The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Duck boats face public calls for improvemen­ts, bans

Design creates blind spots for drivers, advocates contend.

- By Denise Lavoie

BOSTON — With their festive ambiance and ability to travel on land and in water, duck boats have long been tourist attraction­s for sightseers around the U.S. But a string of deadly accidents has left the industry reeling, forced safety improvemen­ts and led some advocates to call for a ban on the vehicles.

In Seattle, after five college students were killed in a 2015 duck boat collision with a bus, the company pulled half its fleet out of service. In Philadelph­ia, a duck boat operator suspended its tours indefinite­ly after three people were killed in two separate crashes. And in Boston, new safety regulation­s are set to go into effect in April after a duck boat ran over and killed a 28-year-old woman last spring.

Boston has a special fondness for duck boats, which have become a mainstay of parades celebratin­g sports championsh­ips. Earlier this month, two dozen duck boats carried the New England Patriots through the streets of Boston for a “rolling rally” to celebrate the team’s Super Bowl win.

But duck boats have lost some of their appeal in Boston and other places where people have been seriously injured or killed in accidents involving them.

“We believe that duck boats in their current design should be banned,” said Ivan Warmuth, the father of Allison Warmuth, who was killed on April 30, 2016, when a duck boat ran over her motor scooter.

Duck boats were originally used by the U.S. military in World War II to transport troops and supplies over land and water, most famously during the invasion of Normandy in 1944. They were later modified for use as sightseein­g vehicles. There are now about 130 duck boats operating in more than a dozen U.S. cities, including Boston, Seattle, Miami, San Diego, Honolulu and Washington.

Critics say the 2½-ton amphibious passenger vehicles are inherently dangerous because their design creates numerous blind spots for drivers, who sit 10 to 12 feet behind the bow, making it difficult to see directly below and in front of them.

Warmuth’s parents have pushed the industry to adopt new safety measures. They successful­ly lobbied for a Massachuse­tts law that requires duck boats to have blind spot cameras and proximity sensors. The new law also requires a second employee — separate from the driver — to narrate the tours.

Kevan Moniri, who was on the scooter with Warmuth, recalls seeing the duck boat accelerate behind them when a light turned green, then realizing the driver did not see them. Video examined by the National Transporta­tion Safety Board showed the driver taking his eyes off the road and turning in his seat to point out landmarks during the tour.

“I hear again and again from Boston Duck Tours and any of these other companies that safety is their No. 1 priority, and if that’s the case, you can’t argue that the safest way to operate the vehicles is for the driver to also be giving the tour,” Moniri said.

Ten weeks after Warmuth was killed, a New Jersey woman was struck and seriously injured by a duck boat at another Boston intersecti­on.

Boston Duck Tours chief executive officer Cindy Brown said the company “places a premium on the safety of its passengers” and touted the additional cameras, second person to narrate tours and new back-up sensors.

Safety advocates have sought improvemen­ts since 1999, when 13 people died after a duck boat sank near Hot Springs, Ark.

In the past seven years, a series of accidents have claimed lives, including a 2010 Philadelph­ia collision between a stalled duck boat in the Delaware River and a barge, which killed two Hungarian tourists.

 ?? MATT ROURKE / AP ?? With an ability to travel by both land and sea, duck boats have long been tourist attraction­s for sightseers around the U.S. A spate of deadly accidents has prompted some to call for a total ban on the vehicles.
MATT ROURKE / AP With an ability to travel by both land and sea, duck boats have long been tourist attraction­s for sightseers around the U.S. A spate of deadly accidents has prompted some to call for a total ban on the vehicles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States