Grain barge set adrift intentionally, authorities say
Published 5:00 pm Monday, September 9, 2013
PORTLAND (AP) Someone apparently intentionally set adrift a loaded grain barge on the Columbia River Friday night that was to be unloaded at a terminal that has locked out longshoremen, U.S. Coast Guard officials said Monday.
The crew of a passing tug happened on the 252-foot-long barge, which was floating unlit and unmanned near a staging area between Portland and Vancouver. Tidewater Barge Lines Inc. staff members had reported the 42-foot-wide barge missing at about 10 p.m. Friday. The Lori B tug towed the barge back to a staging area near Hayden Island where it had been moored.
A Tidewater employee said ratchets used to hold the barge in place appeared to have been intentionally loosened, according to a Coast Guard news release. A longshore union spokeswoman said the union had nothing to do with it.
If in fact it was intentional, thats an extremely serious act of recklessness, said Capt. Bruce Jones, commander of the Coast Guards Columbia River sector. It could have endangered a lot of people or caused a collision or resulted in some environmental damage.
The fact that Barge 550 was loaded with grain destined for the locked-out elevators is also significant because it shows that tugboat companies have found a way around longshore picket lines. Columbia River tugs are typically crewed by union members affiliated with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union.
Until recently, two Portland and Vancouver grain terminals that have locked out longshoremen in a yearlong labor dispute had received grain solely by rail. But now, Tidewater and Shaver Transportation Co. deliver barges to two staging areas, where grain-elevator companies arrange to retrieve them.
Coast Guard officials said they didnt know whether Tidewater originally intended to deliver Barge 550 to United Grain Corp. in Vancouver or Columbia Grain Inc. in Portland. A Tidewater spokeswoman did not return calls for comment Monday.
The barge was found floating near the navigation channel used by large vessels, according to the Coast Guard, which is responsible for policing shipping channels.
Intentionally causing damage to a vessel or its cargo is a crime punishable by a fine and imprisonment for up to 20 years, the Coast Guard release said.
Coast Guard officials said anyone with information about the incident should contact Sector Columbia River Command Center watchstanders in Warrenton at 503-861-6211.
Jennifer Sargent, a longshore union spokeswoman, said strikebreaking companies often try to malign workers during labor disputes. The manner in which the barge broke free from the dock is
pure speculation until the investigation concludes, Sargent wrote in an e-mail, and the employers
private security and strikebreaking firm should be as closely examined
as anyone else during that process.
Sargent noted that last week, a Clark County prosecutor declined to press charges against Vancouver longshore local official Todd Walker, who was accused by United Grain in March of sabotaging operations at the terminal. The prosecutor concluded that the companys video failed to prove a crime had occurred, she said.
The company had used that one fabricated allegation to justify locking out an entire local workforce, Sargent said.
But Pat McCormick, a spokesman for the grain handlers, said Monday that, We remain convinced the the video evidence shows Mr. Walker attempting to sabotage critical operating equipment last December, and the civil case against Mr. Walker will now move forward….
Anyone with information about the incident should contact Sector Columbia River Command Center in Warrenton at 503-861-6211.