Two dead after fishing boat capsizes off Vancouver Island

agentaqua

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http://www.cheknews.ca/two-dead-after-fishing-boat-capsizes-off-vancouver-island-114152/

Two dead after fishing boat capsizes off Vancouver Island

Posted By: Keith Vasson: September 06, 2015In: News


Two people are dead after a fishing boat capsized off the West Coast of Vancouver Island overnight.

The vessel’s last reported position was in the waters off Kyoquout, north of Tofino.

The Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre one survivor was pulled from the water and is being transported to hospital in Victoria.

Two bodies have been recovered and the search continues for one remaining member of the four-person crew.

More details to come.
 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/tofino-fishing-boat-capsizes-1.3217622

Fishing boat capsizes near Tofino, 2 dead, 1 missing

1 person rescued, under medical care aboard cruise ship headed to Victoria

CBC News Posted: Sep 06, 2015 12:33 PM PT| Last Updated: Sep 06, 2015 1:11 PM PT

A search is underway for a missing crew member after a fishing boat capsized north of Tofino overnight. Two others are dead. One person has been rescued. The vessel's last reported position was near Kyuquot, B.C. (Google maps)

Two people are dead and another is missing after a fishing boat capsized off the West Coast of Vancouver Island, north of Tofino overnight.

One person has been rescued and a search is underway for a crew member who is still missing.

Lt. Nicole Murillo with the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre (JRCC) says rescue crews were notified after the fishing company called to report one of its boats had failed to check in.

"We have found two crew members deceased and are searching for one other person," she said.

Murillo says one person has been rescued — the survivor, who was pulled from the water — and is under medical care aboard the Holland America cruise ship the MS Statendam headed to Victoria.

The JRCC says the vessel's last reported position was in the waters off Kyuquot, north of Tofino.
 
Ya it is SV. If anyone is fishing out near Kyuquot - keep an eye out...
 
Sounds like they found the body of the 4th crew member, it was the fishing vessel Caledonian that went down. Thoughts with the families, terrible news.
 
http://globalnews.ca/news/2206116/2...oat-sinks-off-west-coast-of-vancouver-island/

3 dead, 1 in hospital after fishing boat sinks off west coast of Vancouver Island

ja headshot 2 By Jon Azpiri
Web Producer Global News

A search is underway after a fishing boat sunk off the coast of Estevan Point, about 50 kilometres north of Tofino.

Eric Sorenson/MarineTraffic.com

Three men died after a commercial fishing boat sunk off the coast of Estevan Point, about 50 kilometres north of Tofino.

At about 10 p.m. Saturday, the company that owns the fishing vessel Caledonian alerted the Coast Guard after the crew missed a check-in.

The crew was hauling in a net when the ship listed, Lt. (Navy) Nicole Murillo with the Joint Rescue Co-ordination

“They tried to correct it but unfortunately, the ship capsized and subsequently sunk.”

The bodies of two men were found soon after Coast Guard vessels began their search. Three Coast Guard vessels and a Cormorant helicopter searched for a missing fourth boater for much of Sunday, but tragically his body was found off the coast of Tofino later this afternoon.

One crew member was found aboard a life raft and transported to a nearby cruise ship headed to Victoria where he will be transferred to hospital. Murillo said early reports indicate the survivor was the only crew member wearing a life jacket.

It’s not known why the boat capsized.

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada confirmed they are investigating.

-With files from Canadian Press
 
http://www.theprovince.com/news/thr...at+sinks+vancouver+island/11344873/story.html

Three fishermen dead after boat sinks off Vancouver Island

By Dan Fumano, The Province September 7, 2015

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada identified the vessel as the Caledonian. It remains unclear why it capsized and sank.

Photograph by: Eric Sorenson , MarineTraffic.com

A commercial fishing boat sank Saturday off the west coast of Vancouver Island, killing three of the four crew members.

The boat capsized and sank in the ocean about 55 kilometres west of Estevan Point, north of Tofino, said navy Lt. Nicole Murillo with the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre.

