Meeting scheduled to take place next week on Nantucket was moved to the Vineyard.
Jeanna Shepard

Amid Growing Uproar, SSA Moves Meeting to the Vineyard

<p>With growing uproar over problems that continue to plague the Steamship Authority, the monthly meeting has been switched to the Vineyard.</p>

Amid growing uproar over the problems that continue to plague the Steamship Authority, the boat line’s monthly meeting next week has been switched to the Vineyard as governors take up the thorny question of how best to right the ship.

The meeting was scheduled to be held on Nantucket Tuesday. But at the urging of Vineyard governor Marc Hanover, it was changed to the high school Performing Arts Center from 4 to 6 p.m. There are only two items on the agenda: a proposal by management to improve operations, and public comment.

Meeting scheduled to take place next week on Nantucket was moved to the Vineyard.
Jeanna Shepard
Meeting scheduled to take place next week on Nantucket was moved to the Vineyard.
Jeanna Shepard

Mr. Hanover said he will renew his call for an outside independent review of boat line operations.

The SSA has been crippled on and off since March by a long and unprecedented spate of mechanical breakdowns and disruptions in service on the Vineyard route. In April it appeared that the problems had been solved.

Then last weekend the ferry Martha’s Vineyard broke down again. The ferry lost power while pulling out of the slip in Woods Hole for the 5 p.m. trip to Vineyard Haven and was forced to drop anchor near Red Ledge. The Coast Guard was called and service was disrupted on both sides for about three hours while boat line crews scrambled to pull the Martha’s Vineyard back into the slip. More problems followed due to a shortage of available slips in Woods Hole, where a major $60 million terminal reconstruction project is under way.

The problem on the ferry was later tracked to a clogged fuel generator, SSA general manager Bob Davis said. The Martha’s Vineyard has been experiencing problems ever since her return this winter from a $17 million mid-life refurbishment at Senesco Marine in Rhode Island.

On Sunday morning the ferry cleared sea trials and was back in service again. On Monday she briefly lost power again on the 1:15 p.m. trip out of Vineyard Haven, although this time there was no loss in propulsion.

For Islanders the problems have begun to add up to widespread concern and loss of confidence in the boat line that is their lifeline.

“It’s out of control,” declared Mr. Hanover.

Early in the week a Facebook page titled Save Our Steamship Authority sprang up and attracted hundreds of followers.

A Gazette community opinion survey launched Wednesday afternoon received nearly 1,700 responses by press time Thursday. (To take the survey, click here.)

The question of whether to hire an outside consultant has so far seen resistance from other members of the boat line board and senior managers, who have acknowledged the problems but believe they can be handled internally.

Staff report indicated 549 ferries cancelled because of mechanical problems so far this year.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Staff report indicated 549 ferries cancelled because of mechanical problems so far this year.
Mark Alan Lovewell

Meanwhile, a staff report circulated this week among board members highlights the growing crisis and outlines a plan by Mr. Davis to improve operations, as an alternative to a costly proposal submitted by McKinsey and Company last month.

The McKinsey proposal and its $500,000 price tag is also detailed for the first time in the staff report.

The report includes numbers tracking the number of ferry cancellations from 2014 through the first four months of this year.

From January through April, the SSA saw 549 ferries cancelled because of mechanical problems — more than triple the number of breakdowns in the four previous years combined.

In total, the boat line saw 870 ferry trips cancelled on the Vineyard route between January and April because of mechanical breakdowns, weather issues and end-of-day freight trips that were not needed.

By comparison, in all of 2017 there were 484 cancellations, 26 due to mechanical breakdowns. A total of 148 ferries were cancelled for mechanical reasons from 2014 through 2017.

“I think the numbers speak for themselves,” Mr. Hanover said. “It’s clear we have a huge problem and it needs to be corrected.”

Written by Mr. Davis, the 14-page staff report acknowledges the many problems — including a communications system that is outmoded and unwieldy — and describes a complicated plan to solve them.

Apart from the extreme number of cancellations on the Vineyard route this year, an analysis also found an increasing pattern of cancellations due to weather conditions. As a result, new reporting procedures have been put in place for captains and terminal agents to keep better track of delays and cancellations.

The report also outlines a plan to improve communications, beginning with the hiring of a new communications director, who will be responsible for both developing and carrying out a comprehensive “improvement plan” to the SSA’s communications system.

Until the new communications director is in place, an array of staff responsibilities will be reassigned internally to better manage communication, including updates on the website, travel advisories and email alerts.

