The Day

CAPTAIN, CREW AND OWNER BLAMED FOR EL FARO SINKING

Fitch grad was among those who died in 2015 disaster

- By TERRY SPENCER

In a sharply worded report concluding its investigat­ion of the 2015 sinking of the cargo ship El Faro with all hands as it tried to run through a hurricane on its way to Puerto Rico, the U.S. Coast Guard recommende­d civil penalties against the ship’s owner.

The report is the culminatio­n of a twoyear investigat­ion that included public hearings at which 76 witnesses testified. The Coast Guard also listened to 26 hours of voice recordings of the captain and crew from the El Faro’s voyage data recorder that was retrieved from the wrecked ship, 15,000 feet deep in the ocean.

Among the crew of 33 lost was Mitchell Kuflik, 26, a 2007 graduate of Fitch High School in Groton.

A Coast Guard report released Sunday says the primary cause of the 2015 sinking of the cargo ship El Faro, which killed all 33 aboard, was the captain underestim­ating the strength of a hurricane and overestima­ting the ship’s strength.

Among those lost was Mitchell Kuflik, 26, an officer and engineer who was a 2007 graduate of Groton’s Fitch High School. Kuflik went on to study at the Maine Maritime Academy and graduated from MMA in 2011.

The Coast Guard report said Capt. Michael Davidson should have changed the El Faro’s route between Jacksonvil­le, Fla., and San Juan, Puerto Rico, to avoid Hurricane Joaquin’s 150 mph winds. When the 790-foot vessel got stuck he should have taken more aggressive measures to save it.

Speaking at a news conference in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., Capt. Jason Neubauer also said the Coast Guard would have sought to revoke Davidson’s license if he had survived.

Davidson “was ultimately responsibl­e for the vessel, the crew and its safe navigation,” said Neubauer, who chaired the investigat­ion.

He said Davidson “misjudged the path of Hurricane Joaquin and overestima­ted the vessel’s heavy weather survivabil­ity while also failing to take adequate precaution­s to monitor and prepare for heavy weather. During critical periods of navigation ... he failed to understand the severity of the situation, even when the watch standards warned him the hurricane was intensifyi­ng.”

Davidson, 53, was recorded telling a crew member a few hours before the sinking, “There’s nothing bad about this ride. I was sleepin’ like a baby. This is every day in Alaska,” where he had previously worked.

The report also says the ship’s owner, TOTE Maritime Inc., had not replaced a safety officer, spreading out those duties among other managers, and had violated regulation­s regarding crew rest periods and working hours. The Coast Guard said it will seek civil actions against TOTE but no criminal penalties as there was no criminal intent.

TOTE Maritime released a statement Sunday saying the report “is another piece of this sacred obligation that everyone who works upon the sea must study and embrace. The report details industry practices which need change.”

The 40-year-old El Faro went down on Oct. 1, 2015, sinking in 15,000 feet of water to the sea floor near the Bahamas. No bodies were ever recovered. It was the worst maritime disaster for a U.S. flagged vessel since 1983.

Voice recordings recovered from the ship show an increasing­ly panicked and stressed crew fighting to save the ship after it lost propulsion as they battled wind, shifting cargo and waves.

Davidson ordered the ship abandoned shortly before it sank but its open air lifeboats likely would have provided insufficie­nt protection, the Coast Guard said. The agency said it would recommend that all ships now be equipped with modern enclosed lifeboats — if the El Faro had such lifeboats, the crew may have survived, Neubauer said.

El Faro was one of two ships owned by TOTE Maritime Inc. that navigated in constant rotation on shipping runs between Jacksonvil­le, Fla., and San Juan, Puerto Rico. It brought everything from milk to Mercedes Benzes to the island. Other findings included:

A few weeks before the accident, TOTE stopped employing in port helpers who assisted its ships’ crews to safely load cargo.

The Coast Guard said the El Faro’s crew had difficulty keeping up with the pace needed to get the ship out on schedule. A manager at the port took a photo of the El Faro the day before its final launch because unbalanced loading had caused it to lean heavily to one side, more than he had ever seen. He alerted stevedores, who added containers to the other side to rebalance the ship.

When the El Faro departed Jacksonvil­le the oil level in its main engine was below the manufactur­er’s recommenda­tion although still within the range for operation. That became crucial when the El Faro began leaning in the storm as the oil level no longer reached the pump. That starved the engine, shutting it down. The loss of propulsion left the El Faro helpless.

Four of the five Polish workers who had been temporaril­y assigned to the El Faro spoke little English and none of them had been briefed on safety procedures.

The wife of one of the men told investigat­ors “he had never seen or worked on a hulk like this” and that as he worked, rust would fall into his eyes.

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