The Coast Guard was called out around 10 p.m. Saturday. Two men were discovered Sunday morning and confirmed dead, said Murillo, while the search continued into Sunday afternoon for a missing third crew member.

The missing man’s dead body was spotted by a helicopter and recovered around 2:30 p.m. Sunday afternoon, Murillo said.

Three Coast Guard vessels and a helicopter were searching for him, with several other fishing vessels in the area also trying to help, said Coast Guard spokesman Dan Bate.

A fourth crew member, the sole survivor, was rescued around 1:30 a.m. Sunday. He was taken aboard the MS Statendam, a Holland America cruise ship in the area bound for Victoria, and he was treated for mild hypothermia, said Bate. The rescued man was wearing a personal flotation device, he said.

Early indications suggested that the three men who died were not wearing life jackets, Murillo said.

The Transportation Safety Board of Canada identified the vessel as the Caledonian.

A spokesman for Pacific Seafood, the U.S.-based company that owns the boat, told The Province the incident was a “a terrible tragedy for our entire Pacific Seafood family and our community.”

Daniel Occhipinti, general counsel for Pacific Seafood, said: “We thank God for saving one of our crew, but we are devastated by the loss of our other crewmen. Right now we are focused on our people and their families. We do not yet know what caused this tragedy, but we will do a full investigation to find out what happened.”

“We appreciate everything the Canadian Coast Guard has done to help rescue and search for our crew,” he said. “Please pray for the families who lost a loved one.”

The Transportation Safety Board is deploying an investigator to the scene to obtain further information about the incident, said TSB spokesman Chris Krepski.

“Loss of life on fishing vessels is something that we are concerned with as a board,” Krepski said, adding that the issue is one of eight highlighted on the TSB’s watch list.

The watch list is a public record of the “issues posing the greatest risk to Canada’s transportation system,” according to the TSB website.

“The eight issues on this list are supported by hundreds of investigation reports, safety concerns, and Board recommendations. In each case, the TSB has determined that action taken to date is insufficient and more needs to be done to eliminate the risks,” the website reads.

Coast Guard spokesman Bate said: “These are folks out on the water that are doing their job, and obviously it’s a tragic ending to a day working at sea.”

A commercial vessel sinking in B.C. waters with multiple fatalities is “a rare occurrence,” Bate said. But he said this weekend’s incident was similar in some respects to the 2004 sinking of the Hope Bay, a 22-metre fishing boat that capsized and sank in Queen Charlotte Sound north of Vancouver Island, killing three crew members.

It was not immediately clear what caused the Caledonian to capsize and sink, but Murillo said after further investigation, it's believed the men were bringing in a fishing net when the boat began to list.

Strong winds were recorded Saturday evening in the area where the boat was fishing, said Environment Canada meteorologist Louis Kohanyi. Winds from the southeast reached 30 to 50 km per hour, which is considered strong, Kohanyi said, but below the level of a gale warning.

— with a file from The Canadian Press

dfumano@theprovince.com

twitter.com/fumano

© Copyright (c) The Province
 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...-b-c-fishermen-in-a-decade-tsb-says-1.3220097

Deadliest year for B.C. fishermen in a decade TSB says

2015 is the worst year for loss of life on fishing vessels in a decade, says Transportation Safety Board

CBC News Posted: Sep 08, 2015 5:15 PM PT| Last Updated: Sep 08, 2015 5:16 PM PT

The Caledonian capsized Saturday in waters north of Tofino with four crew members aboard. Only one survived. (Eric Sorenson/MarineTraffic.com)

This has has become the deadliest year for B.C. fishermen in a decade, following the capsizing of a commercial fishing boat north of Tofino on the weekend, says the Transportation Safety Board.

Three crew members died when the Caledonian, owned by Pacific Seafood, capsized Saturday night, at about 8 pm. PT, off Estevan Point on the west coast of Vancouver Island.

That brings the number of deaths in B.C. fishing to six for 2015, said Glenn Budden, a senior marine investigator with the Transportation Safety Board.

"It's not been a good year for B.C. fishermen," he said. "We haven't had that large a number for the past decade."

