The following is text of a news release from the Chamber of Marine Commerce:
(OTTAWA) — It isn’t easy to social distance on a tug. Sharon M, which regularly pushes a barge carrying Canadian-made steel coils and plates to U.S. cities for auto production, is just under 115 feet long.
The interior is much smaller than the giant bulkers that ply the Great Lakes. The hallways are narrower and the nine-person crew share accommodation and three bathrooms.
But that hasn’t stopped the vessel’s operator McKeil Marine from devising ways to protect the crew during the COVID-19 pandemic. One of the most important steps has been thoroughly vetting crewmembers before they arrive for duty, including temperature checks, and organizing crew rotations so the same crew work together for five weeks and then all leave together for their five weeks off.
When Capt. Ray Davis and his crew arrived for duty, the chief engineer had already been doing winter repair work on the tug for weeks. But he volunteered to stay an additional five weeks so that he could continue to rotate with the crew during the pandemic.
“We have just a great group of guys. We’ve been on the same boat for five years,” said Davis. “They are really hard-working and they buy into our team within a team approach, which really helps when you’re dealing with a situation like COVID-19.”
Davis is one of a number of captains that were interviewed by the Chamber of Marine Commerce for a series of articles highlighting how crews are working, living and coping aboard ships transporting vital goods in the bi-national Great Lakes-St. Lawrence region and the East Coast.
Designated as an essential service during the pandemic crisis, crewmembers have gone to great lengths to adapt their work practices, often making personal sacrifices to ensure the safety of their fellow crew members and to ensure that food staples, manufacturing materials and energy supplies continue to be delivered in Canada and the United States. Marine transportation supports more than $46 billion (U.S.) of economic activity in the bi-national Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River region.
Read the full case studies:
• Interview with Capt. Peter Norman on the tanker AlgoCanada
• Interview with Capt. Ray Davis on the tug Sharon M
• Interview with Capt. James Ryan on the self-unloader freighter CSL Assiniboine
To ensure that supply chains remain uninterrupted, Canadian ship operators have collaborated to create a detailed set of best practices to protect their crews and shoreside employees during COVID-19.
Fleets from Algoma Central Corp., Canada Steamship Lines, Rand Logistics Inc., Groupe Desgagnes, McKeil Marine, McAsphalt Transportation Services, Sterling Fuels are all part of the initiative, which was led by the Chamber of Marine Commerce. More than 85 Canadian-flag ships are participating – ranging from tug and barges and tankers to bulk carriers and general cargo vessels — all delivering goods throughout the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence, and the East Coast.