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                  <text>APRIL
F E B 2014
RUARY

2014

						

VOLUME
VOLUME
7 6 o 76
N NO.
O . 42

USNS John Glenn Delivered; Construction
Starts on LNG-Powered TOTE Containership
The SIU recently welcomed new tonnage into the Seafarers-contracted fleet, and more is
on the way. In mid-March, the U.S. Navy took delivery of the SIU-crewed USNS John Glenn
(photo at left), a mobile landing platform operated by Ocean Shipholdings for the Military
Sealift Command. Earlier, construction started on the world’s first LNG-powered containership, which also will be operated by an SIU-contracted company (TOTE, Inc.). Pictured at a
ceremony for the containership (photo immediately below, from left) are Peter Keller, executive VP of TOTE; Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.); Walter Tschernkowitsch, manager, General
Dynamics NASSCO Steel Dept.; and Duncan Hunter, Congressman Hunter’s son who did
the honors of making the first cut of steel on TOTE’s new Marlin-class hull #495. The remaining image below is an artist’s rendering of the TOTE vessel. (Ship images courtesy General
Dynamics NASSCO) Page 3.

Crowley Crews Deliver
SIU boatmen teamed up in early March to deliver equipment that’s
now part of a large, floating production facility located about 280 miles
south of New Orleans. Part of the operation is pictured in the photo at
right. A closer photo of one of the tugs, the Ocean Wave, is provided
below. Page 3

Senators Back Jones Act
Page 5

‘Deep Freeze’ Photos
Pages 12-13

Not Too Late to Donate a Brick
Page 20

�Obama Announces Nominees for Posts
At USTRANSCOM, U.S. Coast Guard

President’s Report
Stop the Madness
An old comic strip once featured an expression which over the years
has far transcended the combined circulations of all the newspapers that
carried it: “We have met the enemy, and he is us!”
That line from a Pogo comic gained more prominence a year or two
later when it was used to promote environmental stewardship in the early
1970s, a practice that’s far more common today. But
when I think of that expression, it calls to mind a current issue in our nation’s capital that severely harms
efforts to bring more jobs back home and keep them
here.
Why in the world are we giving tax breaks to corporations that send jobs overseas?
At the most recent meeting of the AFL-CIO
executive council, on which I have represented our
union’s interests since 1991, we tackled this subject
and came up with a straightforward strategy to stop
Michael Sacco
the bleeding. (If your eyes are starting to glaze over at
the thought of reading about tax laws, remember that
the real issue here is American jobs. Read on.)
The heart of the problem is that U.S.-based businesses have hoodwinked legislators and administrations into believing they need outsourcing tax breaks to be “competitive.” Over the years, they’ve managed to get
laws rewritten so that their income generated overseas is taxed at lower
rates than what’s produced at home.
If that’s not an incentive to outsource American jobs, nothing is.
Of course, their approach isn’t that blatant. It’s sugarcoated and misleading, in the same way that proponents of so-called right-to-work laws
hide behind that misnomer. After all, who could be against the right
to work? But, as we know, that’s not what those laws are about, at all.
They’re about driving down wages, benefits and working conditions as
well as dividing workers.
Back to the subject at hand. When businesses claim they need these
kinds of tax breaks, their argument confuses the interests of multinational
corporations with the interests of people who live and work in America,
which is the proper concern of elected officials. And when they get rewarded for outsourcing, it feeds an international race to the bottom.
We heard a report during the executive council meeting that pointed out
corporate profits today are at all-time highs, yet the corporate share of federal tax revenues has fallen more than 60 percent in the last 50 years. What
this means is that big corporations have gamed the system so that working
families’ tax dollars actually subsidize taking away American jobs.
If this seems ridiculous, you should know that not everyone feels it’s
out of line. In fact, Congress is now considering several proposals that
would increase the tax incentive for corporations to shift employment and
income overseas.
Those considerations include allowing corporations to indefinitely
“defer” paying taxes on offshore profits; dramatically reducing or completely eliminating U.S. taxes on offshore corporate profits; and a “minimum international tax,” which is basically what the name suggests.
It doesn’t have to be that way, it shouldn’t be that way, and there are a
few relatively simple steps that will restore fairness. The American people
want a system that rewards those who produce and employ here, not
those who abandon America. That’s why the labor movement stands for
a simple and clear standard: The tax laws must not in any way encourage
investment in foreign countries rather than the United States.
That means the offshore profits of U.S. corporations must be taxed at
the same rate and at the same time as their domestic profits.  There is no
economic or political justification for giving corporations a tax incentive
to shift jobs and income overseas. While part of our industry is based on
moving goods overseas, there’s no way we will stand for jobs moving
overseas.
It’s time to invest in America. It’s time to restore our social contract,
and to recognize that workers deserve to share in the profits they help generate. It’s time to stop treating American workers as if they’re disposable.
Through our affiliation with the AFL-CIO, the SIU will continue this
fight until we’ve won.
FEBRUARY 2014

VOLUME 76

Volume 76 Number 4

o

NO. 2

April 2014

The SIU online: www.seafarers.org
The Seafarers LOG (ISSN 1086-4636) is published monthly by the
Seafarers International Union; Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes and Inland Waters,
AFL-CIO; 5201 Auth Way; Camp Springs, MD 20746. Telephone (301)
899-0675. Periodicals postage paid at Southern Maryland 20790-9998.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the Seafarers LOG, 5201 Auth
Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746.
Communications Director, Jordan Biscardo; Managing Editor/Production, Jim Guthrie; Assistant Editor,
Brian Ahern; Photographer, Harry Gieske; Administrative Support, Misty Dobry; Content Curator, Mark Clements.
Copyright © 2014 Seafarers International Union, AGLIW. All Rights
Reserved.

The Seafarers International Union
engaged an environmentally friendly
printer for the production of this
newspaper.

Change is coming in the leadership of two government organizations vital to the SIU and maritime
industry.
President Barack Obama announced recently
his nominations to replace Gen. William Fraser as
commander of the U.S. Transportation Command
(USTRANSCOM) and Adm. Robert Papp as U.S.
Coast Guard Commandant. Both posts have a large
impact on American maritime interests, including
the U.S. Merchant Marine.
For USTRANSCOM, Obama selected Air Force
Gen. Paul Selva, current commander of Air Mobility Command. For the Coast Guard, Obama picked
Vice Adm. Paul Zukunft, commander of U.S. Coast
Guard Pacific Area.
Selva testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee during his confirmation hearing
March 11. In his
testimony, Selva
emphasized the
importance of the
U.S. Merchant
Marine and its essential role in supporting American
interests around
the world. He
added that the
United States must
take steps to ensure its Ready Reserve Force (RRF)
of U.S.-flag vessels is well-maintained and able to
Gen. Paul Selva
serve the country
for many years to
come – a strategy that could involve expanding the
fleet.
“The capacity provided by the RRF is critical
to USTRANSCOM’s ability to meet its wartime
requirements,” Selva said. “In the past, the fleet
capacity was increased by using authorities to purchase vessels. For the future, we will explore all
options to find a recapitalization strategy that is
cost-effective and minimizes the cost of ownership
(in) the fleet for the long term, to include purchase
and extended service life programs where it makes
sense.”
The general also touted the importance of key
government initiatives like the Maritime Security
Program (MSP). Under the MSP, an annual stipend ensures the military has access to a fleet of
well-maintained U.S.-flag vessels in times of war
or emergency. The agreement provides the military
with billions of dollars in sealift capabilities for a
fraction of the cost.
The MSP and others, Selva said, “are critical to
USTRANSCOM’s ability to meet the needs of the
warfighter and the nation. For more than a decade of
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, our commercial
sealift partners have provided the vast majority of
sealift for the Department of Defense. The vessel

President Outlines Maritime Priorities
President Barack Obama released his 2015 budget in March, offering a glimpse into the administration’s maritime priorities.
While the $4 trillion budget is not expected to
be adopted by Congress, it does outline what policies the administration is expected to support and
pursue in a variety of fiscal matters. As for the
budget’s approach to maritime, the administration
once again offered a mixed bag.
While the budget offered good news for key
initiatives like the Maritime Security Program
(MSP), Title XI shipbuilding loan guarantees and
the Maritime Administration’s (MARAD) Ready
Reserve Force fleet (RRF), it also had some troubling provisions. Once again, the administration
proposed converting a sizeable portion of the Food
for Peace budget into a cash giveaway, a move that
could negatively affect the domestic maritime and
farm industries (not to mention the intended recipients of the food).
Following is a breakdown of how the president’s 2015 budget impacts the maritime industry.
Maritime Security Program
The MSP is an annual stipend that ensures a