The report paints a picture of a cumbersome internal system for getting information out to the public. For example, during the most recent incident in Woods Hole last Saturday, the SSA website was not updated to advise the public until an hour and a half later. According to the report: “This delay was partly attributable to the general manager’s need to focus first on getting to Woods Hole . . . and also the result of emails sent from the general manager’s smart phone not being delivered (which was only corrected after the smart phone was rebooted) or ending up in other staff members’ spam firewalls (which the system did not report until 8 a.m. Sunday); but approximately ten minutes of the delay was because staff did not post the travel advisory until it was approved by the general manager . . .”

Oak Bluffs selectmen backed Vineyard governor Marc Hanover's call for outside review.
Timothy Johnson
Oak Bluffs selectmen backed Vineyard governor Marc Hanover's call for outside review.
Timothy Johnson

The report concludes: “More progress needs to be made in getting information to the public as quickly as possible.”

The report also describes an internal system where terminal agents and ticket sellers are responsible for posting the current status of trips and standby lines on the SSA website. “Whenever there is a service disruption of the magnitude experienced this past Saturday, the terminal agents and ticket sellers are immediately occupied with an entire array of serious customer service issues, which may cause them to forget to update the Authority’s website,” the report says in part.

A new communications and operations center is proposed that would be housed in the new administration building off Palmer avenue in Falmouth.

The report also proposes working with the Martha’s Vineyard Chamber of Commerce and hosting a public forum on the Vineyard to hear suggestions from Islanders.

At their regular meeting this week, the Oak Bluffs selectmen voted to send a letter to the SSA backing Mr. Hanover in his call for an outside review.

“I really think we should support Marc,” selectman Mike Santoro said. “We have a management in the SSA, they’re afraid, obviously to have a consultant come in.”

Cape and Islands Rep. Dylan Ferndandes and Sen. Julian Cyr added their own call for action in a letter to Mr. Davis. “The Steamship Authority’s failure to solve problems with maintenance and operations, as well as its lack of transparent communication, has become a significant and ongoing concern,” they wrote.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 05/10/2018 - 21:08

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It's easy to see Martha's Vineyard

I can not fathom that we haven't publicly discussed the potential of employee tampering (sabotage).
Is the SSA in the midst of union negotiations? Let's look and talk about that angle.

VH Villager Vineyard Haven

Great point! In this day and age of corruption, it’s not unlikely. The most obvious tell is their resistance to McKinsey coming in and exposing the problems to fix. I applaud Mr. Hanover for the honesty and willingness to expose the truth.

Thomas Hodgson WT

"Sabotage" is a pretty conspiracy-theory notion. "Whoa if true", and all that, but is highly unlikely. To blame employees is a distraction, and is not fair, when you consider that it's more appropriate that management should be held responsible for this "cluster" of events. When looking for answer, simpler is usually better. Try answers like "bad management", "crappy job at the shipyard", "bad run of luck", "poor (to nonexistent) planning"...the list goes on and on. SSA management prefers to operate out of the limelight, and to run their little fiefdom as they please. This meeting is a great opportunity to hold their feet to the fire.,

Curious

", "bad run of luck" is not an explanation.
Such an obvious statistical anomaly demands that one look everywhere for answers and not prejudge what could and what could not be possible. The latter attitude is totally unscientific. It may be that sabotage of some kind is actually the simplest hypothesis. How could one know in advance with out looking?????

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 02:34

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Sam MV

OUTSIDE CONSULTANT ASAP! I cannot believe this is happening.... Hopefully Rep Ferndandes and Sen Cyr will step up and help us.... This is the most important issue on the Island and not one of our elected officials have stepped up?????

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 06:50

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GM Boston

Very sad state of affairs. At the very least complete incompetence, which should require resignations ASAP. Sure, bring in consultants, but it does not take another layperson to see what is obviously a lack of leadership.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 07:22

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Tim OB

Good job Mr. Hanover get them to have independent audit of all business transactions ...we need this. The ship will sail again!
Thank you
Tim

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 07:31

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Curious

From a purely statistical point of view, this series of failures doesn't look like a random series of events. BTW, what is a "fuel generator" and what is its function on the ferry? A google search didn't provide any hits that seemed relevant to a large vessel such as a ferry.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 07:43

