Page 28: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (August 1977)
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A Salute To The American Merchant Marine
Leadership In World Maritime Safety
Shown on the dais at Annua! Awards Luncheon, left to right: Rev. Msgr. Thomas
McGovern; Capt. Thomas King, Eastern Region Director, Maritime Administration,
U.S. Department of Commerce; Rear Adm. James J. Gracey, Commandant, Ninth
U.S. Coast Guard District, Cleveland; Dave Walker, general chairman, Marine Sec- tion, National Safety Council; Al May, vice president, American Institute of Merchant
Shipping; Fred S. Sherman, chairman of board of Marine Transport Lines; Rear Adm.
Sam H. Moore, Commander, Military Sealift Command, and Capt. Jones F. Devlin.
U.S.-flag shipping — on the oceans, the Great Lakes and
Inland Waterways — has again proven to be an undisputed leader in world maritime safety.
This was evident during the An- nual Ship Safety Awards Lunch- eon, sponsored by the American
Institute of Merchant Shipping and the National Safety Council's
Marine Section, held at the Down- town Athletic Club, New York,
N.Y. U.S.-flag ships of all types were honored for, collectively, op- erating more than 127 consecu- tive years without a crew member losing a full turn on watch be- cause of an occupational injury.
Government officials and key executives from all coasts and all segments of the U.S. maritime industry attended the luncheon in a salute to the American Mer- chant Marine's leadership in ma- rine safety.
Two types of awards were given.
One was the National Safety
Council Awards, covering a vari- ety of interests, from dock work- ers, dredgers and towboats to shipyards and shipping fleets.
These awards are based on the lowest personnel accident fre- quency rate among competing companies for the previous year.
They were presented by Rear
Adm. James S. Gracey, Com- mander, Ninth U.S. Coast Guard
District (Great Lakes), and David
S. Walker, manager, Boston Tow
Boat Company, and general chair- man of the NSC Marine Section.
The second, the Jones F. Devlin
Awards, sponsored by AIMS and given to individual U.S. ships operating for extended accident- free periods (two, four and more years), were presented by AIMS vice president Albert E. May and
Capt. Jones F. Devlin, retired
United States Lines' vice presi- dent (Operations), for whom the
Devlin Awards are named.
Devlin Awards were presented to 27 ships owned by 10 U.S.-flag companies and three vessels oper- ated by the Military Sealift Com- mand. The 30 vessels collectively sailed 46,355 days (127 years) without a lost-time personnel ac- cident onboard.
As an example of unusual safety competence, in the Devlin
Awards' Dry Cargo Category, four vessels of United States
Lines were honored for operating a total of 6,730 days (over 17 years) without a crew member losing a full turn on watch due to injury. One of those, the S/S
American Lark, won a special
Devlin award for sailing eight years without a lost-time person- nel accident—a contest record for
U.S.-flag cargoliners. For the first time, a U.S.-flag barge-carrying vessel won an award. Charles P.
McFaull, safety director, Delta
Steamship Lines, accepted a two- year award for the lighter aboard ship (LASH) vessel S/S Delta
Norte, which has sailed 827 acci- dent-free days to and from South
America.
In the tanker category, Texaco
Inc. led the way with six winners.
Its Texaco Montana and Texaco
Georgia operated 11 and 10 years, respectively, without a crew in- jury. Getty Oil Company's Wil- mington Getty and New York
Getty also won top honors, the two ships steaming a total of 21 years with perfect personnel safety records.
For the fourth consecutive year, ships of the Military Sealift
Command qualified in the Devlin
Awards program, open to the
Command's civilian-manned ves- sels. Two-year awards for the
USNS Atakapa, Range Sentinel and De Steiguer were presented to the Commander of MSC, Navy
Rear Adm. Sam H. Moore.
In the NSC Marine Section
Safety Contest, first place plaques are given in four areas: Tanker,
Dry Cargo-Passenger Vessels,
Stevedoring, and Shipbuilding and
Repair Divisions.
First place plaque winner in the
Tanker Divisions was Getty Oil
Company (Eastern Operations-
Marine), which had the lowest fleet injury frequency rate for the previous year in competition with other company fleets on all seacoasts. Texaco was runner-up in that division.
