BIMCO Article Sept 2009
BIMCO Article Sept 2009
BIMCO Article Sept 2009
The survey found that the lack of a current US visa was by far the greatest hindrance to shore leave, the sample noting that out of more than 800 seafarers reporting denial,
more than 600 had experienced visa problems. The concern over swine flu had also led to a number of denials, at a time when globally this was a major issue. But the
survey also pointed to a number of continuing problems, where proprietors of shore side facilities, such as oil terminals made in exceedingly difficult for either seafarers to
get ashore, or for people with a legitimate requirement to board ships, to do so.
There were also reports of excessive charges for transport or escorts to conduct people between ship and gates and some evidence that considerable effort was being
made to deter movement between ship and shore, through imposition of bureaucratic barriers or simple inconvenience. The survey also seemed to infer that US seafarers
were almost as much affected as foreign seafarers.
Notably, although the survey only lasted for a week in May, it was discovered that requirement for the new US Transport Worker Identification Credential did not seem to be
reported as a problem by those wishing to board ships. The ability of foreign seafarers to obtain US visas is, by contrast, a problem that will not go away and remains
particularly acute for those who are not regular traders to the US or whose ships might engage in spot voyages to US ports, where they arrive without visas.
For some time it has been suggested by seafarers’ organisations and others that “security” has been seized upon by many facility operators to merely opt out of any
provisions to assist those wishing to leave and board ships. A complete denial, it is suggested, is so much easier and cheaper to implement.
The seafarers’ dilemma has clearly been recognised by the US Coast Guard, with its Commandant Admiral Thad Allan taking an increasingly tough line with ports and
facilities which make no provision for ship/shore access. He has now written to his force of Port Captains instructing them to reject the port facility security plans which
require to be submitted to the USCG, if they do not make proper provision for ship/shore access. The Commandant has been increasingly sympathetic to the concerns
expressed by seafarers and by industry organisations such as BIMCO, which has used its high level contacts to point out the problems shore leave denial causes to the
welfare and convenience of visiting seafarers. It is hoped that the latest and stronger stance by the Commandant will make a difference to those facilities which continue to
make the lives of seafarers and others unnecessarily difficult.
Articles written by the Watchkeeper and other outside contributors do not necessarily reflect the views or policy of BIMCO.
https://www.bimco.org/Members%20Area/News/General_News/2009/10/14_Watchkeep... 10/24/2009