2 Seafarers LOG	

capacity, intermodal transportation networks and
the U.S. citizen Merchant Marine are key components to USTRANSCOM and its global mission.”
Regarding the future of such important maritime
programs, Selva
pointed to the role
played by the U.S.
Maritime Administration (MARAD)
and its task to develop a national
maritime strategy.
“Congress
tasked the Maritime Administration with the
development of a
national maritime
strategy to ensure
the health of the
fleet and the U.S.
Merchant Marine,”
Vice Adm. Paul Zukunft
Selva said. “USTRANSCOM is
coordinating closely with MARAD to ensure these
vital commercial programs remain effective in supporting DOD well into the future.”
Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) issued a statement
praising Selva’s service and vowing his support.
Durbin’s state is home to Scott Air Force Base,
which serves as the location of USTRANSCOM
headquarters.
“General Selva’s experience at Air Mobility
Command has prepared him well to take on this
critical new assignment at Scott Air Force base,”
Durbin said. “I look forward to voting on his nomination as soon as possible in the Senate.”
If confirmed by the Senate, Selva will succeed
Fraser, who has served as USTRANSCOM commander since 2011.
Obama’s nominee for Coast Guard Commandant, meanwhile, is getting praise of his own. Vice
Adm. Paul Zukunft, a 37-year Coast Guard veteran
who currently commands the U.S. Coast Guard Pacific Area, received high marks from Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Charles Johnson.
“Since I became secretary, I have had the opportunity to get to know Vice Admiral Zukunft, and if
confirmed he will be a great leader for the future of
the Coast Guard,” Johnson said. “As a 37-year veteran of the U.S. Coast Guard, he has demonstrated
this leadership while serving in an number of different capacities, including coordinating federal response to the Deepwater Horizon Spill.”
If confirmed, Zukunft would replace Papp, who
has served as commandant since 2010. Papp added
himself among those praising Zukunft and his service.
“He is an outstanding selection to serve the nation as the next leader of the greatest Coast Guard
in the world,” Papp said. “Paul and his wife, Fran,
are eager to advocate for and represent all members
of our Coast Guard family.”

fleet of 60 militarily useful commercial vessels are
well-maintained and able to be called for use by
the government in times of war or national emergency. The president’s 2015 budget provides the
full amount of $186 million for the program, a
small sum when compared to the billions of dollars’ worth of sealift capability the program provides the nation.
The budget also allocated an additional $25
million to the MSP to offset some of the losses in
cargo tied to the administration’s proposal to alter
the nation’s Food for Peace program. The administration broke down how the additional $25 million
would be spent in the budget document.
“At least $1 million of these funds shall be
used to support training programs to retain and advance U.S. citizen mariners for crucial positions
as determined by the secretary of transportation
in consultation with the commandant of the Coast
Guard,” the budget read. “Up to $24 million of the
remaining funds shall be used for other support to
mariners, such as providing payments to operators
of vessels in foreign trade separate from Maritime
Continued on Page 4

April 2014

�Navy Takes Delivery of New Tonnage, More on Way
Construction Starts on LNG-Powered Containership
For the SIU, good news and new tonnage
keep coming from a union shipyard on the
West Coast.
The U.S. Navy on March 12 took delivery of a mobile landing platform (MLP)
ship that will be crewed by Seafarers. A few
weeks earlier, construction began on the
world’s first LNG-powered containership,
which also will be operated by an SIU-contracted company.
Operated by Ocean Shipholdings, the
MLP – the USNS John Glenn – was built at
General Dynamics NASSCO in San Diego,
the same yard that also is constructing new
Marlin-class containerships for TOTE, Inc.
“These vessels signify new jobs for
SIU members, and they also showcase the
great capabilities of American shipyards,”
said SIU Vice President Contracts George
Tricker. “Within these two new-build programs alone, you can see how the U.S. Merchant Marine supports our military and our
economy.”
Fireworks marked the first cut of steel in
a ceremony Feb. 24 as construction of the

initial LNG-powered ship started.
“These ships will be the most advanced,
environmentally progressive vessels of
their kind,” said U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter
(R-Calif.), chairman of the House Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation. “They also represent $350 million
in U.S. investment, 600 American shipyard
jobs, and the bright future of the indispensable domestic maritime industry.”
According to NASSCO, the Marlin-class
vessels, which will sail in the Jones Act
trade, mark a new age in American shipbuilding. TOTE’s back-to-back announcements in 2012 – converting its existing RO/
RO fleet in Alaska and investing in new
containerships for the Puerto Rico trade
– began “what can only be described as a
change of tide in the U.S. maritime industry
toward LNG as the new maritime fuel,” the
shipyard said in a news release.
“Clean-burning, LNG offers unmatched
environmental benefits, reducing emissions
below even the world’s most stringent standards,” NASSCO observed. “The new Mar-

An artist’s rendering highlights the propulsion system of TOTE’s new LNG-powered containerships. (Photo courtesy NASSCO)

SIU-Crewed Crowley Tugs Deliver
Crews Carry Massive Offshore Production Facility to U.S. Gulf
With skilled SIU boatmen leading the
way, Crowley Maritime Corp. recently
made a big delivery in the Gulf.
SIU-crewed Crowley tugs in early
March successfully delivered oversized
equipment – including topsides, tendons,
piles and more – that are now part of a massive semi-submersible floating production
facility located approximately 280 miles
south of New Orleans. Working alongside
the ocean-class tugs were Crowley’s 455
series high-deck-strength barges, which
carried much of the equipment as it was
towed offshore.
“Utilizing the Crowley tugs’ dynamic
positioning capabilities, the facility,
known as Jack/St. Malo, was successfully
moored and made storm safe at a depth of
7,000 feet between the Jack and St. Malo
offshore oil and natural gas fields, which
are within 25 miles of each other,” the
company reported.
As was done when SIU-crewed oceanclass tugs successfully delivered the Olympus platform and Lucius spar to the U.S.
Gulf, both completed late last year, Houston-based Crowley personnel (managing
the tugs and barges) oversaw completion
of the delivery in three stages in both nearshore and offshore waters.
Crew members involved in the more
recent project included Captains Ted Caffy,
Charles Alan Williams, Andrew C. Ashworth, Brian Cain, Stuart B. Andrews
Jr., Stephen Berschger, Laurence Christie and Ward P. Davis; Chief Mates Darrel
Koonce, Dustin Marks, Clyde McNatt,
James Hoffman and Scott R. Ellis; Chief
Engineers R.D. Lewis, Charles Pate, Scott

April 2014	

Bovee and Edgar C. Henson; ABs Terry
Laviolette, Ryan Landers, Dave Heindel
Jr., Orvin McCoy, Preston Harper, Farrell Bodden, Steven Kendrick, Jonathan
Solomon, Corey Hill, Satchel G. Caffy,
Ben E. Johnson and Edward J. Rynn;
Assistant Engineers Michael Bibby, Keith
Smith, Matthew Hamer, Andralesia
Terrell, Richard A. Saunders, James
H. Murray, Thomas Murphy and Isaac
Levine; Second Mates Travis Cheer, Nate
Leachman, Eric A. Eaton, Cecil Wilson
and Ray Adams; Third Mate Scott M.
Tompkins; Dynamic Positioning Officer
John Willson; and Ordinary Seamen and/
or Cooks Johnny Godwin, Stephen R.
Goletz, Rene Fuentes, Evan Flynn and
Glen Williams.
During the first stage, the near-shore
phase, the topsides were skidded onto the
company’s 455 series barge Julie B at the
Keiwit facility dock in Ingleside, Texas,
where they were later lifted and installed
onto the hull of Jack/St. Malo. Once in
place and secured, the Ocean Wind and
Ocean Wave provided assistance by pushing the Jack/St. Malo facility away from
Corpus Christi, through the Port of Aransas,
Texas, and out to deeper waters. The Ocean
Sun followed the flotilla and was equipped
to provide assistance if needed.   
Relocation to deeper waters marked the
beginning of the second phase of work, the
offshore stage. Here, the Ocean Wind and
Ocean Sun towed the facility to its final
location, alongside the Crowley-contracted
tugboat Harvey War Horse II. Also during this phase, the 455 series barge 455-7,
towed by Crowley’s tug Warrior, and third-

