Grounded tanker raises issue of federal watch on foreign flagged ships:mariners
Veteran mariners are questioning why a tanker that operated in calm harbours was permitted to attempt a winter crossing of the Gulf of St. Lawrence waters, as plans continued Thursday to pull the grounded ship off a sandy Cape Breton bottom.
Coast guard officials are optimistic a second towing attempt expected on the weekend will shift the double-hulled Arca 1 — which holds 15 tonnes of its own fuel.
However, with memories still fresh of the taxpayer-funded cleanup of the MV Miner — which broke free from a tow line and ran aground in 2011 off Cape Breton — seafarers’ advocates argue the incident shows Canada must tighten oversight of foreign flagged vessels travelling its coasts.
Patrice Caron of the Seafarers International Union says when he worked aboard the Arca 1 in the early 1990s, it wasn’t intended to make the crossing of the often wild waters northeast of Cape Breton’s coast.


