attention while navigating, and inadequate bridge resource management.” A more detailed report described the lead-up to the moments when the Ever Forward ran aground March 13 north of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge while it was traveling from the Port of Baltimore to Norfolk.

It took authoritie­s a little over a month to dislodge the Taiwan-based container ship — longer than three football fields — from the muddy bottom of the bay.

In the detailed report, the Coast Guard said it didn’t find mechanical issues or equipment failures but instead painted a picture of a pilot who was frequently on his phone in the lead-up to the grounding. While a ship is captained by a “master,” pilots often guide ships through specific passages such as a river or bay where they have knowledge of the waterways. A Maryland State Pilot was on board the Ever Forward.

In a statement Tuesday, the Maryland Board of Pilots also said that they were suspending the pilot’s operating license.

Taiwan-based Evergreen Marine Corp., which operates the Ever Forward, said in a statement Wednesday the pilot in control of the Ever Forward when it grounded was not an Evergreen employee.

“Bay pilots control of vessels is required practice within Chesapeake Bay,” the company statement said, noting that the pilot was assigned to the ship and “... in control of the vessel at the time of the incident. He is not now and has never previously been an Evergreen employee, therefore we cannot provide additional comment regarding the suspension of his license.”

According to the investigat­ion, the pilot placed or received five calls from his personal phone after they left the dock, including one that lasted nearly an hour. He also sent two text messages during a “critical time period” before a turn south should have been executed.

“Had Pilot 1 refrained from drafting email correspond­ence, and placing and receiving personal or non-urgent profession­al calls, it is possible he would have maintained better situationa­l awareness and properly executed the turn in a timely manner, avoiding the vessel grounding,” according to the report.

The investigat­ion also found that the pilot only used one piece of equipment — his Portable Pilot Unit — to navigate the vessel and did not use any charts or equipment or navigation­al buoys that marked the channel’s southern turn. The report said that if the pilot had used “all available means to determine the ship’s location, the grounding likely would not have occurred.”

The ship became stuck outside the shipping channel and did not block marine navigation, unlike last year’s high-profile grounding in the Suez Canal of its sister vessel, the Ever Given. That incident disrupted ship traffic and the global supply chain for days.

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