lin class will create a reduction of sulfur
dioxide (SOx) emissions by 98 percent, particulate matter (PM) by 99 percent, nitrous
oxide (NOx) and carbon dioxide (CO2) by
71 percent over TOTE’s ships currently operating in Puerto Rico.”
“The move to LNG fuel is no less significant than the evolution from sail to steam,”
said Mark Tabbutt, chairman of Saltchuk,
TOTE’s parent company. “The Marlins represent the start of a new age in American
maritime.”
Speakers at the February event included
Hunter; Acting Maritime Administrator Chip Jaenichen; Tabbutt; and Kevin
Graney, general manager of the NASSCO
shipyard.
TOTE has ordered two containerships
and has options to build up to three additional ones. Each will be 764 feet long.
“We are excited to begin construction
of the lead ship on this historic project,”
said Fred Harris, president of General Dynamics NASSCO and himself a former
union mariner. “All of the stakeholders on
this first-of-a-kind program … are completely focused on its success. We are beginning construction at a level of design,
planning and material readiness that is unsurpassed.”
The Marlins, which will home port in
Jacksonville, Fla., are expected to enter
service in late 2015 and early 2016. TOTE
recently announced it entered into an agreement with Pivotal LNG and WesPac Midstream to provide LNG to the ships.
Meanwhile, the SIU also welcomed news
that the USNS John Glenn became the second MLP delivered to the Navy. The ship is
named after the Honorable John Glenn for
his exceptional and decorated service as a
U.S. Marine Corps pilot, astronaut and U.S.
senator. Glenn, 92, attended the vessel’s
christening Feb. 1 at the yard.
Construction of the USNS John Glenn
began in April 2012. The 785-foot-long
auxiliary ship will serve as a floating base
for amphibious operations, and operate as a
party barge Marmac 400, towed by Crowley’s tug Pilot, delivered the piles (long,
pipe-like structures that serve as anchors
for the platform) to the project site.
Finally, the Marty J, towed by the Pilot,
made three subsequent trips to the installation site to deliver additional equipment –
including chains, connectors and line reels
– that were used in the mooring of the floating facility.
In the final stage, the positioning phase,
the Ocean Wind, Ocean Wave, Ocean Sky,
Ocean Sun and Harvey War Horse II
worked together to hold the Jack/St. Malo
in its final location, and remained on site
in a star pattern to provide support as the
spar was connected to its moorings and

The addition of the USNS John Glenn bolsters U.S. sealift capability. (Photo courtesy NASSCO)

transfer point between large ships and small
landing craft.
“This is a great day for the NASSCO,
Navy and Military Sealift Command team,”
said Harris upon the Glenn’s delivery. “We
are delivering this ship with the quality, innovation and capability needed to support
the future missions of the nation’s fleet
and uniformed men and women around the
world.”
NASSCO is currently building the
third ship of the class, which will be configured as an afloat forward staging base.
It is scheduled for undocking in November and delivery in the second quarter of
2015.
made storm safe in more than 7,000 feet
of water.
As one Crowley executive put it, “Not
only was the project completed safely and
on time, but it also helps to illustrate the increasing competence and capability of our
crew and vessels. We look forward to utilizing these specialized teams and assets in
projects in the future.”
Scheduled to begin producing oil and
natural gas later this year, the facility will
have a capacity of 170,000 barrels of oil per
day and 42.5 million standard cubic feet per
day of natural gas. The Jack/St. Malo will
act as a hub for the 43 subsea wells, including pumps and other equipment on the seafloor.

SIU-crewed tugs tow the equipment to its final location.

Seafarers LOG 3

�Seafarers Fondly Remember Retired Dispatcher Jesse Solis
Reflecting on the life of retired union
official Jesse Solis, people who worked
with him at sea and ashore described him in
glowing terms.
“He was a kind, caring man who was always able to remain patient and calm,” recalled SIU Vice President Contracts George
Tricker, who worked with Solis at the hall
in Wilmington, Calif., from 1990-97. “He
was more like a father than a brother and he
set the standard for servicing the membership. I think everyone who worked with him
still carries his example with us every day.”
Solis died Feb. 17 in southern California, at age 78. He spent 45 years in the
maritime industry, including 26 as an SIU
official, before retiring in late 2005. He
sailed with the Marine Cooks and Stewards (MC&amp;S) from 1960 until that union
merged into the SIU in 1978, then came
ashore a year later.
In addition to attending his traditional
memorial service, many Seafarers and SIU
officials met at the Wilmington hall for a
remembrance in late February. More than
100 people turned out for that gathering,
including retiree Mary Lou Lopez, one of
Solis’ close friends.
“I met Jesse in 1975 aboard the SS Mariposa,” Lopez remembered. “A few years
later, he became a dispatcher and he surely
learned the contracts well. He was so helpful to all of us and constantly encouraged us
to keep our documents up to date and go to
Piney Point (to upgrade).”

She added that in retirement, they lived
just a few blocks apart in San Pedro, Calif.,
and kept in frequent touch.
“We weren’t boyfriend/girlfriend but
we were close friends, and he was always
there for me,” Lopez said. “He was positive
and funny and just a great guy. He will be
missed by many.”
A native of Travis County, Texas, Solis
began sailing with Matson and later shipped
with companies including APL, Oceanic
Steamship, Pacific Far East Line, and Delta
Steamship Lines. His last ship was the Delta
Santa Maria in 1979, on which he was chief
steward.
Ashore, he officially had several titles
over the years including representative,
patrolman, port representative, and safety
director, but he was known to practically all
as dispatcher.
Wilmington Port Agent Jeff Turkus said
he had an unforgettable first encounter with
Solis upon graduating from the trainee program in 1979. When Turkus went to the
counter at the old hall in Avalon, Calif.,
Solis (a Marine Corps veteran), upon learning of Turkus’ service in the Navy, disarmed him when he exclaimed “Not another
[bleeping] swabbie!”
“It was hilarious,” Turkus said. “I
thought I was going to have a problem, but
two hours later I was on a ship as an ordinary. I saw him for years after that, and
every time I signed off, he’d point at me and
say, ‘Don’t sit around, man.’”

Jesse Solis is pictured in September 2005
during his retirement celebration at the
union hall in Wilmington, Calif.

Solis sailed with the Marine Cooks and
Stewards before that union merged into
the SIU, including on this 1972 voyage as
a bell captain.

Turkus added, “Jesse was a special guy.
He was compassionate and he would help
out anyone who was down in the dumps,
whether it was with funds or words of wisdom. He was like a priest – there were some
guys you would listen to, and everybody listened to him.”
Former Seafarer Bill Pratley, a 1981
graduate of the trainee program who’s now
a maritime consultant, knew Solis from

shipping out.
“Jesse was a soft-spoken, kind and gentle man who could always be counted on to
do the right thing,” Pratley said.
Solis is survived by four children, six
grandchildren, one great grandchild and
several siblings.
Donations in Solis’ memory may be
made to the Disabled American veterans at
www.dav.org, 877-426-2838.

Administration’s 2015 Budget
Continued from Page 2
Security Program payments…”
Ready Reserve Force Fleet
The RRF is a fleet of 46 ships – mostly with SIU
crews – that provide support for the rapid deployment of
American military forces. They are among the vessels
carrying equipment and supplies to U.S. forces around
the world.
Under the president’s 2015 budget, the RRF gets a budgetary boost. For 2015, the administration allocated $378
million for the RRF, up from $364 million. Acting Maritime Administrator Paul “Chip” Jaenichen has said the increased levels would make it likely that no vessels would
have to be removed from the RRF for budgetary reasons.

Pictured from left to right in the photo above are: (front) Recertified Bosun Dan Marcus, Recertified Steward Lauren
Oram, Electrician Timothy Pillsworth, Recertified Steward Exxl Ronquillo, (standing) Bosun Martin Simmons Jr.,
Chief Steward Marychris Littel, Executive Assistant Tina Corbin, Secretary-Treasurer David Heindel, Bosun Brian
Fountain and Assistant VP Ambrose Cucinotta. The photo below shows committee members reviewing their report
before signing off on it.

Finance Committee Okays 2013 Records
Seven Seafarers recently signed
off on the SIU’s financial records
for 2013, finding the paperwork in
good order.
Those members were elected by
fellow Seafarers at the March membership meeting in Piney Point,
Md., to serve on the annual financial committee. The committee, in
accordance with the union’s con-

4 Seafarers LOG	

stitution, then reviewed the SIU’s
financial records for the previous
calendar year.
After closely examining the paperwork at SIU headquarters the
first week of March, the group
completed its report, which will be
read in all ports and presented for
approval at the union’s April membership meetings. The report also

has been submitted to the secretarytreasurer’s office.
Serving on the committee were
Recertified Steward Lauren Oram
(chair), Recertified Bosun Dan
Marcus, Recertified Steward Exxl
Ronquillo, Electrician Timothy
Pillsworth, Chief Steward Marychris Littel, Bosun Brian Fountain
and Bosun Martin Simmons Jr.
In its report, the committee wrote,
“All records used in connection with
the union’s financial operations were
reviewed fully…. We find that the
headquarters of the union is taking
all steps possible to safeguard union
funds and to see that the disbursements of the union are in accordance
with the authority delegated to them
and that, at the same time, there is a
striving effort to increase day-to-day
efficiency of our operation.”
Article X, Section 14-c of the
SIU Constitution lists the duties
of the annual financial committee
along with rules and procedures for
electing the committee.

