Workers inspect damage to the bottom of a tower on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, Jan. 7, 2013, after an empty oil tanker ship, Overseas Reymar, struck it.(Photo: Jeff Chiu, AP)
SAN FRANCISCO -- Coast Guard investigators on Tuesday plan to
interview the pilot of an empty tanker that struck a tower in the middle
of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge while navigating beneath the
hulking span.
The 752-foot Overseas Reymar rammed the tower on
Monday afternoon as it headed out to sea, according to the Coast Guard
and state transportation officials.
The unidentified pilot will
also report to the state Board of Pilot Commissioners, which will
conduct its own investigation of the accident. That board regulates bar
pilots.
The pilot has been a San Francisco bar pilot since 2005,
said Charlie Goodyear, a spokesman for the San Francisco Bar Pilots
Association. The association did not release his name.
Coast Guard
spokesman Shawn Lansing said the pilot and others on board during the
accident will be tested for drug and alcohol use "per federal
regulations."
Lansing said investigators will inspect the hull
above and below the water line and are exploring possible factors.
Visibility at the time was about a quarter-mile, but officials didn't
say if that was a factor.
"There's always the human factor," Lansing said.
Lansing
said the ship's double hull wasn't breached, and state officials said
the bridge sustained minor damage but remained opened immediately after
the accident. The crash damaged 30 to 40 feet of "fender" material that
will need to be replaced.
Monday's incident brought back memories
of a major crash in 2007 that spilled 53,000 gallons of oil into the
bay. The 902-foot Cosco Busan rammed the bridge in November 2007 and
spilled 53,000 gallons of oil into the San Francisco Bay.
That
accident contaminated 26 miles of shoreline, killed more than 2,500
birds and delayed the start of the crab-fishing season. Capt. John Cota,
the pilot of the Cosco Busan, was sentenced to 10 months in prison
after pleading guilty to two misdemeanors.
The mishap Monday did not affect traffic on the busy bridge - the main artery between San Francisco and Oakland.
The
parent company that owns the Marshall Islands-registered ship, OSG Ship
Management Inc., said the accident occurred as the vessel hit an
underwater portion of the massive bridge structure. The Overseas Reymar
was not carrying oil as cargo on Monday, only fuel to power its engines,
said Goodyear.
The Coast Guard said no oil or hazardous materials
were reported to have leaked into the water. Still, officials spread
4,000 feet of absorbent material on the water to be safe.
No crew members on the ship were injured, and its hull appeared to suffer some scrapes and minor indentations, Goodyear added.
"There's
all kinds of speculation as to whether the ship had been pushed into
the fender by a strong tide, rather than a head-on collision," Goodyear
said. "In comparing this to 2007, this appears to be a much lesser
impact."
The crew of the Overseas Reymar reported no loss of
steering or propulsion, and initial investigations showed no water leaks
from any of the ballast tanks, said Darrell Wilson, a spokesman for
OSG.
"The ship's crew safely anchored the vessel and made all proper notifications to the authorities," Wilson said.
California Emergency Management Agency spokesman Jordan Scott said the superstructure of the bridge was fine.
"There
is some damage to the vessel, but nothing that poses a danger to
anybody," Scott said. "A fire boat is out there to make sure it stays
that way, and it should."
The tower of the bridge appeared to be
fine from a distance, added California Department of Transportation
spokesman Bart Ney. A fender system made of steel and wooden timbers was
built onto the west span to absorb such strikes, he said.
Investigators
have not yet said why the crash occurred. The tanker docked west of
Yerba Buena Island immediately following the crash.
State law
requires a bar pilot to guide every large vessel - be it a luxury liner,
a billionaire's yacht, aircraft carrier or cargo ship - in, out and
around the San Francisco Bay.
The pilots' role came under intense
scrutiny in the crash of the Cosco Busan. The companies responsible for
the Cosco Busan paid close to $60 million for the cleanup and in
criminal fines.
Associated Press