Capsizing under investigation

The Transportation Safety Board is still determining the scope of its investigation into Saturday's capsizing, said Budden.

Loss of life on fishing vessels is an issue on the TSB's "watch list," meaning it considers the number of accidents, and deaths they cause, unacceptably high.

Budden cited other high-profile commercial vessels that capsized, including the Ocean Tor, which capsized in 2005 killing two people.

In 2004, the Hope Bay capsized in Queen Charlotte Sound, killing three — with a total of six fishers dead that year, he said.

In 2002, the Cap Rouge II capsized near the mouth of the Fraser River, killing five, including two children.
 
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...zed-north-of-tofino-id-d-by-coroner-1.3221732

3 killed when fishing boat capsized north of Tofino ID'd by coroner

The Caledonian capsized off Estevan Point north of Tofino Saturday night, killing 3 of 4 crew

CBC News Posted: Sep 09, 2015 4:02 PM PT| Last Updated: Sep 09, 2015 4:02 PM PT

The Caledonian capsized Saturday in waters north of Tofino with four crew members aboard. Only one survived. (Eric Sorenson/MarineTraffic.com)

The BC Coroners Service has identified the three fishermen who died following the capsizing of their commercial fishboat Saturday night north of Tofino.

■Wesley Hagglund, 55 of Duncan, was the skipper of the vessel.
■Keith Edward Standing, 48, of Port Alberni, was the engineer.
■Doug White, 41, of Port Alberni was a deckhand.

The Caledonian, owned by Pacific Seafood, capsized Saturday night, at about 8 pm. PT, 55 km west of Estevan Point on the west coast of Vancouver Island. A fourth crew member survived and was rescued by the Canadian Coast Guard.

The BC Coroners Service, RCMP and the Transportation Safety Board are continuing to investigate the deaths. The weather conditions were not bad at the time of the capsizing, with light winds and one-metre seas, according to the TSB.

In total, six B.C. fishermen have been killed on the water this year — the largest number of deaths in the industry in a decade, said the TSB.
 
Fatal fishing boat capsizing caused by loss of stability, says safety board
The Canadian Press
December 14, 201
http://www.timescolonist.com/fatal-...loss-of-stability-says-safety-board-1.4487175

RICHMOND, B.C. - The federal government should look at the success of seatbelt laws when it considers a recommendation that would require commercial fishermen to wear a life-jacket at all times while on deck, the head of the Transportation Safety Board says.
 
Inflatables are inexpensive and so much less bulky than the PFDs of old. Surely someone can make a model appropriate for commercial fishermen. Hopefully we don't have to resort to legislation to protect people from themselves and that education can do it instead, but all boat fishermen should be wearing PFDs.
 
Inflatables have some drawbacks. I have a manual one but find the inflation toggle keeps dropping down and I'm worried about accidental inflation. I guess I could rig it out of the way, but that might defeat the purpose.

Not sure about auto inflate or hydrostatic. I assume one you need to keep one dry to avoid inflation? The other you would need to hit a certain depth for it to inflate?

Positive buoyancy would make sense when working in a situation where you could end up in the water unconscious or injured but the rest of the time it would be cumbersome.

Not sure there is a simple answer, but if anyone ever develops one they will become pretty wealthy.
 
I think it's different when you are at sea 24/7? If as the accompanying article suggests it's the same as seatbelts, I assume they mean wearing on or off watch?
 
Agent - you brought it up over a year ago and now you are rehashing it... We remember those lost in the scenario so let it go... We get it. For some, it's actually personal, thanks!

If you want to debate PFD, start a thread\ can we let this thread and folk RIP?
 
Banger - I am bringing it up because the TSB just released its report over this incident - and there were recommendations that were pertinent - ones that also may affect others on the water. That's why there is a TSB - so some good might come out of any tragedy. So that we can learn and discuss what we should do better. That's what the other posters were trying to do. The discussion over life-jackets - and what we can do to make it practical is important. relevant, and respectful.

I've also been involved in quite a few marine incidents and SARs over the years - and I do understand how traumatic it can be. My condolences to you.
 
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