Title XI Shipbuiling Loan Guarantees
The budget also brought good news regarding the
Title XI shipbuilding loan guarantee program. Title XI
helps spur growth in domestic shipbuilding by offering
government guarantees on loans related to vessel construction. By guaranteeing those loans, the government
encourages companies to build more ships and banks to
lend them the money to do it.
The 2015 budget proposes $35 million for the program, a move that could guarantee more than $1.7 billion in loans for 39 different projects.
Food for Peace
Unfortunately, the administration’s 2015 budget proposes converting parts of the nation’s Food for Peace
program into a cash voucher system. Out of the $1.4
billion the administration allocated for the program, approximately 25 percent ($350 million) could go toward
cash vouchers aid instead of food aid.
Created in the 1950s, Food for Peace has funded
efforts to bring American-grown food on U.S.-flag
ships to starving people around the world. It not only
saves lives and improves America’s standing in the
world, but it also is responsible for more than 44,000
American jobs. Having the program send cash instead
of food could threaten those American jobs and increase the chance that food never reaches those who
need it.
Other Proposals
The administration’s 2015 budget also made news
in a variety of other areas. The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, which employs some SIU
members, saw an increase in its budget for core navigation, while funding was also increased for Department of Transportation infrastructure work that could
improve the nation’s ports.
The Army Corps Engineers, which also employs
Seafarers, saw its funding drop in certain areas, including its port modernization and navigation programs.

April 2014

�Senators Shoot Down False Attacks on Jones Act
Maritime Coalition also Sets Record Straight in Jersey Salt Saga
At least one state official and a few local
media outlets tried to blame a key maritime
law for a potential shortage of road salt in
New Jersey, but the state’s two U.S. senators made sure the false claims didn’t gain
traction.
The American Maritime Partnership
(AMP), a key coalition to which the SIU is
affiliated, also helped set the record straight
in late February after the Jones Act briefly
came under attack.
The senators and AMP both said the real
culprit was poor planning by the state.
The saga unfolded as local media outlets
lazily reported claims by a state official that
the Jones Act was preventing a readily available supply of rock salt from being delivered
from farther north. (The law requires that domestic cargoes move aboard American-flag,
U.S.-crewed ships that are also built and
owned U.S.) Some of those outlets also said
the domestic maritime industry was standing
in the way of a waiver request, to the detriment of public safety.
While false attacks on the Jones Act are
nothing new, this particular round of erroneous claims caught the attention of not only
those within the industry, but also U.S. Senators Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) and Cory
Booker (D-N.J.). On Feb. 25, the senators
issued a joint statement that reads in part,
“When we first heard about the emergent
nature of the state’s salt shortage in media
reports, we immediately contacted the appropriate federal agencies on behalf of the
health, safety and well-being of New Jersey residents seeking help in expediting
procurement and delivery of much-needed
rock salt.
“What has become clear is that the State
Department of Transportation has fallen
short in planning for and addressing its
dwindling salt supply,” the senators continued. “There were numerous opportunities to
enlist our help, including at least one direct
conversation with (Transportation) Commissioner (Jim) Simpson, in which the apparent
salt crisis wasn’t even mentioned. In the face
of an emergency, citizens of New Jersey expect its officials to do everything possible to
protect the public from potential harm and in
this case, the state has fallen short.”
The senators also pointed out that the
state’s request for a waiver “was denied be-

U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez
(D-N.J.)

cause it was determined that American vessels were readily available to transport the
salt from Maine to New Jersey, a development we were glad to help facilitate and expedite. We stand ready to act and to advocate
for our fellow New Jerseyans at the federal
level, but can only do so when we are informed of a potential issue. It doesn’t matter
if it’s John Q. Public, a local mayor or in this
case, the state. Had offers for help not been
ignored, we could have worked in partnership, provided appropriate guidance on the
best way to achieve their intended goal, and
most likely avoided this unnecessary situation.”
They concluded by defending the Jones
Act, a law that helps pump billions of dollars
each year into the American economy while
maintain around 500,000 U.S. jobs.
“We would caution those who would
recklessly call for the abolition of the Jones
Act, which has served for nearly a century
to protect our national and economic security,” the senators stated. “The Merchant
Marine Act of 1920 – which prohibits use
of a foreign-flagged vessel for transporting
goods between U.S. ports – was designed to
support America’s strong shipping industry,
while ensuring our country’s readiness to de-

NY Congressman: Maritime Industry
Can Help Steer Economic Turnaround
Demonstrating both his sense of
humor and his very serious commitment
to the American maritime industry, Con-

gressman Michael Grimm (R-N.Y.) reaffirmed that support Feb. 27 during an
address to the Washington, D.C., chap-

Following his remarks, U.S. Rep. Michael Grimm (R-N.Y.) (center) is pictured with (from
left) SIU Secretary-Treasurer David Heindel, SIU VP Contracts George Tricker, SIU
Patrolman Anthony Houston and SIU Legislative Director Brian Schoeneman.

April 2014	

Tom Allegretti
AMP Chairman

U.S. Sen. Cory Booker
(D-N.J.)

fend itself against a national security threat.
“The lesson learned here should not be to
repeal or blame the Jones Act, but to work in
partnership to achieve a common goal. The
state’s poor planning should not become
New Jersey residents’ emergency.”
AMP Chairman Tom Allegretti, in an
op-ed submitted on behalf of the coalition’s
450-plus member organizations, noted, “The
sheer volume of inaccurate statements (concerning the salt issue) calls for the record to
be set straight…. Several weeks ago, the state
Department of Transportation found itself unprepared for the winter weather that the state
and the nation have experienced this year.
Recognizing that a foreign shipment from
the usual source of road salt – South America – would not reach New Jersey quickly
enough, officials scrambled for options.
“Sensing a potential public relations disaster as the state would soon run out of salt,
New Jersey transportation officials identified
a stockpile in Maine,” he continued. “They
were told then by the U.S. Department of
Transportation that U.S. law required that it
be shipped by a U.S.-owned, -crewed, and
-flagged vessel. Despite this guidance, state
officials opted to publicly promote a story
that a foreign-flagged vessel was available

in Maine and willing to haul the salt to New
Jersey, and, if not for the Jones Act, that ship
could sail immediately. However, there is
no confirmation that the foreign vessel was
willing to move the salt. The ship left port
the next day – which would signal it had no
intention to move that salt.”
Allegretti pointed out that not only did
the domestic maritime industry not stand in
the way, it activated a vessel “to retrieve the
salt and deliver it to New Jersey on Monday
evening. Even more curiously, on Monday,
the same day the salt arrived, the New Jersey
transportation commissioner misinformed
the media that the shipment was ‘still in
Maine,’ and that ‘it could be three weeks’
before it gets here.’ This reckless statement
is not true.
“The DOT simply waited too long to
order more salt, then found itself in a public relations bind and needing a scapegoat.
With just a little planning, this situation could
have been prevented. It is important that New
Jerseyans know that the domestic maritime
industry acted quickly to help resupply the
state and that this industry plays a foundational role assuring our country’s national,
economic and homeland security every day
of the year.”

ter of the Propeller Club of the United
States.
A co-founder of the Congressional
Maritime Caucus (with Congressman
Cedric Richmond) (D-La.), Grimm joked
about occasionally being too candid, but
quickly added that the people in maritime “know where you stand with me.
I’m proud to say, you have a friend in
Congress that understands your industry and wants to learn more about it.
I’m going to stand up for what’s right
in your industry every single time – not
once in a while, not only when it’s easy
or when people are watching. When the
doors are closed, know that I’m working
behind the scenes on securing funding,
on making sure that you’re treated fairly.
And that we build awareness and educate
members on one of the best industries
that this country was founded on – an industry that our economy was started on.
We need to recognize the gem that we
have in maritime.”
A U.S. Marine Corps veteran, Grimm said
that when he first was elected to Congress three years ago, he immediately
noticed “that the (maritime) industry
had been neglected for years – decades,
even. That’s what really gave rise to the
Congressional Maritime Caucus: to be
able to reestablish an emphasis that a
dialogue is not haphazard; it’s not done
once in a while…. This is about an education process. Members of Congress
need to know (for example) what the
Jones Act is, why we have it and how
important it is from so many different
perspectives – especially what’s near and

dear to my heart, the national security
of the greatest nation in the world. It’s
often lost, and believe it or not we even
have prior-service military members of
Congress that really don’t understand the
Jones Act’s magnitude.”
He said that in an era when seemingly every political campaign points to
job creation as a cornerstone, maritime
jobs – both at sea and on the docks and in
related shore-side positions – can play a
huge role in turning around the economy.
He recalled recently meeting a 70-yearold Longshoreman whose son and grandson both followed his career path. Grimm
stated that those jobs and others in the industry have more in common than water;
they are “career jobs” that allow people to
support their families.
“The answers to growing our economy and creating jobs are right in front
of our nose,” Grimm declared, adding
that investing in the maritime industry
will greatly boost the cause. “Why can’t
we go back to the way jobs were created
when this country was formed?”
After taking questions from the audience (addressing flood insurance and potential cuts in the Defense Department),
Grimm wrapped up his talk by reinforcing his backing of the U.S. Merchant
Marine and other segments of maritime.
“I’m 100 percent for the industry,”
he said. “I’m proud of it. I think those
are real career jobs that we’re not taking advantage of, and we need to do so.
I love the industry, and you’re regular,
salt-of-the-earth people. You say what
you mean; you mean what you say.”

