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Fast Ferry Scandal

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The three BC Ferries PacifiCats sitting idle in the North Vancouver shipyards.
The three BC Ferries PacifiCats sitting idle in the North Vancouver shipyards.

The Fast Ferry Scandal, also referred to less-formally as the "FastCat Fiasco", was the name given to a political scandal in the Canadian province of British Columbia in the 1990s relating to the construction of a fleet of high speed ferry vessels.

High speed ferries

The provincial government at the time, led by New Democratic Party premier Glen Clark, decided to use provincial Crown corporation BC Ferries to advance its economic (and political) goal of supporting British Columbia's shipbuilding industry by creating a fleet of custom-designed high-speed catamaran passenger/vehicle ferries for BC Ferries, with the eventual goal of exporting additional vessels on the international market. The vessels were to be built by local shipyards under the overview of a new provincial Crown corporation to be called Catamaran Ferries International Inc. (CFI).

Public goals of the Fast Ferry Program

A major impetus for the program was in direct response to public complaints. They wanted:

In response to these main concerns, the program was to deliver more frequent service (travel time reduced by 30 minutes), with smaller-capacity ships (250 cars vs. 365). Trucks were to be banned from the terminals and moved to an alternate ferry route, and a 100% reservation system was to be implemented, eliminating the need for long queues.

Political goals of the Fast Ferry Program

Perhaps more important than the need for a more efficient ferry system was the New Democratic Party's desire to rebuild the shipbuilding industry of British Columbia. During the early 1900s, shipbuilding in British Columbia was at its greatest, in support of a booming fishing industry. During the Second World War, shipbuilding again peaked with the delivery of two 10,000-ton freighters every week. By the 1990s, however, shipbuilding in British Columbia was nearly dead due, in-part, to the ballooning cost of materials, labour disputes, and increasing competition from Asian shipyards.

Faced with the potential collapse of an institutional industry the New Democratic Party, a political party with a very strong pro-labour disposition, attempted a resuscitation by creating the Fast Ferry Program. BC Ferries had initially recommended that a comparable ferry be leased for trials in coastal waters, but the New Democratic Party decided to forego testing -- against BC Ferry recommendations -- and committed to the construction project. The New Democratic Party was attempting to emulate the success of Australian shipbuilders such as Incat Tasmania and Austal Shipbuilding in the global fast ferry market.

PacifiCat fleet

The vessels built for BC Ferries were intended to improve ferry service between the mainland terminal of Horseshoe Bay (in West Vancouver) and the Vancouver Island terminal at Departure Bay (in Nanaimo).

The three vessels were built between 1995-2000 and were named as follows:

Technically, PacifiCat Voyager was never part of the BC Ferries fleet, as it was christened but never commissioned; by the time this vessel was ready for deployment, the bottom had already fallen out of the Fast Ferry Program.

The vessels had a service speed of 37 knots (68 km/h) and a capacity for 250 car-equivalents and 1000 passengers.

Due to various blunders by the government, BC Ferries, design bureaus, and the shipyards, the cost of the program more than doubled from $210 million ($70 million/vessel) to almost $460 million ($150 million/vessel) and final delivery was almost 3 years behind schedule. A large part of the delay was due to the fact that the shipyards commissioned to construct the vessels had very little experience working with aluminum. Previously, construction of aluminum vessels in British Columbia had been limited to fishing boats and special-purpose vessels. The construction of three dual-hulled 122.5m catamarans represented a very large leap of faith by the New Democratic Party in British Columbia shipyards.

The ferries also had the following problems during their brief tenure:

After a change in leadership, the new Premier of BC, Ujjal Dosanjh, placed the ferries up for sale. A subsequent election virtually eliminated the New Democratic Party from government, and Gordon Campbell of the BC Liberals auctioned off the PacifiCat fleet on March 24, 2003 for $19.4 million ($6.5 million/vessel) to the Washington Marine Group. Further controversy erupted when it was revealed that the same company had offered $60 million for the vessels prior to the auction.

Appearance

All three vessels, although having as picture of a cougar on the side, have slightly varying murals.

A future for the PacifiCats on the South Coast?

With the 2010 Winter Olympics to be hosted in Vancouver, some have speculated that the BC Government of the day may lease back the ferries from the new owners to shuttle commuters between downtown Vancouver, the Airport and Squamish (near Whistler, planned site of several sports).

In September 2005, the media reported that the Washington Marine Group had expressed interest in operating a fast ferry service from Downtown Vancouver to a point on Vancouver Island. When questioned, representatives of WMG indicated that they are actively searching for suitable applications for the Fast Ferries and they would not rule out such a service.

On Friday, December 16th, 2005 WMG confirmed that it is considering putting the ferries into service from North Vancouver to Duke Point (Near Nanaimo) to compete with the BC Ferries routes. WMG said they intend to make a decision by spring of 2006. [link]

External links

 


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