Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fuel-laden barge drops anchor after it was adrift of B.C.'s central coast

Darpan News Desk, 27 Nov, 2017 10:26 AM

    Officials say conditions off British Columbia's central coast improved overnight, slightly easing concerns about a loaded fuel barge that broke away from its tug southwest of Bella Bella.

    Katelyn Moores of the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Victoria says another tug, the Gulf Cajun, was preparing to take the 128-metre barge under tow.

    The barge was originally identified by the centre as the United States registered Jake Shearer, but Moores says that is the name of the tug that was pushing the barge through Queen Charlotte Sound when it broke free.

    Moores says the barge is the Zidell Marine 277, also registered in the U.S., and it is loaded with 3.5 million litres of diesel and 468,000 litres of gasoline.

    She says two crew members from the Jake Shearer were able to board it, despite strong winds and rough seas on Sunday.

    They dropped the barge's anchor off Goose Island.

    The rescue co-ordination centre says winds have eased to about 37 kilometres per hour, with two-metre swells.

    Tweets from members of the nearby Heiltsuk Nation say improved conditions were a relief but the band's members continued to monitor the situation.

    Heiltsuk spokeswoman Jess Housty posted messages on social media saying they were responding with their best people and experience from last year's sinking of the Nathan E. Stewart, which spilled 110,000 litres of diesel.

    "Reminder that a positive resolution, while desperately hoped for, will not make the horror of this unnecessary event irrelevant. Change is needed," Housty tweeted about the latest situation.

    Moores said two Canadian Coast Guard vessels were at the scene.

    A B.C. Environment Ministry spokesman said because there hasn't been a spill, federal officials were leading the response.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Word-Flipping Victoria Boy Gets William Shatner's Support For Invented Word

    Word-Flipping Victoria Boy Gets William Shatner's Support For Invented Word
    When six-year-old Levi Budd saw the word stop on a sign, he created the word pots. Before long, he was imagining words backwards and coming up with rats from star and pets from step.

    Word-Flipping Victoria Boy Gets William Shatner's Support For Invented Word

    UBC Denies Mishandling Sex Assault Complaints In Response To Human Rights Cases

    The University of British Columbia has denied mishandling sexual assault reports in documents filed with the province's human rights tribunal.

    UBC Denies Mishandling Sex Assault Complaints In Response To Human Rights Cases

    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Opens Up About Getting Lost, Injured In New Mexico Desert

    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Opens Up About Getting Lost, Injured In New Mexico Desert
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister choked up Tuesday as he recounted a harrowing night in the New Mexico desert that left him lost, wandering and with a broken arm.

    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister Opens Up About Getting Lost, Injured In New Mexico Desert

    Doctors At Royal Columbian Hospital Hospital Question Why Police Eavesdrop On Suspects In ER

    Doctors At Royal Columbian Hospital Hospital Question Why Police Eavesdrop On Suspects In ER
    Doctors at Royal Columbian Hospital in New Westminster have complained that local police and RCMP officers are routinely recording conversations without consent between doctors and patients who are considered a suspect in a crime.

    Doctors At Royal Columbian Hospital Hospital Question Why Police Eavesdrop On Suspects In ER

    Body Of Quebec Man, Missing For 2 Weeks In California, Found By A Family Member

    Body Of Quebec Man, Missing For 2 Weeks In California, Found By A Family Member
    According to police in Arcata, the body of 25-year-old Felix Desautels-Poirier was found in a marsh in a city park by a member of his family.

    Body Of Quebec Man, Missing For 2 Weeks In California, Found By A Family Member

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations
    OTTAWA — A report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives recommends that payments to shareholders such as dividends and share buybacks by companies should be limited if their pension plans are underfunded.

    CCPA Report Calls For Expansion Of Pension Regulations