Seafarers LOG 5

�NMC, SIU Clarifiy Medical Certificate Requirements
New Regulations Mandate
That Internationally Sailing
Mariners Have Document
As of March 31, all Seafarers who sail
internationally should have received communications in the mail from the U.S.
Coast Guard’s National Maritime Center
(NMC). The package – which refers to the
NMC’s final rule on amendments to the
International Convention on Standards of
Training, Certification and Watchkeeping
(STCW) – should include a new medical
certificate that brings mariners in compliance with the latest international rules.
These new requirements come with a
lot of information to digest. The NMC and
SIU have worked to make the entire process as easy to navigate as possible. The
NMC acknowledged the need to keep mariners in the loop and has hosted meetings
and issued guidance documents to clarify
the process.
“We are fully aware there is a lot of
anxiety [about] the future of the implementation of the STCW with the domestic fleet,” said Mayte Medina, chief of the
Coast Guard’s Maritime Personnel Qualifications Division. “We will continue to
use the advisory committees and use the
public meetings.”
The SIU has also taken an active role
in informing mariners about the changes.
Following is a breakdown of what mariners need to know for now about the
STCW Manila amendments and how the
new rules affect them.
Background on Medical Certificates
n Medical certificates are now being
issued by the NMC to serve as proof the
mariner meets certain medical and physical standards.
n The certificates ensure U.S. mariners

This graphic, created by the NMC, instructs mariners on what to do once they receive their new STCW medical certificate.

are in compliance with the new Maritime
Labor Convention (MLC) requirement that
mariners have a medical certificate issued
by the flag administration they sail under.
Receiving Medical Certificates
n All mariners holding STCW endorsements should have automatically received
the medical certificates in the mail by
March 31, free of charge. The certificates
are mailed to the address the NMC has on
file for the mariner.
n Medical certificates should be

Talking Maritime with VP Biden

scanned at the mariner’s union hall to be
entered into the SMIS database.
n Mariners must sign their medical certificate and carry it with them aboard vessels.
n Mariners who have changed their
address since their last credentialing
transaction should contact the NMC at
IAskNMC@uscg.mil or 1-888-427-5662
to ensure the right address is on file.
n Those who have yet to receive their
certificates should contact the NMC at
1-888-427-5662.
Expiration Dates
n Each medical certificate carries three
expiration dates. One is the expiration date
for the STCW, a second is the expiration
date for the national endorsement and the
third is the expiration date for first class
pilotage.
n If a mariner’s medical certificate expires during a voyage, it will remain valid
until the next U.S. port of call, provided
the period after expiration does not exceed
90 days.
Waivers
n Mariners with existing medical
waivers are issued a medical certificate,

provided the mariner is compliant with
the terms of the waiver. If a mariner has
not complied with the annual reporting requirements or other conditions, the NMC
will not issue medical certificates.
n Mariners receiving a waiver of certain
medical conditions may receive a time-limited medical certificate. Applicants must
comply with the terms of their waiver letter
in order to renew the certificate.
Entry-Level Mariners
n Entry-level mariners should contact
IAskNMC@uscg.mil or 1-888-427-5662
to request issuance of a two-year medical
certificate.
n They must also obtain a Coast Guard
physical examination, attach any additional information and submit the physical to a Coast Guard regional examination
center and request, in writing, a two-year
medical certificate.
n Along with the physical examination,
entry-level mariners must provide proof of
sailing on international vessels and submit
a copy of a discharge or company letter.
Comprehensive information about the
STCW final rule is available at www.uscg.
mil/nmc

Senator Reaffirms Jones Act Support

SIU St. Louis Port Agent Becky Sleeper (right) recently had a chance to talk about
the maritime industry with Vice President Joe Biden (left) during a Feb. 19 event in
Granite City, Ill. VP Biden, a longtime friend of the SIU, was in town to promote the
administration’s support of infrastructure investment, including ports and waterways.
Sleeper mentioned her time sailing in support of Operation Desert Storm and also
stressed the need for ongoing support of the Jones Act; VP Biden enthusiastically
replied that he remains fully committed to backing the nation’s freight cabotage law.

6 Seafarers LOG	

Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) specifically sought the position of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
regarding the Jones Act when that agency’s head was testifying March 12 before
the Senate Appropriations Committee’s
Subcommittee on Homeland Security.
Landrieu, who chairs the subcommittee, reaffirmed her longstanding support
for the Jones Act before asking Secretary Jeh Charles Johnson, “So, what are
your views of the Jones Act? And under
what circumstances can you imagine it
would have to be waived?”
After explaining how a waiver may
be obtained, Johnson further responded,
“In my experience as secretary of DHS,
I have not seen that yet. And so, we have
maintained – enforced the general rule
that U.S. port to U.S. port should involve
a U.S.-flagged vessel.”
Landrieu thanked the secretary for
his answer, noting that “the majority
of members of Congress would feel
strongly about that. And that is the law.
We will be carefully monitoring it.”
The Jones Act, which is part of the
Merchant Marine Act of 1920, states
that cargo moved between two domes-

tic ports must be carried by U.S.-flag,
U.S.-owned, U.S.-crewed and U.S.-built
vessels.

Sen. Mary Landrieu

April 2014

�Workers Should Share in Wealth They Help Create
‘Broad-Based Wage Growth Is the Defining Challenge of Our Time’
The AFL-CIO executive council, on which
SIU President Michael Sacco is the longestserving member, recently approved a statement that clearly spells out many of the labor
movement’s core goals.
Meeting in Houston in late February, the
council passed 11 resolutions, one of which
specifically addressed labor’s firm belief that
workers have a right to share in the gains they
help generate. Titled “Broad-Based Wage
Growth Is the Defining Challenge of Our
Time” (a quote from President Obama), the
statement provides insight into goals shared
by the federation and its 56 affiliates (including the SIU), that collectively represent an
estimated 12.5 million workers. The text is as
follows:
“The purpose of the labor movement is to
give voice to working people so we can improve our lives, our nation and our world. The
principle that all working people share in the
wealth we create through rising wages has always been at the heart of our movement.
“In 1996, this Council issued a statement
titled America Needs a Raise. Since 1997,
according to the Economic Policy Institute,
100 percent of the wage growth in the U.S.
economy has gone to the top 10 percent of the
income structure. Income for the bottom 90
percent declined.
“At the 2013 AFL-CIO convention, we
committed to the battle to raise wages in all
their forms. In the 2013 elections, the fight
against inequality and wage stagnation propelled Bill de Blasio and Marty Walsh to victories in New York and Boston, and the voters
themselves raised the minimum wage in cities
and states across the country. Meanwhile lowwage workers across the country struck for
higher wages and collective bargaining. These
successful efforts by working people have put
raising wages at the center of our public life.
“We therefore view the great national
conversation about economic inequality that
is now taking place as both an opportunity
and a challenge for our movement. Working people have the opportunity to shape the
conversation in ways that help workers win
real economic improvements and build a true
working-class movement. Our challenge is to
keep the growing momentum for change from
being deflected by tokenism and distractions.
“In a landmark speech last December,
President Obama warned of a ‘dangerous and
growing inequality’ and declared that making our economy work for every working
American was the ‘defining challenge of our
time.’ Pope Francis similarly warned last year

