| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
Contact: Anne Davis Burns |
| August 31, 2004 |
(703) 841-9300 |
NTSB RELEASES FINDINGS OF I-40 ACCIDENT INVESTIGATION;
AWO PLEDGES COOPERATION TO IMPROVE BRIDGE SAFETY
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The nation's tugboat, towboat, and barge industry
is committed to improving public safety and preventing accidents
involving vessels and bridges, the American Waterways Operators
(AWO) pledged as the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB)
released the results of its investigation of the May 2002 I-40 bridge
accident at Webbers Falls, Oklahoma.
AWO President Thomas A. Allegretti called the NTSB findings "important
information that will help our industry and make the traveling public
safer. AWO is a partner with the NTSB and the Coast Guard in improving
marine transportation safety. We are committed to studying, learning
from and applying the lessons of this investigation for our industry.
In particular, AWO would be pleased to provide any assistance possible
with regard to the NTSB recommendation that the Coast Guard evaluate
the utility and effectiveness of wheelhouse alerter systems on inland
towing vessels for preventing accidents."
Since the I-40 accident, AWO has worked cooperatively with government
to understand the causes of barge/bridge accidents and take action
to make marine transportation safer. Highlights include:
- The Coast Guard-AWO Bridge Allision Working Group, established
immediately after the I-40 accident to study the frequency and
causes of towing vessel bridge accidents. The Working Group
report, released in May 2003, recommended a package of prevention
measures to improve bridge safety.
- A pilot project with the U.S. Coast Guard to implement
Crew Endurance Management systems as a means of improving
decision-making fitness and increasing safety levels on
towing vessels.
- Sample policies on Bridge Transit Safety and Operator
Incapacitation, developed by AWO safety experts for use
as tools for inland and coastal operations. AWO's Board
of Directors will vote in October to add requirements for
safe bridge transit and operator incapacitation procedures
to the AWO Responsible Carrier Program, a third-party-audited
safety management system with which all AWO members must
comply as a condition of membership in the association.
- The Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2004, signed
into law in August, which ushers in a historic change in towing
vessel regulation. This Coast Guard-proposed and AWO-supported
legislation establishes an inspection program for towing vessels
based on a safety management system. The new legislation is
directly responsive to a 2000 NTSB recommendation that the Coast
Guard seek legislative authority to require a safety management
system for towing vessels.
AWO is the national trade association for the inland and coastal
tugboat, towboat, and barge industry.
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The Tugboat, Towboat and Barge Industry Association |