The fishing vessel Pacific Producer arrived at its current location on August 29, according to a nearby home.
“This is a significant threat to the health and safety of our community and the surrounding environment,” said Melissa Malott, executive director of Community for a Healthy Bay, a Tacoma-based environmental advocacy nonprofit.
The 472-gross-ton, 169-foot-long vessel was built in 1946 and has operated in Alaskan waters until recently. Registered with East West Seafoods in Seattle.
An Occupational Safety and Health Administration investigation was opened in July, but was delayed when the ship left Alaska for Seattle. On Jan. 12, OSHA cited East West for 20 violations, 17 of which were classified as “serious.” He imposed fines of $208,983 with abatement requested by Feb. 23.
“Working in Alaska’s fishing industry — an occupation already considered one of the nation’s most dangerous — employees of the F/V Pacific Producer faced hazards created only by their employer,” OSHA said in a statement.
OSHA Acting Regional Administrator Jack Rector said fishing workers depend on their employer for strong safety protocols.
“For more than a decade, our inspectors have found disgusting and dangerous conditions aboard the F/V Pacific Producer, and the well-being of the vessel’s crew is at great risk due to the negligence of its owner,” Rector said. “This employer’s blatant and ongoing disregard for the crew aboard the F/V Pacific Producer must end before tragedy strikes. The US Department of Labor and its federal partners will use their full enforcement powers to hold East West Seafoods and Christos Tsabouris to federal workplace safety standards to be held accountable for gross negligence and contempt.”
The regulations cover a wide range of standards including respiratory protection, fire protection, exposed wiring. hazard communication and ship components. All of the violations were reported by East West on Feb. 9, according to OSHA.
“Inspectors found dark, brown water in the vessel’s drinking water system; crew members are served expired food; Water used for processing fish that flows into dry food and galley feed; and other unsanitary conditions throughout the vessel,” OSHA said.
The US Coast Guard confirmed on Friday that it had revoked the Pacific Producer’s certificate of compliance, halting the East West’s operation until repairs are made.
CONFUSED HISTORY
Violations and fines are not new for the company and its owner since 2012, Christos Tsabouris.
The ship has had similar OSHA violations since 2012, including sanitation, electrical, fire hazards and an ammonia leak in 2018.
In 2017, East West Seafoods was fined $50,000 in federal court for intentionally dumping oily and dirty water from the Pacific Producer bilge into the ocean off the coast of Alaska.
He then submitted false records to the US Coast Guard.
The spill violated the Ship Pollution Prevention Act, the Clean Water Act and the Waste Disposal Act, according to the Department of Justice.
East West Seafoods was placed on five years of probation and Tsabouris was fined $10,000 and sentenced to five years in prison.
In a brief phone interview Wednesday, Tsabouris said he could not move the boat “because of legal paperwork,” but denied any involvement in the OSHA violation.
“We’re still working on it, so we don’t have anything concrete yet,” he told The News Tribune.
Tsabouris, who said he lives in Tacoma, moved the boat to the Foss Waterway because he couldn’t find a mooring in Seattle. He said he plans to return to service as a seafood processor.
MOORED IN TACOMA
According to a tenant at the nearby Petrich Marine Dock, the vessel arrived there on August 7, smashed against a dock.
“There were 10 people on deck screaming at each other and then they came in too fast,” said Freddy Neumayer, who witnessed the arrival. “It was pandemonium.”
The Pacific Producer, a large fishing vessel shown on Tuesday, April 4, 2023, has been tied up at the old Martinac shipyards on the Thea Foss Waterway in Tacoma since August. The ship is 77 years old, nearly 200 feet long, and has a history of environmental and safety concerns and fines.
Marina owner and 20-year Tacoma Port Commissioner Clare Petrich said Tsabouris has yet to repair or pay for the damage. The Pacific Producer was docked at its dock for less than two weeks before returning to Commencement Bay, Neumayer said.
On August 29, the ship returned to the Foss Waterway, this time at the old JM Martinac Shipyard at 401 East 15th Street.
During the ship’s first visit to Fosse in August, the Pacific Producer’s antenna reportedly clipped the 11th Street Bridge. According to the city, inspector Chad Norman found no structural damage to the bridge during a later inspection.
THE ROLE OF THE CITY
The City of Tacoma does not regulate boat traffic; that is the jurisdiction of the state and the Coast Guard. The city regulates the installation of moorings and harbor infrastructure in accordance with its coastal code. That is what an inspector from the city’s Planning and Development Service attended on March 20.
The inspector found that an illegal floating dock had been added to the site, in violation of city code.
“Employees will coordinate with state agencies to work to correct the violations,” the City said in a statement. “The next steps would be to get the necessary permits for the floating docks/moorings or remove those docks.”
ECOLOGY
The State Department of Ecology has no jurisdiction over ships, except for sinkings, spills or discharges that may cause accidents. Sometimes they include the deliberate illegal dumping of fuel, oil, sewage and other fluids.
The agency is not proactively involved with the vessels, said Ty Keltner, a spokesman for the DOE’s emissions prevention program. Instead, the agency responds to reports of contamination.
“We can’t proactively ban someone or take some kind of action just because they’re there,” Keltner said.
DOE is aware of the illegal dock installed for Pacific Producer, DOE spokesman Jeff Zenk said.
“We will provide technical assistance and support to the city of Tacoma,” Zenk said. “The city of Tacoma would be the one to enforce that.”
According to Secretary of State records, East West last filed as a corporation in November 2021. The office stated that the annual report was due on March 1, 2023. East West has a history of late annual reports. at least 2018
East West’s business address is a private mailbox rental service in Seattle.
Pacific Producers has been raising concerns with Communities for a Healthy Bay since the vessel’s arrival in August. The group said it notified the U.S. Coast Guard and the city of its concerns.
“It is important that the authorities take action and remove the vessel from our waters before it causes further damage,” Malott said.
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