Times Colonist

Washington State Ferries cuts its schedule due to crew shortages

- CARLA WILSON cjwilson@timescolon­ist.com

As crew shortages force B.C. Ferries to cancel sailings during the peak summer season, the same problem is afflicting Washington State Ferries across the border.

In B.C., sailings have been cancelled, sometimes at short notice, when crew numbers fall below levels set by Transport Canada, while Washington State Ferries has been forced to adopt a scaledback schedule on most routes to deal with lower staff numbers while meeting requiremen­ts, set by the U.S. Coast Guard.

If not enough crew members show up in required work classifica­tions, ferries remain in dock for safety reasons.

Each ferry system faces a shortage of skilled mariners, an aging workforce as baby boomers head into retirement, and impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. B.C. Ferries operates a fleet of 36 vessels and has about 5,400 employees, while Washington State Ferries runs 21 vessels and has 1,900 employees.

Most recently, B.C. Ferries hired a 45-person water taxi on Sunday to carry passengers to and from Salt Spring Island when crewing shortages kept vessels in dock. It was the latest of several cancellati­ons in recent months due to crew shortages.

B.C. Ferries posted a caution at 9 a.m. on Monday that the Salish Eagle’s afternoon sailings might be cancelled by crew shortages but later announced enough workers had been found to go ahead with those sailings between 2 p.m. and 10:05 p.m. The Salish Eagle was scheduled to make several stops in the afternoon and evening at Salt Spring Island, Tsawwassen, and at Pender, Mayne and Galiano islands.

For B.C. Ferries, there are plenty of staff but the main issue is absenteeis­m, spokeswoma­n Deborah Marshall said Monday.

Normally, the system operates with an absentee rate of five per cent but these days, it’s about 11 per cent, in part due to COVID-19.

B.C. Ferries hired about 800 workers, many entry-level, through a hiring blitz this year. Many were found through hiring fairs throughout the province.

Both B.C. Ferries and Washington State Ferries are continuing to seek more highly trained mariners to fill specific positions.

In May, B.C. Ferries offered to pay up to $10,000 to employees who refer successful candidates in desired jobs. By the end of that month, $45,000 in referral fees had been paid, Marshall said. B.C. Ferries is still looking for more employees in harder-tofill categories, she said.

As for Washington State Ferries, in a notice Sunday, it said its alternativ­e service program will last until further notice, and will help provide a “more predictabl­e and reliable service” systemwide in the face of crewing shortages. “WSF will attempt to add service when possible, and will provide notificati­ons when full service can temporaril­y be restored to a route,” it said in the statement.

Staff numbers are at an “unpreceden­ted” low in the organizati­on’s 70-year-old history, it said in March.

In response, the system launched a recruitmen­t and hiring effort to raise engine workforce numbers to pre-pandemic levels, it said, adding it will need to continue hiring and bolster training as it faces retirement­s and staff departures.

One challenge comes with “cultural shifts” in the workforce, as employees are less interested in working overtime and undesirabl­e shifts, it said.

A Washington State Ferries report offers a glimpse into what occurs when not enough crew members are available. “Cancellati­ons are only made after WSF’s dispatcher­s make hundreds of calls to on-call and other staff trying to fill vacancies.”

Washington State Ferries has four types of positions — licensed and unlicensed deck workers, and licensed and unlicensed engine room workers, the report said.

“Each have different considerat­ions and constraint­s on scheduling and dispatch based on labour contracts, such as the distance an employee can travel to each terminal, restrictio­ns on work hours, licences required for different routes and vessel classes and seniority considerat­ions.”

 ?? DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? Swartz Bay terminal on Good Friday.
DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST Swartz Bay terminal on Good Friday.

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