Staten Island Ferry Crashes Into Dock

DENNIS WASZAK and CRISTIAN SALAZAR   05/ 8/10 11:21 PM ET   AP

Staten Island Ferry Crash

NEW YORK — A Staten Island ferry with a history of accidents, including a fatal wreck in 2003, malfunctioned as it approached its terminal Saturday and smashed into a pier with a jolt that tossed passengers to the deck and hurt as many as 37 people.

The accident happened at around 9:20 a.m. as the Andrew J. Barberi arrived at the St. George Ferry Terminal on Staten Island, carrying 252 passengers and 18 crew.

Passenger Jason Watler, 30, of St. George, said he became alarmed when the ferry approached the shore faster than usual and ran toward the back of the boat.

"It was not slowing down," he said. "He was going too fast."

Then, he heard a "a real big boom."

"I stumbled a little bit," he said. "People were screaming. People were crying."

The accident appeared to be the result of a mechanical failure, New York City Department of Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan said.

The ferry's throttle failed to engage as it prepared to dock, she said, meaning the crew was unable to use the engines to apply reverse thrust and slow down. The cause of the malfunction is still unknown, she said. The approximately 3,000-ton, 310-foot-long ferry was moving at about 5 knots, or 5.8 miles per hour, when it hit.

Coast Guard officials said the ferry suffered serious damage to its ramps and gouges in the decks above the waterline. Ramps on the pier were also damaged. The Department of Transportation described the damage to the vessel and terminal and slip as minor and said the Barberi would be taken out of service.

Fire Department spokesman James Long said a total of 37 passengers were treated. He said 35 were taken to hospitals, but none had life-threatening injuries. Of those, 34 were treated and released and one remained hospitalized for further evaluation, Long said.

Two police officers providing ferry security were among the injured, officials said, but no crew members were hurt.

The National Transportation Safety Board said it had dispatched a team to investigate the ferry accident.

The Andrew Barberi was also involved in a 2003 wreck that killed 11 people. That accident occurred when the pilot, suffering from extreme fatigue and on painkillers, passed out at the wheel and the boat hit the terminal in St. George at full speed. The ferry returned to service after a multimillion-dollar rehabilitation.

The pilot pleaded guilty to negligent manslaughter and lying to investigators. He was sentenced to 18 months in prison. The city ferry director was sentenced to a year in prison after pleading guilty to negligent manslaughter and admitting he failed to implement or enforce a rule requiring two pilots during docking.

Capt. James DeSimone, the ferry's chief operating officer, said it was unlikely that the mechanical failure had anything to do with damage suffered by the vessel in the 2003 accident and that it had passed all the required inspections so that it could be placed back in service.

"There's no relationship whatsoever" between the two incidents, he said. "The two of them shouldn't be spoken of in the same breath."

On July 1, 2009, a different ferry lost power and slammed into a pier at the St. George terminal, causing more than a dozen minor injuries among passengers. That accident was blamed on the failure of a transformer, which regulates power to the main propulsion engine.

The ferry runs across New York harbor between Manhattan and Staten Island. Ferries landing at the terminal approach fairly quickly, then slow by putting the engines in reverse. The boat coasts into a U-shaped slip and workers extend large ramps that allow passengers to exit. Most passengers assemble at the front as the ferry arrives.

DeSimone said Barberi pilot Donald Russell had 15 years experience. He said Russell had worked on the Barberi for five years and was promoted from assistant captain to captain in March.

The crash might have been worse if it had happened during rush hour rather than on a sleepy Saturday morning. The Barberi, an orange behemoth of a boat, can carry up to 6,000 passengers.

The Barberi has had other problems since being put into service in 1981, including corrosion and a roach infestation. On its maiden voyage, it suffered a temporary loss of engine power and drifted into some mud near Governor's Island.

The vessel passed annual inspections in 2009 and a quarterly inspection in April, according to the Department of Transportation.

In Saturday's accident, Sadik-Khan said, the crew discovered the mechanical problem in time to alert passengers to brace for a hard landing and move back, although it is unclear how many heard or understood the warning.

Dwayne Forrest, 47, of Knoxville, Tenn., was sitting in the front with of the ferry with his wife, Sheila. He said he heard a warning, buzzers sounded and then someone said "Red! Red! Red!" and about 15 seconds later, the boat hit.

"It was a hard jolt. ... Luckily we were sitting down," he said.

The Forrests were in New York City on vacation and were told they could get a better look at the Statue of Liberty if they rode the ferry.

