Page 12: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (January 1989)

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Hornblower Dining Yachts Contracts

Trinity Marine Group To Build

West Coast's Largest Diner Boat

A LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT

OF THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION

OF PASSENGER VESSEL OWNERS

By Alan Bernstein, Owner,

B.B. Riverboats, Cincinnati, Ohio

Public policy was the focus of the

National Association of Passenger

Vessel Owners' (NAPVO) activities in 1988. Led by a newly appointed

Public Policy Committee, the asso- ciation addressed several important issues relating to marine transporta- tion. •In anticipation of the Subchapter

T regulatory revisions, we met with the U.S. Coast Guard to devise industry courses. It is expected that the new regulations will call for a stricter standard of construction and manning for the larger vessels, but a relaxation of the rules con- cerning material of construction. •Responding to Coast Guard con- cerns about manning requirements on Subchapter T vessels, the asso- ciation founded a Safety and Train- ing Committee to develop training standards for the industry. Our po- sition is that the key to the solution is the quality of the manning and not the quantity. •The Coast Guard's proposed drug testing regulations sparked major concern among association members this past year. NAPVO members were the only industry group to successfully lobby for relief on the regulations. A provision that would have required random drug testing of non-safety-related crew was struck from the rules. •NAPVO continued to urge the

Coast Guard to crackdown on illegal bareboat charter operators through- out the nation. Our members seek to operate under a consistent set of equitable rules. The presence of ille- gal operators impede the process of fair trade. We commend the Coast

Guard for the many positive steps they have taken in this area.

To assist NAPVO in their efforts, we employed a technical advisor, retired Coast Guard Capt. Peter

Lauridsen. Most recently Deputy

Chief of the Coast Guard Office of

Marine Safety, Captain Lauridsen brings to us a wealth of experience and knowledge in how to work effec- tively on marine issues.

As NAPVO moves into 1989,1 see us faced with continued issues in regulatory development.

Subchapter T, manning, drug en- forcement and other issues will re- main with us. User fees for Coast

Guard services are expected to re- surface this year. Further, we antici- pate more attempts to change em- ployment relations by trying to in- crease minimum wage, forcing man- dated health insurance, and regular child care.

Our membership has continued to grow. It is only through our collec- tive efforts that NAPVO will con- tinue to remain in the vanguard of efforts to protect the small passen- ger industry from having to operate in an uncompetitive regulatory en- vironment.

National Marine Acquires

Southern Marine Services

National Marine, Inc., the New

Orleans-based barge and towing company, recently announced their acquisition of Southern Marine Ser- vices, Inc., a towing and fleeting ser- vice located on Blakely Island in

Mobile, Ala., which will now operate as National Marine, Inc., Mobile

Fleet.

Southern Marine Service, Inc. was formed in 1973 as part of Ryan-

Walsh Stevedoring Company, Inc. to provide towing and fleeting ser- vices in the Mobile port area. South- ern Marine's fleet includes several towboats servicing Mobile harbor as well as the Eastern Gulf Intracoas- tal Canal.

Heading up National Marine's

Mobile Fleet will be Charles

McDonnell, fleet manager; Rick

Simms, barge maintenance engi- neer; Lucian Lott, traffic coordi- nator; and Connie Clayton, office manager. All are former Southern

Marine employees.

The Trinity Marine Group has been awarded a contract to build a 183-foot diner boat for Hornblower

Dining Yachts of California. The new flagship of the Hornblower fleet, largest of its type on the West

Coast, will operate out of the Los

Angeles Harbor beginning in the spring of 1989.

While new in every aspect, the

California Hornblower will have a nostalgic "look," as she is patterned after turn-of-the-century steam- powered vessels. The new vessel will feature three air-conditioned decks, each with a dual service mahogany bar. The top deck, called the Cap- tain's Lounge, will be tailored for business meetings of up to 250 people.

Amenities will include an elegant foyer on the main deck, large pano- ramic windows, brass, teak, and ma- hogany appointments, hardwood dance floors, and plush carpeting.

The boat will be available for pri- vate group charters and individually ticketed cruises open to the public.

The California Hornblower will be 183 feet 3 inches in length, with a 40.5-foot beam (molded), and 11- foot molded depth with an approxi- mate 7-foot draft.

She will be powered by two Cum- mins KT19M marine engines with a continuous rating of 510 bhp each at 2,100 rpm. They will drive through

Twin Disc MG-518 reverse/reduc- tion gears with a ratio of 4.06:1.

The California Hornblower will be built under U.S. Coast Guard subchapter "T" rules and regula- tions and will meet American Bu- reau of Shipping (ABS) standards.

The California Hornblower is now under construction at Trinity's

Moss Point Marine, Inc., in Esca- tawpa, Miss.

John Dane III, president of the

Trinity Marine Group, said the se- lection of Moss Point Marine to build the California Hornblower re- flects the Group's experience in building a wide range of dinner/ cruise and excursion vessels for use on both coasts and on the nation's inland waterways.

The Trinity Marine Group is owned by Trinity Industries, Inc.,

Dallas, Texas. In addition to Moss

Artist's conception of the Cummins-pow- ered California Hornblower, Trinity Marine

Group's new diner boat.

Point Marine, Inc., it includes Halt- er Marine, Inc., with shipyards in

Lockport, La., and Moss Point,

Miss.; Equitable Shipyards, Inc., with facilities in New Orleans and

Madisonville, La.; Gretna Machine and Iron Works, Inc. in Harvey, La.; and Aluminum Boats, Inc. in Crown

Point, La.

For more information and free lit- erature on the facilities and capabil- ities of the Trinity Marine Group,

Circle 51 on Reader Service Card

Seaward Offers 105-Page

Technical Manual On

Marine Fendering Systems

Seaward International, Inc. has recently released a revised 105-page

Technical Manual for their Sea

Cushion® line of foam-filled marine fender systems.

The availability of this technical data now provides naval architects, engineering firms, and end users with the information needed to se- lect quality engineered Seaward fender systems for vessel-to-dock and vessel-to-vessel applications worldwide.

The Sea Cushion Technical Man- ual covers all aspects of fendering, including construction features, fen- der performance, physical charac- teristics, and total system design.

Also included are application tables and installation examples that will provide the user with a clear under- standing of Seaward's foam fender- ing systems and their advantages.

The manual is filled with valuable and useful data including photos of different applications, layout of dif- ferent applications, mechanical drawings, specification tables, ener- gy absorption data, recommenda- tions for particular applications, etc.

This manual complements the

Technical Manual already released for the Sea Guard netless fender systems used worldwide by the U.S.

Navy and the international mari- time community. Other products available from Seaward Interna- tional include marine buoys and floats, Donut fender systems, and special urethane marine coatings.

For further information and a free copy of the "Fendering Techni- cal Manual From Seaward Interna- tional,"

Circle 30 on Reader Service Card

The success continues! Now more than 400

Stal-Mini

Screw Compressors in operation for marine refrigeration

MARINE

STAL Refrigeration AB

S-601 87 NORRKOPING

Sweden

Telephone Int +46 11 21 40 00

Telefax +46 11 16 19 04

Telex 64110 FROSTAL S

Circle 208 on Reader Service Card 14 Circle 180 on Reader Service Card Maritime Reporter/Engineering News

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