Vessel
Recovery
How
many commercial and recreational vessels are missing or in need of salvage
due to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita?
In an Oct. 31, 2005,
article, the New Orleans Times Picayune estimated that there are approximately
3,000 commercial vessels and 35,000 to 45,000 recreational boats missing
or in need of salvage.
The Louisiana Department
of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) has established a Web site that will
help boat owners to search for boats that were lost as a result of Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita. Interested people can access the Web site through
a link under the "What's New" section of LDWF's home page
at www.wlf.louisiana.gov.
The Web site allows
the public to access information on all recreational and commercial
vessels located and reported to the department by LDWF Enforcement Division
agents, insurance companies, private citizens and others involved in
recovery and removal of displaced boats. The site is updated daily as
information on boats is received.
As of Jan. 3, 2006
the Coast Guard identified 2,266 commercial vessels in need of salvage,
of which 725 have already been salvaged by the Coast Guard or the owners
themselves.
(Justin
Farrell, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program and Rusty
Gaude, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program/LSU AgCenter) 1-4-06
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What
is the process for commercial vessel recovery in the affected parishes?
Under the Stafford Act, FEMA charged the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) with
removing wrecks and debris that pose an immediate threat to human life,
public health and safety from commercial waterways and channels in the
parishes of Plaquemines, St. Bernard, St. Tammany, Jefferson, Orleans,
Calcasieu, Cameron, Vermillion, LaFourche, Terrebone, Iberia and St.
Mary. In separate tasking, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers charged
the Coast Guard with removing vessels beached on Army Corps levees,
battures and borrow pit areas. Vessels which do not meet the mission
criteria outlined by FEMA or the Corps do not qualify for salvage by
the Coast Guard. USCG has organized salvage firms with five barge-based
cranes to assist in the commercial vessel clean-up. USCG continues to
bring in additional contractors to assist with the recovery effort.
The process is estimated to take approximately 12 months.
Additionally, the
Coast Guard is spray painting case numbers on vessels throughout Louisiana.
A spray painted case number does not automatically qualify a vessel
for Coast Guard salvage. These case numbers are simply used to track
vessels in an electronic database. Once a case number is assigned, a
separate determination is made whether or not the vessel meets the mission
criteria.
(Justin
Farrell, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program and Rusty
Gaude, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program/LSU AgCenter) 1-4-06
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What
should commercial vessel owners do to salvage their vessels?
Commercial vessel
owners with boats in need of salvage due to Hurricanes Rita and Katrina
are encouraged to contact the USCG Wreck and Salvage Group by phone
(504) 310-3711 and (409) 682-4287.
Owners should be
prepared to provide the information requested on the Owner
Contact Questionnaire (16KB PDF). Information
includes owner contact information, vessel name, registration, owner’s
intentions, etc. Additionally, owners may contact USCG’s Stationary
Information Center, which is open daily from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at St.
Ann’s Church in Empire, La. Owners are encouraged to get a USCG
case number, typically spray painted by the Coast Guard on the vessel.
Owners, whose vessels
do not meet mission criteria, can apply for a low interest loan with
the Small Business Administration (800) 659-2955 to pay for their vessel’s
salvage. For more information, please visit www.sba.gov/disaster.
(Justin
Farrell, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program and Rusty
Gaude, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program/LSU AgCenter) 1-25-06
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What
role can the parish play in vessel salvage and recovery?
Since the vessel
salvage operations are driven at the parish level, the USCG encourages
parish assistance in directing commercial salvage operations. Parishes
are encouraged to assist in the prioritization of recovery operations,
as well in locating staging areas to position vessels and debris.
(Justin
Farrell, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program and Rusty
Gaude, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program/LSU AgCenter) 1-4-06
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Does
a similar process exist for recreational vessels?
Yes, but only if
the recreational vessel is deemed to meet the FEMA mission (impeding
a commercial waterway) or an Army Corp mission (impeding a levy). At
present, the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) is
in discussions about recreational vessel clean-up with federal agencies.
LDEQ has set up three staging areas for recreational boat owners hoping
to recover boats missing due to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita:
- Old Landfill
on Paris Road, St. Bernard Parish
- Empire Shipyard,
284 Rose Marie Drive, Plaquemines Parish
- Venice Marina,
237 Sports Marine Road, Plaquemines Parish
The Louisiana Department
of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) has established a Web site that will
help boat owners to search for boats that were lost as a result of Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita. Interested people can access the Web site through
a link under the "What's New" section of LDWF's home page
at www.wlf.louisiana.gov.
The Web site allows
the public to access information on all recreational and commercial
vessels located and reported to the department by LDWF Enforcement Division
agents, insurance companies, private citizens and others involved in
recovery and removal of displaced boats. The site is updated daily as
information on boats is received.
(Justin
Farrell, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program and Rusty
Gaude, Louisiana Sea Grant College Program/LSU AgCenter) 1-4-06
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For questions, comments
or suggestions, please contact the Web Coordinator.