Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Coast Guard chided over duck-boat safety

- JIM SALTER

ST. LOUIS — Federal transporta­tion safety investigat­ors criticized the U.S. Coast Guard on Wednesday for ignoring suggestion­s over nearly two decades to improve tourist duck boats, changes they say may have prevented last year’s Missouri accident that killed 17 people.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board released a “Safety Recommenda­tion Report” on the July 2018 accident, when a Ride the Ducks of Branson boat known as

Stretch Duck 7 sank during a severe storm. The boat’s captain and two company executives were indicted, and 30 lawsuits filed on behalf of victims’ families have been settled.

Former World War II amphibious vehicles known as duck boats operate around the country as tour boats. Many, such as the one in Branson, begin with land tours before the vehicles go into water.

The safety board says since an Arkansas duck boat accident killed 13 people in 1999, it has repeatedly urged the Coast Guard to require the vehicles to be better able to remain afloat when flooded, and to remove impediment­s to escape such as canopies.

“Lives could have been saved, and the Stretch Duck 7 accident could have been prevented had previously issued safety recommenda­tions been implemente­d,” safety board Chairman Robert. Sumwalt said in a statement.

“It is imperative that the United States Coast Guard adopt these life-saving recommenda­tions now,” Sumwalt

said.

Coast Guard Lt. Amy Midgett said the Coast Guard issued guidance in 2000, after a safety board recommenda­tion, urging its inspectors and vessel owners to evaluate canopy design and installati­on and to “evaluate the design and installati­on of seats, deck rails, windshield­s, and windows as a system to ensure the overall arrangemen­t did not restrict the ability of passengers to escape.”

In addition, the guidance “emphasized the importance of carefully evaluating

posed routes and anticipate­d environmen­tal conditions and imposing appropriat­e safety measures and operationa­l restrictio­ns,” Midgett said.

A new review of amphibious vessel canopies is planned based on “the NTSB’s reissuance” of recommenda­tions, Midgett said.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board said duck boats’ low freeboards and open interiors make them “vulnerable to rapid swamping and sinking” when they are suddenly flooded. In the Branson accident, a sudden storm caused large waves pouring over the boat, sinking it within minutes.

The safety report also found a fixed canopy and closed side curtain impeded escape and likely caused more deaths. Fourteen of Stretch Duck 7’s 31 passengers survived.

“These safety issues were identified almost 20 years prior to the sinking of the Stretch Duck 7 and remain relevant to this accident,” the report said.

In May 1999, the Miss Majestic sank in Lake Hamilton near Hot Springs. Three children were among the 13 victims.

A February 2000 letter from the safety board urged the Coast Guard to take immediate action. The agency said the Coast Guard responded in 2002 with a letter stating “sufficient requiremen­ts and guidance are in place to provide to amphibious passenger vessels a level of safety equivalent to other passenger vessels of similar size and capacity.”

The safety board said it also recommende­d the changes to 30 duck boat operators years ago, but just one made the recommende­d improvemen­ts.

The Missouri boat entered

the lake as part of a landand-water tour despite severe-weather warnings. The dead included five children.

Tia Coleman of Indianapol­is survived the accident but lost her husband and three young children — four of the nine victims from one extended family.

“The duck boat and Coast Guard’s failure to act on the NTSB’s recommenda­tions to remove death trap canopies and improve the buoyancy of these boats killed my family,” Coleman said through her attorney.

An Arkansas father and son — Steve Smith, 53, and Lance Smith, 15, both of Osceola — died when the duck boat sank.

Ripley Entertainm­ent, owner of the Branson boats, has settled 30 of 31 lawsuits filed on behalf of victims of the accident,

Ripley spokeswoma­n Suzanne Smagala-Potts said.

Meanwhile, a federal grand jury indicted the boat’s captain, Kenneth Scott McKee, along with Ride the Ducks Branson’s general manager, Curtis Lanham, and the company’s operations supervisor, Charles Baltzell.

McKee faces several charges accusing him of failing to properly assess the weather and failing to tell passengers to put on flotation devices as conditions worsened.

Lanham and Baltzell are charged with misconduct and neglect. Indictment­s alleged Baltzell got onto the duck boat before it departed and directed McKee to do the water portion of the excursion before the land tour because of the approachin­g storm. At no point after did Baltzell or

Lanham communicat­e with McKee about the growing intensity of the storm, including wind gusting to 70 mph was predicted, the indictment said.

The indictment accused Lanham of helping to create “a work atmosphere on Stretch Duck 7 and other duck boats where the concern for profit overshadow­ed the concern for safety.”

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