that ‘inequality is the
rich. Wages must
root of social ills’ and
grow with productivcalled for ‘attacking
ity if our economy is
the structural causes
to provide economic
of inequality.’
security and dignity
“But before we
to the vast majority
can tackle the strucof people who never
tural causes of inwill be rich, but who
equality, we have to
work hard every day
understand what they
and deserve their fair
are. Inequality did not
share of the enorjust happen. It was
mous wealth they
not an accident or an
produce. Our econact of God. It was the
omy used to provide
predictable result of
those things, but no
decisions made by
longer does. Our
people with power
challenge is to make
in America over the
sure it does so once
past generation. The
again.
key decision was
“The public is
to use the power of
rightly focused on
government to help
falling wages and
corporate America
rising economic
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka
push down wages by
inequality, thanks
destroying workers’
in large part to the
bargaining power.
courage of striking
“Any serious effort to attack the structural Walmart and fast food workers across the
causes of inequality must begin with restoring country. According to one recent poll, 66 perthe individual and collective bargaining power cent agree that ‘government should work to
of all workers. Wage and income stagnation substantially reduce the income gap between
is a problem affecting the 90 percent, not just rich and poor.’
the poorest people in America, though it is the
“The public understands that there is
poorest workers whose lives are most blighted something wrong with our economy when alby falling real wages.
most all (95 percent) of the income gains since
“If we care about economic inequality, the end of the Great Recession have gone to
we have to raise wages and living standards the wealthiest 1 percent. Working people are
across the board. It’s that simple. If we care hungry for solutions, and in workplaces and
about a healthy economy no longer plagued communities across the country, we are deby financial booms and busts, we have to raise manding action: increases in the minimum
wages and living standards. If we care about wage, an end to the exclusion of tipped worka healthy society, with a sense that we are all ers from the minimum wage laws and, most
in this together, we have to raise wages and importantly, the right to bargain collectively
living standards. Broad-based wage growth is over wages.
the defining challenge of our time.
“Now, as the 2014 elections approach and
“Broad-based wage growth begins with the workers at Walmart and T-Mobile, workers
principle that everybody – including tipped in fast food and other restaurants and workers
workers, agricultural workers and victims of in the streets of Raleigh, N.C., stand up, the
wage theft – should be paid at least a mini- question the labor movement intends to put to
mum wage. But it does not end there. The every person in power in America – every polminimum wage is just that – a bare minimum. itician and every employer – is a simple one:
All workers deserve to be paid a living wage
“Are you for, as President Obama said,
that allows them to provide for themselves ‘making sure our economy works for every
and their families. And every worker should working American,’ or are you for inequality;
be allowed to bargain for better wages and for what Pope Francis calls ‘a new tyranny’
better living standards.
fueled by the ‘idolatry of money’?
“Broad-based wage growth is very differ“Raising wages requires collective barent from the fantasy that everybody can be rich gaining and fundamental labor law reform.
– or the reality that a few of us will become Only through workers bargaining with their

Alaska Ranks Third
In Nation Per Capita
In Maritime Jobs
The American Maritime Partnership (AMP), the voice of
the domestic maritime industry, joined with the Transportation Institute, along with Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska),
Sen. Mark Begich (D-Alaska) and Rep. Don Young (RAlaska) on March 20 to highlight new data from a study by
PricewaterhouseCoopers that shows Alaska ranks third in
the nation in per capita maritime jobs.
The study showed that thousands of Alaskan jobs are
directly related to the domestic maritime industry and account for more than $1 billion in economic impact. Alaska’s
navigable waterway network of more than 5,400 miles is
the largest in the country and allows the state’s maritime
industry to move commodities across Alaska’s 586,000
square miles.
America’s domestic maritime industry includes vessel operators, marine terminals, shipyards, and workers
engaged in the movement of cargo exclusively within the
United States.
“For many Alaskan communities not accessible via road,
our waterways are our highways, and the hard-working
men and women of the state’s maritime industry provide
a crucial transportation link that delivers essential fuel and
supplies. With more than 5,400 miles of navigable water-

April 2014	

ways, it is no surprise that the state ranks third in the nation
in maritime jobs per capita,” said Murkowski. “The U.S.
maritime industry, supported by the Jones Act, provides
vital services necessary for Alaska’s economy and quality
of life, and I appreciate the work of the American Maritime
Partnership, the Transportation Institute and the many companies operating in the state who are making our maritime
workforce strong today and for the future.”
“The U.S.-flagged fleet, enabled by strong support from
the Jones Act, has been key to Alaska’s development and is
the economic backbone of the state today. From moving our
natural resources to market to transporting our armed forces
overseas, to bringing in the commercial goods needed to
keep the state running, Alaskans rely on the maritime industry in almost every aspect of our lives,” Begich said. “I’m
glad the Transportation Institute’s study has captured this
snapshot of where we are as a maritime state, and I hope to
use my chairmanship of the Oceans, Fisheries and Coast
Guard subcommittee to make Alaska a worldwide hub for
maritime activity as we move into the Arctic.”
“As a mariner myself, I recognize the crucial role the
maritime industry plays in delivering goods to communities
across the globe,” said Young. “I am a strong supporter of
the Jones Act, which I believe is necessary to maintaining a
viable U.S. Merchant Marine fleet that keeps Alaskan communities fueled and supplied even in some of the world’s
most challenging conditions. Alaska’s maritime industry is
not only critical to our state’s economy, it is also an important part of our state’s identity.”
“Alaska’s maritime industry contributes more than $1
billion to the state’s economy every year and sustains more
than $344 million in wages,” Transportation Institute President Jim Henry said. “Alaska’s shipyard industry also plays

employers can we raise wages for the 90 percent.
“Raising wages and full employment go
together. Raising wages drives up demand
that drives hiring, and full employment gives
workers bargaining power.
“Raising wages requires that workers’
organizing drives and collective bargaining
campaigns succeed – especially at giant corporate employers like Walmart that are at the
core of Big Business’ generation-long effort
to cut wages and impoverish working families.
“Raising wages requires understanding
that employers in industries like retail have
learned to use scheduling and other complicated personnel practices to keep wages low.
That’s why collective bargaining is necessary
to make sure wage gains are real, and Our
Walmart’s demand of a minimum annual salary of $25,000 for all employees at America’s
largest private employer is so important.
“To succeed, we must as a labor movement
frame these campaigns as what they really are:
fights for raising wages and broadly shared
prosperity and against inequality, and as fights
worthy of broader support from other parts of
the labor movement, our allies and the public.
“Raising wages requires passing the many
legislative and electoral initiatives under way
at the federal, state and local levels that aim
to raise wages and improve working conditions for millions of workers – beginning
with raising the federal minimum wage to
$10.10 an hour, and including efforts to win
paid sick days and end unequal pay for equal
work.
“Raising wages requires that workers’
voices not be weakened, and that means defeating state-level legislative attacks on workers and our unions, such as right to work for
less and paycheck deception.
“Raising wages requires a more effective
labor movement. At the 2013 convention, we
committed to creating stronger and more durable bonds with our allies at the local, state, and
national levels; and encouraging a progressive
tendency in both political parties. Focusing on
wages, quality jobs and a thriving middle class
will help us achieve these goals.
“Raising wages requires involving workers through both traditional and nontraditional
membership in the labor movement, such as
Working America.
“Most of all, raising wages is about the
path to shared prosperity, a future worthy of
our children and grandchildren, about a society in which we are truly in this together.”

an important role in the state’s economy by providing more
than $108 million in annual economic impact, sustaining
more than 1,100 associated jobs, and supporting more than
$63.9 million in worker income in Alaska.”
Alaska’s maritime industry also receives support from
several private-sector efforts that have provided training,
apprenticeship, and employment opportunities to hundreds
of Alaskans in the past decade. The purpose of these initiatives is to provide maritime training, education and job
placement to displaced fisherman, veterans, youth, and
Alaska Natives.
Some of these initiatives include:
n A program supported by the Seafarers International
Union (SIU) and our contracted companies in Alaska (Horizon Lines, Alaska Tanker Company, Seabulk, and TOTE,
Inc.), to offer free training for maritime positions through
the SIU-affiliated Paul Hall Center;
n Scholarships offered to Alaskan youth attending the
California Maritime Academy through the “Alaskans for
Alaskan Jobs in Transportation” program;
n The Lund Scholarship, named in honor of an Alaska
Marine Highway System mariner, focused on providing
scholarships to individuals who attended the Ketchikan
School District and are interested in obtaining some form
of maritime academic or vocational training; and
n A program supported by Crowley Maritime to advance Alaska Natives into licensed tug officers.
America’s domestic maritime industry includes approximately 40,000 vessels, supports more than 478,000 jobs,
and has an annual economic impact of $92.5 billion according to the findings by PricewaterhouseCoopers. The industry also accounts for approximately $29 billion in wages
and $10 billion in tax revenues.

Seafarers LOG 7

�WELCOME ASHORE IN – AND SHOVING OFF FROM – JACKSONVILLE – Two longtime Seafarers recently picked
up their first pension checks at the hall in Jacksonville, Fla., while former Patrolman Brian Guiry couldn’t resist the call
of the sea and returned to sailing. In the photo at left, Asst. VP Archie Ware (right) congratulates Chief Cook Abraham
Lagasca, who joined the SIU in 1990. Ware is pictured directly above with OMU Charles Dallas, who began his SIU
career in 1977. In the photo above at right, SIU VP Gulf Coast Dean Corgey (right) wishes good luck to Guiry, who’s
sailing with Maersk Line, Limited.