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John Cyril Chilmark

The SSA management should bring in outside consulting before the state decides to do it. Once our legislators get involved the problem will never get solved..
The new technologies in the newest boats may be “state of the art”, but why don’t we have technical staff onboard trained to handle that technology?
I am sure management had good intentions when buying fancy technologies from the low bidder, however we will end up paying much more for refitted technology after the fact. We need outside consulting to guide the solutions. If it turns out that sabotage is part of the problems, I pray that the saboteurs end up in prison for many years. Bring in independent counsel now!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 07:55

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JOSII

I understand that the chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has recently retired. He's a summer visitor to the Vineyard and would be an ideal choice as a consultant since he could be a fair and neutral voice. He must know the island and is certainly eminently qualified.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 08:14

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Anne Edgartown

Bridge...BRidge...BRIdge...BRIDge...BRIDGe...BRIDGE...BRIDGE!

Problem solved for all of us.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 08:15

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Hmmm Oak Bluffs

I guess an expensive consultant is now needed to listen to everyone's theory on the issues and provide a plan. If it is wrong, the Consultant will be blamed thus the $500K. Given the height of the issue now, no one is going to change anything given the severity of the situation and the wrath they will incur if they are mistaken. It is much easier to blame the Consultant and use them (or their report) to negotiate with the union.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 08:16

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AB OB

I'm not connected to any employee at the SSA. I would be very surprised if there have been any employees tampering with the boats. I think we should hold off on any accusations until a thorough investigation is completed. It's too easy to start rumors on this Island.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 08:17

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charlie callahan so boston/edgartown

That's it genius, blame the hard workers for the problems, not the incompetents running the show.Typical vineyard type snobs

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 10:39

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Jake OB

The common thread in all ferry breakdowns? The work was done at Senesco Marine. That's where a (federal?) investigation should begin. SSA should withhold any remaining payments due to Senesco until it's know if they're the root cause of all these mechanical issues.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 11:04

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john edgartown

where are our elected officials? no one from the island or state government seems to be doing anything for the citizens who elected them.

Kelly Edgartown

Great Question??? I put a call into the LT governor and Govenors office... both said they have been getting a lot of calls.
The SSA is a disaster and such a old boy network. Just watch the meetings... what is there plan if this happens in August?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 11:35

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Scott Prescott South carolina

They never should have got rid of the Islander.That proud ship worked the islands for over 50 years.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 14:36

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Chris OB/NY

Regardless of whether there is sabatoge or not (although we saw this in NY with sanitation during a blizzard), regardless of whether it is incompetence on the part of whatever company is “fixing” the problems, regardless of whether SSA does not have its own mechanics trained in fixing these new ferries, regardless of whether the communications system is a disaster, the serious question should be, do we allow one authority, a total monopoly, run the ferries exclusively? Without competition you have no say, no recourse, no way to hold anyone accountable. They own the ships, own the docks, own the crew and own all of us. A bridge does not seem even remotely realistic, but couldn’t there be another car ferry company? Surely, it would make sense, especially during the summer. If SSA knew there was another option for travelers, they would undoubtedly not let failures keep recurring. But, when your the only game in town, you control the show. Unacceptable.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 17:31

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Jim m Oak Bluffs

Questions for the upcoming meeting,who are the SSA Bond Holders,what is the status of the SSA Seaman's Pension Funds,past and present,incredulous Captain, my kind of Guy.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 19:58

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R Scott Patterson Edgartown

There must be an independent investigation/audit/review of the SSA, an internal report is unacceptable! I don't trust them as far as I can toss them.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/11/2018 - 20:35

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fred Tisbury

question to ask, why was the katama in slip 3 getting its generator replaced, when we have purchased a repqir yard in fairhaven for this type of work. Had the katama not been in woods hole the broken marthas vineyard could have gone in slip 3 and the two working boats would have had a slip to work out of with out to much delay.
that management mistake cost the islanders thousands, if a football coach blew a game like that we would be asking for his head.
just saying

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 05/12/2018 - 00:55

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trip barnes Vineyard Haven,

FBI COULD TAKE A LOOK AT THE BREAKDOWNS SOME ONE MIGHT BE UP TO NO GOOD ENOUGH SAID

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 05/12/2018 - 01:36

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Christine Powers Waltham

For once, I am glad that I have no plans or reservations to travel to the Island this summer. I suffer from Multiple Sclerosis, so the SSA trips sound like a nightmare for a disabled person confined to a walker!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 05/15/2018 - 08:32

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Paolo Aquinnah

What jumps out at me is SSA has taken its eye off the ball, so to speak. Too many projects at the same time, new admin building, new ticket office, new slips, and major renovation of one ship.

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