The sinking of the fishing boat Alaska Ranger, which took the lives of five of the 47 people aboard, was probably caused by an old and poorly maintained hull, according to a new Coast Guard report. The March, 2008, accident occurred off the coast of Alaska.
The Coast Guard report said that Fishing Company of Alaska, the ship’s owner, consistently failed to address a series of structural problems with the hull. The investigation also concluded that the flooding that led to the ship’s sinking should have been contained in the rudder room, where it began, but a lack of necessary watertight integrity allowed it to spread.
In addition to blaming the Fishing Company of Alaska, the report also criticized a safety program operated by the Coast Guard since 2006 aimed at improving the fleet of fishing boats that drop their nets near the coast of Alaska. Saying it lacked effective enforcement, the report called for the program to be suspended.
“There were a few people in the field trying to make a positive impact but without the resources and technical expertise to make it work properly,” said Capt. Mike Rand, a former Coast Guard officer who led the investigation, according to the Seattle Times.
The Alaska Ranger was subjected to an examination under the regional safety program in 2007, but the inspector failed to notice problems with the hull.
The safety initiative aims to alleviate the constant dangers in the fishing industry, especially off the coast of Alaska. Commercial fishing is often ranked as the most dangerous profession in the United States, with 133 industry workers dying within 200 miles of the Alaska shoreline from 2000 to 2009.