At Sea and Ashore with the SIU

STATE FED ADDS SEAFARER – Patrolman Kevin Sykes (foreground) recently was
sworn in as a delegate member of the Texas
AFL-CIO, whose affiliated unions (including the SIU) represent 235,000 members in
Texas. Becky Moeller, president of the state
federation, recently addressed the executive
board of the Maritime Trades Department,
AFL-CIO, in Houston.

AT THE HALL IN PUERTO RICO – For Paul Hall Center apprentice
Steven Horta (center in photo above), seafaring runs in the family. Before heading to Piney Point, Md., for the program’s third phase, he is
pictured in San Juan, P.R., with (from left) his mother, Marilyn Ginel,
Port Agent Amancio Crespo, administrative assistant Maria Gomez and
QMED Hector Ginel, his uncle. The photo at right features (left) future
Seafarer Jaziel Crespo with the port agent and his nephew, AB Jose
Crespo Jr.

WITH SEAFARERS IN CHARM CITY – Baltimore Port Agent Elizabeth
Brown is pictured with Bosun Victor Nunez (above) aboard the Tyco Decisive and with (photo at top right, from left) AB Stanley Gurney, Recertified Steward Rafael Cardenas and Bosun Paul Dooley aboard the Resolve,
where crew members raved about the steward department. The remaining
photo, though taken at the union hall, is figuratively much farther off the
beaten path. It shows former Seafarer Scott Wenneson (far right, with his
wife), former Patrolman Ken Horner (left), Brown and a unique item that
Wenneson picked up after stumbling upon it at a local auction: a plaster bust
of the late Andrew Furuseth, who is regarded as the father of the American
maritime labor movement. Furuseth was president of the old International
Seamen’s Union, forerunner to the SIU. It is believed that the plaster bust
was used in the creation of metallic ones at SIU headquarters and at the
union’s affiliated school in Piney Point, Md.

8 Seafarers LOG	

April 2014

�ABOARD BLACK EAGLE – SIU members (photo at left) are pictured in
mid-January aboard Sealift Inc.’s Black Eagle (photo above) in Concord,
Calif. The SIU crew included AB Luis Valerio, Steward/Baker James Watson, GUDE Jacob Gaskill, GUDE Nicole Stephenson, SA Dimitri Baker,
OS Arnold Williams, Bosun Moises Ramos, OS Ledaron McIntosh, AB
Alexander Dodoo and AB Abedon Lujan.

TAKING THE OATH IN NORFOLK – At the SIU hall
in Norfolk, Va., VP Government Services Kermett
Mangram (left in photo above) swears in GUDE Aaron
Shorter.

ABOARD WEST COAST RRF SHIPS – SIU Asst. VP Nick Celona (standing in photo above) and Patrolman Nick Marrone
II recently met with crews from Ready Reserve Force (RRF) ships in Alameda, Calif., including the USNS Algol, USNS
Capella, Gem State, Keystone State and Grand Canyon State. Members from the Algol and Capella are pictured here.

IMPECCABLE
SAFETY – Chief
Cook Marilou Toledo
(left in photo at immediate right) and SA
Ahmed Omar (right),
pictured with Captain
Mark Paine aboard
the USNS Impeccable, recently received
cash awards as part
of an ongoing safety
program conducted
by vessel operator
Maersk Line, Limited.
The Seafarers’ excellent work recently
was applauded by
the ship’s officers and
crew.

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY – AB Josefino Casugay submitted this photo of him and his wife, Erlinda, who celebrated their 44th anniversary March 8. Josefino has
been sailing SIU since 1968, while Erlinda is a retired
preschool teacher still working part-time at a faith-based
preschool. They have five kids, eight grandchildren and
one great grandson. Josefino said he’s thinking about
retiring next year.

April 2014	

WELCOME ASHORE IN HOUSTON – Patrolman Joe Zavala (right in photo above) hands newly retired Seafarer
Mark Stewart his first pension check at the Houston hall.

CHECKING OUT MEDICAL CERTIFICATE – During a recent visit in southern California, SIU VP Contracts George
Tricker (right in photo above) and AB Ahmed Baabbad examined one of the newly issued medical certificates from the
Coast Guard. The certificates were issued due to the most
recent amendments to the STCW convention.

Seafarers LOG 9

�Get Latest SIU News, Access Your Own Info
Member Portal, Texting Service
And More Available to Seafarers
Whether a Seafarer is accessing personal data through the member portal
on the union’s website or sharing photos and comments on the SIU’s social
media sites, there are lots of ways to
stay connected. Here’s a quick look at
some of the informational resources
available to SIU members (besides, of
course, the Seafarers LOG):
n Member Portal. All members
are encouraged to sign up for a free
account through the SIU home page,
www.seafarers.org. The member portal features a wealth of information including work history, claims status, a
list of dependents and much more, plus
Seafarers can use it to update their contact information.
n Text Messaging. Seafarers can
sign up for SIU text alerts by sending
the word “join” (without the quotation
marks) to 97779. The union is just getting started with this service and will
be selective in how often it’s used. In
addition to receiving important alerts
about the union and the maritime industry, members may elect to sign up
for job alerts. Message and data rates
may apply. It’s easy to opt out, too.
n Facebook and Twitter Sites. The

SIU’s social media pages are linked on
the homepage at www.seafarers.org.
The SIU’s twitter handle is @SeafarersUnion. We normally post a handful
of times per week – usually current
photos of members, occasionally links
to interesting articles, and once a week
(Friday morning) an old file photo.
n Mobile Website. Want to check
something on the union’s website but
can’t get to a computer? The SIU late
last year launched a mobile version.
Just type the web address for the home
page into any mobile browser and it
should automatically redirect to the
mobile site. Most pages have been optimized for mobile browsing, although
visitors may scroll to the bottom of
nearly any page and select “Classic”
if they’d rather view the traditional design.
n Good Old Seafarers.Org.
Launched in 1997, the union’s website
features general and SIU-specific news
items, current and past issues of the
Seafarers LOG, lists of all the union
halls and membership meeting dates,
union and Seafarers Plans forms (in
PDF format), photo galleries, Paul Hall
Center course dates and a lot more.

The SIU Facebook page is linked on the union’s homepage. Most of the posts are
current photos of members, but links to news items and (weekly) old images also are
featured.

Access the mobile version of the SIU website by typing www.seafarers.org into any mobile
browser.

The union’s Twitter handle is @SeafarersUnion.

10 Seafarers LOG	

The members-only portal is linked at upper right on the home page, and also may be
accessed directly at https://members.seafarers.org/

April 2014

�A Merchant Seaman in Korea
April to December 1948 – Part 2
Editor’s note: Beginning in September 2010, the LOG
regularly has featured articles by retired mariner Ed
Woods, who first shipped out during World War II, as
a teenager. Most of the earlier stories were run in two
series, concluding in the September 2012 edition. Standalone articles were published in the November 2012, May
2013 and August 2013 issues.
Brother Woods recently submitted the following article
recalling a stay in Korea; the first installment ran in our
March edition.
At this time in Korea, the summer of 1948, I was told
that the highest ranking officer in the Pusan area was that
of a full colonel and few were ever allowed to see him. It
was said he spent most of his time in Japan playing golf.
The colonel didn’t need to give a care about his office
because at its entrance door was a grouchy old 30-year
sergeant major who handled all his affairs. I don’t think
that Gen. Douglas MacArthur would have been allowed
past him. He was especially curt to army pilots wishing
to be assigned flying time. If they didn’t fly a designated
number of hours each month it would cost them pay.
I was surprised at the manner in which he answered
officers. However, I never heard or saw any officer pull
rank on him. He had them intimidated. It was obvious that
whatever he did or said would be backed up by the colonel.
The sergeant was also in charge of the officers club.
The club was serviced by two young Koreans who tended
the bar and did the cleaning. Beer was sold in cans for 10
cents, whiskey and scotch at 10 cents a shot. Periodically,
there would be an open house with free drinks and sandwiches.
The club could not show a profit and had to make use
of any extra income. In the evening, the sergeant would sit
near the bar and observe the activity that was taking place.
For an initial refundable deposit of 25 dollars, I became
a member of the monthly officers’ liquor allowance. Once
a month, for less than 10 dollars, I could purchase a case
of beer, a bottle of scotch, a bottle of rye and two bottles of
wine. The cost of beer and alcohol in the States was much
higher because it included taxes; here it was tax-free.
Only the beer appealed to me, however, the army pilots
were pleased to exchange their cases of beer for my bottle
of rye or scotch.
I shared my beer with the enlisted men who operated
the motor pool. They were closer in age to me. I could get
a jeep and driver any time I requested a ride. One time,
this arrangement proved a bit embarrassing. I was in a card
game in the hut’s rec room when one of the pilots, a first
lieutenant, called for a jeep and was told there was none
available at the time. When the game ended, I also called
for a jeep and within a few minutes the vehicle arrived in
my name. The lieutenant was still waiting.
I had become close friends with the two young soldiers
that operated the motor pool. When they were off duty,
we would pack sandwiches and a cooler of cold beer and
then visit remote villages and beaches on the east or west
coast of the Lower Peninsula. The boys always had a rifle
on hand. Their superiors had told them that while the U.S.
had liberated Korea from the Japanese, there were Koreans, both from the South and North, who wanted us out of
their country.
In a few weeks, our office was closed down. The major
was relocated to Seoul, the capital of Korea, and asked if

Woods said these two Korean young men “were employed
as house boys in our hut. They were constantly reading
and studying, and I’m confident they went on to more important jobs.”