In the Dry Cargo and Passen- ger Vessel Division, a first place plaque was presented to the Ford
Motor Company's Marine Depart- ment, Dearborn, Mich., which won in the Great Lakes Straight
Deck Category. In addition, Huron
Cement Co., Detroit, won first place recognition in the Great
Lakes' "Self Unloader" Cargo
Ship Category.
The U.S. Naval Ship Repair
Facility in Yokosuka, Japan, won a first place plaque in the U.S.
Government Shipbuilding and Re- pair Division. A second place cer- tificate in that Division went to the U.S. Naval Ship Repair Yard,
Subic Bay (the Philippines).
A first place plaque went to
Hilo (Hawaii) Transportation and
Terminal Co. in the Stevedoring
Division's General Cargo Cate- gory.
In NSC's Harbor Equipment
Division (dredging vessels, tugs, barges, etc.), first place recogni- tion went to the Corps of Engi- neers' Missouri River Division,
Omaha, Neb.
The National Safety Council also honored the U.S. towing in- dustry. First place plaques were presented by Admiral Gracey to
Texaco's Marine Department, Port
Arthur, Texas; Exxon Company,
USA's Marine Department, Bay- town, Texas, and Western Trans- portation Co., Portland, Ore. A second place certificate in the tow- ing contest also went to Exxon
Company, USA's Marine Depart- ment in Houston, Texas.
Special towing awards were also given for perfect safety rec- ords (no personnel injuries in 1976) to Boston Tow Boat Com- pany, Levingston Shipbuilding
Company, Orange, Texas, Mobile
River Sawmill Division, Mt. Ver- non, Ala., and Exxon Company,
U.S.A., Everett, Mass.
In a joint statement, Messrs.
Walker and May said: "We are well aware of certain unfortunate maritime tragedies that made headlines this year. However, suc- cessful U.S. maritime safety pro- grams may not be making the headlines but are having a sig- nificant impact in this country.
We are well into a national pro- gram to make our industry safer and healthier for every man or woman who goes to sea for a liv- ing or works shoreside. "The Awards we are present- ing today," they continued, "rep- resent the hard and dedicated work of U.S. maritime Safety
Directors who, backed by the dedication of topside shipping executives, are conducting far- reaching marine safety cam- paigns, in cooperation with the
National Safety Council, that have led to safer ships, safer shipyards and safer working conditions in the harbors and on the docks."
As to "safer Ships," the NSC and Devlin Awards winners are testimonials to this. The 11 U.S.- flag organizations and the num- ber of Devlin award-winning ships from each include The Cleveland-
Cliffs Iron Company (1) ; Colum- bia Transportation Division-Ogle- bay Norton Company (3) ; Delta
Steamship Lines, Inc. (1) ; Getty
Oil Company (4) ; International
Ocean Transportation Corp. (2) ;
Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., Inc. (3) ; Military Sealift Command (3) ; The Ohio River Company (1) ; Standard Oil Company (In- diana) (2) ; Texaco Inc. (6), and
United States Lines, Inc. (4).
Henry Olson Joins
Morris Guralnick Staff
Henry A. Olson
Morris Guralnick Associates,
Inc., naval architects and engi- neers, 550 Kearney Street, San
Francisco, Calif. 94108, have an- nounced that Henry A. Olson has joined the staff in the position of project manager. MGA is one of the largest private offices of naval architects in the West.
Each major project is assigned a manager whose duties include assuring the timely delivery and accuracy of work packages.
Mr. Olson joins the MGA staff after spending some 10 years with
American President Lines. Among his duties at APL, Mr. Olson was project naval architect for the new Pacesetter-class of container- ships. Mr. Olson had charge of the development of this class from concept, through preliminary de- sign stages, construction, delivery, and post delivery guarantee work.
Prior to assuming his duties at
APL, Mr. Olson joined the United
States Coast Guard upon gradu- ating from school, and spent over three years with that organiza- tion both ashore and at sea. He was commissioned a lieutenant in the Coast Guard Reserve.
Mr. Olson has a Bachelor of
Science degree in naval architec- ture and marine engineering from the Webb Institute of Naval Ar- chitecture. He holds memberships in The Society of Naval Archi- tects and Marine Engineers and the American Society of Naval
Engineers. 30 Maritime Reporter/Engineering News