DeSimone said the captain of the Barberi used a danger signal – multiple blasts on the ship's whistle – to warn of an emergency.

The "Red!" heard by passengers was a signal to the crew from the captain of an imminent emergency situation, he said.

Alex Gonzalez, 36, of the Bronx, said the ferry appeared to speed up, rather than slow, as it approached the dock. He said the impact threw a woman and child standing near him about 10 feet.

"It was the scariest thing of my life," he said.

Service on the ferry line was suspended after the accident, then restored by late morning.

The ferry itself was dislodged from the dock at the terminal about five hours after the crash, with the help of a tugboat, and taken to another nearby pier area.

The crash will be investigated, Gov. David Paterson said at the scene. He said it was important for him to be on site after the events of the past week had raised tensions in New York City.

"That's the byproduct of harmful acts, and it causes people to be worried about things like transportation," Paterson said.

__

Associated Press writer David B. Caruso contributed to this report.

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NEW YORK — A Staten Island ferry with a history of accidents, including a fatal wreck in 2003, malfunctioned as it approached its terminal Saturday and smashed into a pier with a jolt that tosse...
NEW YORK — A Staten Island ferry with a history of accidents, including a fatal wreck in 2003, malfunctioned as it approached its terminal Saturday and smashed into a pier with a jolt that tosse...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maverick77
08:30 PM on 05/09/2010
Was it a Toyota?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maverick77
08:27 PM on 05/09/2010
Must have been a Toyota
04:41 PM on 05/09/2010
Soooo, do we need private regulation of government industries after this fiasco?
11:13 PM on 05/08/2010
NYC is all about locking down the average citizen, with cameras, with no smoking bans, and takes hours to mess with an SUV loaded with potential explosives in Times Square, but it cannot keep people who take the ferry safe. Does this sound familiar? Our national government gives billions, hundreds of billions to DOD, the FBI and DHS, and our local police have been militarized to the point of tasering grandmothers for jaywalking, but when a REAL THREAT happens, an oil disaster happens, a hurricane destroys a city, well, nothing is done. How are we being 'kept safe' by our national and local governments? We're taxed to the limit, we're monitored in our email and phone calls, but when something actually HAPPENS, we find out we're as unprotected as Americans were in the 1800's. Enough. Enough of this sham 'keep us safe' meme. Let's wake up, how about it?
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08:55 PM on 05/08/2010
Ferry's have two engines, one for each direction. [also two pilot houses etc.] They do not have brakes etc. While slowing down on the approach to the terminal the opposite engine must be engaged at certain rpms to soften impact. Tricky currents and maintenance problems with the engines and components can cause some issues. Folks should think of it like an aircraft, you would not be walking around and take everything for granted while a plane is taking off or landing. You should already be braced!
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lightist
light as a photon, heavy as tungsten.
06:49 PM on 05/08/2010
I love boats in rough weather. Some people definitely don't. I love being on boats when stuff is going wrong. Call me crazy, but it's my sense of adventure in the face of danger. Unless one has a lot of time on boats it can be a strange environment to saddle up with. It's always been about going with the flow. Not resisting. The flow of being on boats can be applied to life. If you feel something's about to go wrong, brace yourself and go with the flow... Sorry for the hurt ones.
10:29 PM on 05/08/2010
I was on the Lake Champlain ferry (which is really more of a barge design) when we were taking green water across the deck out in the open lake. Not too much, but it was, well, pretty interesting for a while. I was fortunate enough to be next to a lifejacket locker, but still...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
11:05 PM on 05/08/2010
My first time at sea was a car ferry across the English Channel, in the middle of the night, in a terrific thunderstorm. Everyone else was below decks, the girl I was traveling with was puking... I was up at the bow of the ship with my arms tight around the railing enjoying the sea spray and the driving rain. Have loved the sea ever since.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Steamboater
Forget hope. Agitate.
05:37 PM on 05/08/2010
The pilot in 2003 was sentenced to only 18 months in prison and 11 people died because he was using pain killers and then lied about it? You're not even supposed to drive a car when using medicine that could numb you or make you sleepy.

BTW, anyone know how much it is to reide the ferry in NY now? When I left it was only five cents and that was 1980.
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Rockwell
Recovering Reagan republican. 26 years sober.
06:51 PM on 05/08/2010
If he'd had a bag of weed he'd still be in prison.
10:31 PM on 05/08/2010
Free, last I checked.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Talossa
Not all liberals are silly.
11:06 PM on 05/08/2010
Still free.
05:20 PM on 05/08/2010
How many safety violations have they had?
10:53 PM on 05/08/2010
You really are fishing for anything, aren't you. You think you can do such a great job, make an offer to the city and take over.

