The Union Democrat

Inferno on Navy ship rages into second day

- By ANDREW DYER

SAN DIEGO _ Navy officials said Monday morning that the fire ravaging the amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard for a second day has reached temperatur­es as high as 1,000 degrees and it is still burning in various portions of the ship.

Smoke and fumes continued to affect the skyline and air throughout San Diego.

Rear Adm. Philip Sobeck, the commander of Expedition­ary Strike Group 3, said Monday morning that the fire is in the superstruc­ture of the ship and its upper decks and that the ship's forward mast has collapsed.

"There's obviously burn damage all the way through the skin of the ship and we are assessing that as we kind of go through each compartmen­t," he said. "Right now the priority is to get the fire out so that we can take a complete assessment."

He said the flames are two decks away from the area in the ship where a million gallons of oil is stored. He said that is "a concern," but he's confident the fire can be kept away from it.

About 400 sailors and fire crews from across the San Diego waterfront are fighting the blaze and helicopter­s are doing water drops. So far Helicopter C Combat Squadron 3 has dumped 415 buckets on board.

Water from the firefighti­ng is causing the ship to list to one side, he said, but Navy personnel are working to pump the water off.

The cause of the fire still is unknown. Sobeck said it may have been begun in a cargo area known as the deep V storage area. There are large storage boxes, called triwall boxes, that are the size of pallets that burned.

Sobeck said that although the ship was under maintenanc­e, none of it was in the storage area.

And because the ship was under maintenanc­e, its Halon system, which emits a gas that starves a fire of oxygen, was not active, he said.

So far, 34 sailors and 23 civilians have been treated, mostly for minor injuries related to firefighti­ng. Five are still in the hospital in stable condition.

Air quality issues are still a problem. Local residents report smelling smoke from as far away as Vista, which is more than 40 miles away. The skyline around the South Bay and Bonita area had a tinge of brown to it Monday morning.

Sobeck said he is urging people to take the precaution­s county air quality officials recommend. He said that plastics and the exterior of cabling were burning.

San Diego County and the National Weather Service recommende­d people stay indoors with their windows closed if they smell the fire. High temperatur­es in San Diego Monday are expected to reach 77 degrees, a relief from Sunday when inland areas saw temperatur­es approachin­g 100.

The fire began around 8:30 a.m. Sunday morning in the ship's lower cargo hold, Sobeck said.

Some observers, including former sailors and naval experts, have questioned on social media whether the Navy will scuttle the ship, but Sobeck said Monday he believes the Navy will ultimately repair the ship.

Amphibious assault ships are used to deploy Marines in amphibious landings. During operations, the ships conduct flight operations with helicopter­s and jet aircraft, such as the AV-8B Harrier and its replacemen­t, the F-35 B Lightning.

While deployed, these ships carry more than 2,000 sailors and Marines.

Sobeck said Sunday that all sailors are trained from boot camp to fight fires on ships.

This is one of the biggest fires on a Navy ship outside of combat.

In 1967, a fire on the aircraft carrier Forrestal killed more than 130 sailors after a rocket accidental­ly fired on the flight deck and ignited several explosions. The episode has been used as a lesson on how to tackle safety procedures aboard Navy vessels, Dukat said.

The George Washington, a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, caught fire in 2008 when oil was improperly stored on the craft. At least 37 sailors were injured in the fire that took 12 hours to put out and cost $70 million in repairs.

 ?? Nelvin C. Cepeda/san Diego Tribune ?? Monday morning, July 13, 2020, under a cloud of smoke the fire continues to burn more than 24 hours later, aboard Bonhomme Richard at San Diego Naval Base.
Nelvin C. Cepeda/san Diego Tribune Monday morning, July 13, 2020, under a cloud of smoke the fire continues to burn more than 24 hours later, aboard Bonhomme Richard at San Diego Naval Base.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States