'We are basically flying blind': B.C. mariner says broken weather stations making his job more dangerous - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 01:07 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

'We are basically flying blind': B.C. mariner says broken weather stations making his job more dangerous

Prince Rupert mariner Sasha Gilbert says the stations, which are run by Environment Canada and maintained by the coast guard, are not providing the information people need to stay safe on the ocean.

Stations are run by Environment Canada and maintenance performed by coast guard

Lucy Islands Lightstation is on the northwest coast of B.C. and is one of three weather reporting stations Prince Rupert mariner Sascha Gilbert says is not operating as it should. (www.env.gov.bc.ca)

A career mariner from Prince Rupert, B.C., says three area automatic weather reporting stations operated by Environment Canada are currently broken and it is making his job more dangerous than it needs to be.

Sascha Gilbert, who primarily provides water taxi service to and from shipswithin Prince Rupert anchorage, said the Lucy Islands Lightstation and Grey Islet stationhave been not working properly for almost a year and recently a third station, located at Holland Rock, also stopped functioning properly.

The stations, which are meant to provide up-to-the minute marine weather, are operated by Environment Canada and maintained by the coast guard.

In a statement, Environment Canada said it knewabout wind sensor problems in April of 2019 on Lucy Island and on Grey Islet in February2019.

The statement says the battery has been intermittent on Holland Rock since Dec.19, 2019, and should resume normal functioning once the solar panel sufficiently recharges the battery.

Mariner Sascha Gilbert says there are currently three weather reporting stations out of service off the coast near Prince Rupert, which is a busy international port. (rupertport.com)

According to the department, all three stations will be repaired between Feb. 17 and 21.

Gilbert says stations should befixed for safety's sake when they breakand not months after the fact.

"They are visited once a year for maintenance. We find that they go down much more often than that and end up being offline until the next scheduled maintenance visit."

Information critical for safety

And in his line of work, Gilbert says knowing what the conditions are on the ocean iscritical.

"The waves can be as much as sixmetres in height.We will have wind speeds that are of higher value than what was reported or forecasted and we will also often have weather that comes up sooner than expected," said Gilbert.

He said without a steady stream of current information, he has to rely on weather forecasting which he says can be aguessing game and not always accurate.

"We are basically flying blind.We have no idea what to expect when we get out there," said Gilbert.

On Environment Canada's website, there is currently no reported information about conditions or visibility from Lucy Islands Lightstation, Grey Isletor Holland Rock.

Prince Rupert major deep sea port

The Port of Prince Rupert is the deepest natural harbour in North America and almost 30 million tonnes of cargo moved through the port in 2019, according to its website.

"Prince Rupert is a busy international port. It is vital for us to have an accurate reporting system,"said Gilbert.

The province announced it's giving Prince Rupert $65 million in funding for the port city's aging water system.
The expansion of the Fairview container terminal at the Port of Prince Rupert makes it the second-largest container handling facility in Canada, trailing only Delta, B.C. (Prince Rupert Port Authority)

Environment Canada says it is currently working to confirm when the three outages occurred.

The department said in a statement that it's meteorologists use a variety of tools for severe weather detection and prediction. This includes weather radar, weather buoys, satellite images, surface weather stations, lightning detectors and sophisticated computer models.

With files from Matt Allen