Coupla problem for you, bunky: yes, all vessels have to pass Coast Guard inspections, which are pretty rigorous. You would have to pay the crews, which do have to have rating certificates for the positions they occupy, union or not. That doesn't come cheap. Be prepared to make 33,000 sailing per year on a near 100% on time schedule, and care for the safety of 75,000 passengers a day. Your insurance company would LOVE you. The ferry currently charges no fee, so you would have to go back to the old one: 25 cents. You could triple it, but then your boats would likely run empty and people would just LOVE you.

Enjoy.
05:17 PM on 05/08/2010
If this were run by non union workers, this would not have happened.
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Rockwell
Recovering Reagan republican. 26 years sober.
06:54 PM on 05/08/2010
Wow. What a really silly supposition. Can I play too? "If this were run by Unicorns and Smurfs this would not have happened." ooo! ooo! Let me try another one. "If the sky had been green instead of blue, this would not have happened."
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08:41 PM on 05/08/2010
LMAO! Fanned!
10:47 AM on 05/10/2010
lmao...
10:45 PM on 05/08/2010
You that sure? Let's do a little time travel and check.

During the 1850s, Staten Island developed rapidly, and the ferry became far more important to daily life. The very poor condition of the boats became a source of chronic complaint. One of these ferries, the Westfield, suffered a boiler explosion while sitting in its slip at South Ferry at about 1:30 in the afternoon of July 30, 1871. 85 dead and hundreds injured, and several more were added to the death toll in the weeks following. The ferry was non-union at the time. Jacob Vanderbilt, president of the Staten Island Railway, was arrested for murder, though he escaped conviction. The contention was that Vanderbilt had hired an incompetent crew because they came cheap. In today's courts, Vanderbilt certainly would have been convicted, as he narrowly missed being convicted even then.

Then, on June 14, 1901 the Staten Island ferry Northfield was departing the Whitehall ferry port at Whitehall when it was struck by a Jersey Central Ferry and sank immediately. By this time, the ferries had been unionized, though they were still privately run. The trained deck crews aboard Northfield acted swiftly and professionally, and only 5 of the 995 passengers aboard were lost in the sinking.

The ferries carry 19 million passengers annually and make 33,000 trips, with a 95% on-time rating through one of the busiest and most treacherous tidal rivers in the world. Yeah, it'd make sense to back to hiring bums, alright...!
mollybeejay
"Can't we all just get along?" Rodney King
10:29 PM on 05/09/2010
billbb,You tell 'em. Great post. fanned
05:14 PM on 05/08/2010
Were there union workers involved?
04:25 PM on 05/08/2010
Operating a ferry must be one of the tougher maritime jobs.

You dock dozens of times a day. And everyone has to be perfect.

Not to mention dodging the traffic in the harbor.

The repetition makes the job routine. Except it isn't. Any landing has the possibility of catastrophe.

My hat is off to the Captain and crew of this and all ferries,
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chuck prebys
03:21 PM on 05/08/2010
How come I'm never there when these things happen?
02:58 PM on 05/08/2010
They need to privatize this, the liability is too great.
04:21 PM on 05/08/2010
Huh?

Privatizing will eliminate mechanical failure?
05:16 PM on 05/08/2010
Union mechanics......need i say more.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
countyfair
04:24 PM on 05/08/2010
Over 60,000 people ride for FREE on the ferry daily. It leaves once every half hour (and once an hour between late nights) between Manhattan and Staten Island. The only other way to get from Manhattan to Staten Island is to take an expensive express bus or to drive all the way through Brooklyn to get to the bridge. It is a valuable and useful public service and should NOT be privatized.
02:57 PM on 05/08/2010
Let's take a vote:

How many people think it will be attributed to mechanical failure that an inspector 'failed' to notice...again?

Government regulators are killing us with ineptitude.

Financial regulators, oil industry, crane operators, banking, food, drugs, toys, pollution, shipping, automobiles, transportation, law enforcement, and our own Congress!
03:00 PM on 05/08/2010
Human error sounds much more likely.
03:22 PM on 05/08/2010
Suggestion:
Try reading the article before answering like a bonehead.
02:54 PM on 05/08/2010
hey Huff - can you stop putting things you consider dramatic in CAPITALS? i.e. CRASHES. Kinda FOXY of you...