April 2014	

I would like to continue to work with him. We would be
doing identical work, reporting on the heating systems of
buildings the State Department was considering for office
space. I accepted his offer and within a day or so found
myself back in Seoul.
I was assigned a room at the West Gate Hotel. It was
called a hotel but it was more like a series of small rooms
with dressers, small closets and desks.
The latrine was down the hall and shared with other
DACs, one of whom was in charge of the post exchange
(PX). He would tell me when good buys were available
for sale.
When I started to work, I once again had a driver, an
interpreter and two laborers; I found my job would be reporting the conditions of furnaces, boilers and their missing parts.
In one old building, as I was attempting to get water
into a boiler to check for a leak, I could not understand
why no water came out of the hose attached to the boiler. I
had the laborers dig up the floor and discovered the underground pipes had been removed. There were shortages of
just about everything at that time and I am sure the missing pipe was put to good use. Metal beer and soda cans
were hammered flat and used as roofing tiles. Nothing was
wasted.
The major called me into his office to tell me he had
been alerted to expect a group of high-ranking American
officials to arrive in Seoul for a conference. To entertain
them, a review was planned for their benefit at the Old
Opera House. He asked me to check the air conditioning
in the building.
Cooling systems were new to me; I knew little about
their operation. When I arrived at the opera house, I was
met by an elderly Korean gentleman who spoke a passable
amount of English. He indicated that he was in charge of
the building. He knew all about the air conditioning system and offered to explain it to me. At the time, I thought
the system to be unique and only later did I learn that fans
and ice have been in use for many years in many parts of
the world. Cakes of ice are placed in a room and huge fans
blow air over the ice and the cooled air into the building.
He said, “All I need is ice.” I reported back to the major
who told me he would make some phone calls. The next
day, when I returned to the opera house the ice had been
delivered. The interior was cool but damp with a substantial amount of condensation on the walls and seats.
There was a weekly bingo game at the club. One night,
a clothes washing machine was to be the big prize. When
it was carried out to the winner, it proved to be a rock and
a stick – a Korean washing machine.
As the days went by, I began to like the native Koreans
more and more and admired them for their resourcefulness. They had been subjected to all sorts of indignities
under the Japanese but had managed to uphold their traditions and self-respect.
My stay in Korea was cut short in early November
1948, when we were told that all civilian workers would
be returned to the States. No reason was given but the
air was full of rumors that later proved to be true. North
Korea wanted South Korea and would not hesitate to fight
for it. We were guessing that MacArthur and his staff in
Japan knew a lot more than they were telling us.
About 50 DACs, including me, were transported to the
Port of Inchon in preparation to board a USAT Transport
(no airplane this time) for the return voyage to the States.
Our hold luggage, but not our carry-ons, was loaded aboard
the ship. As we waited to board, a jeep pulled alongside the
pier and an army officer told us we would be not boarding
this ship and we would be returning to the hotel in Seoul.
He was asked, “What about our hold luggage?” He gave an
honest answer, “I don’t know.”
I didn’t see my hold luggage again until it was delivered to my home in New York City the following summer.
The lock on my footlocker had been broken off and all my
clothes and souvenirs were missing. Someone had taken
the time to fill the locker with assorted junk, possibly to
give it some weight.
Back at the hotel, we learned that the Communist Army
had broken through the Nationalist lines in Northern China
and were threatening Shanghai. All U.S. Army transports
had been ordered to go there and carry both Chinese and
other nationals to Taiwan. (We were still referring to the
island as Formosa.)
When I first heard I would be sent back to the States,
I said, “Well, I’ll be back home in time for Thanksgiving
dinner at my Mom’s in New York City.” It was to be another month before a transport became available to return
us to the States.
A transport became available in early December; we
boarded it and found it to be crowded with long lines for
every activity. It became more crowded when we stopped

This photo from Tague is part of the author’s collection
from his stay in Korea.

at Okinawa to pick up additional passengers. There was
much whining and complaining from the passengers about
the accommodations, especially from the military wives
with children.
The shipboard crowding didn’t bother me. I was 21
years old and had shared crowded cabins with two or three
other seamen for almost four years during the war.
Our stop at Okinawa was of special interest. I had
been there in 1945 at the end of the war when a typhoon
passed over the island. My ship, an oil tanker, had rode
out the storm at sea for three days and then returned to an
anchorage at Buckner Bay on the east coast of the island.
(Buckner Bay was named in honor of Gen. Simon Bolivar
Buckner Jr. He was killed June 18, 1945 during the closing days of the Battle of Okinawa by enemy artillery fire,
making him the highest-ranking U.S. military officer to
have been lost to enemy fire during World War II.
When we returned to our anchorage in Buckner Bay,
the beaches were filled with ships, boats and debris as a
result of the damage caused by the storm. Therefore, when
I went ashore on this last visit in December 1948, I was
pleasantly surprised to see a clean and well-maintained
military base. A sign read: Welcome to Okinawa courtesy
of the United States Ryukyu Islands Command. Nearby
was a plaque honoring Ernie Pyle.
We arrived in San Francisco on Christmas Eve 1948.
As the ship passed under the Golden Gate Bridge, the passengers threw pennies over the side, a good luck tradition.
All government offices were closed for the holiday and
I was very short on funds, as I had not been paid in a number of weeks. Transportation back to New York could not
be arranged until Monday when the government offices
reopened.
One of the men with me had previously lived in in the
City by the Bay and was able to get me a hotel room with
the understanding I would pay the hotel bill on the coming
Monday. He also treated me to dinner at the famous Top
of the Mark restaurant in the Mark Hopkins Hotel. As we
sat and enjoyed dinner, I could see the lights of Alcatraz
Island across the bay. It looked peaceful and attractive in
the moonlight. Its beauty gave me an eerie feeling, as I
thought of the convicts serving time in the prison.
Back at the hotel, I put a call through to my mother
to wish her a Merry Christmas and to tell her I would be
home within the week. My girlfriend, Jackie, was visiting
with my family. Jackie asked me for the hotel’s telephone
number and within the hour called me from her parent’s
house and we chatted for the first time in eight months.
In the 65 years since I worked in South Korea, the
country has made a most remarkable, one could say miraculous, recovery from the decades of Japanese oppression and later the war with its northern neighbor. From dirt
roads to highways, from shacks with roofs made of discarded flattened metal cans to modern buildings. From a
subjugated nation under Japanese rule, Korea has become
a nation of international respect and admiration. I want to
say, “I knew they could do it.”
Ed Woods
Atlanta, Georgia
January 2014
Postscript
June 25, 1950 was a Sunday. My wife, Jackie, and I
had just settled down to breakfast when we heard the news
report of the North Korea invasion of South Korea. It was
added that the North Koreans were driving south with
little or no opposition. My prayers and thoughts immediately went to the young soldiers of the 24th Corps that I
had befriended.

Seafarers LOG 11

�Seafarers Deliver
In Deep Freeze 2014

AB Marie Acosta

Most of the SIU crew members are pictured aboard deck in Antarctica.
Each Antarctic summer since McMurdo Station was established in 1955, an MSC tanker and dry cargo ship (with assistance from an icebreaker) have arrived to deliver most of the
fuel and dry cargo required to sustain personnel at the research outpost for a year.

F

or many people, thoughts of
summer may include beach
umbrellas, flip-flops and visits
by the local ice cream truck.
Not so at the National Science
Foundation’s McMurdo Station,
where summertime still means icebergs, penguins and all the other assorted sights that reflect Antarctica’s
status as the coldest and windiest
spot on the planet.
For Seafarers, Antarctic summer
means gearing up for the annual resupply mission to the station, known
as Operation Deep Freeze. SIU members have a decades-long tradition of
delivering vital cargos to McMurdo
Station as well as transporting research findings from the scientific
outpost.
This year, the tanker Maersk
Peary and heavy-lift vessel Maersk
Illinois (both operated by Maersk
Line, Limited) called on the station
from late January to early February.
According to the Military Sealift
Command, the Peary delivered more

Bosun Ron Paradise

12 Seafarers LOG	

than 3.5 million gallons of diesel
fuel, jet fuel and gasoline (enough to
sustain the station for a year), while
the Illinois’ cargo featured nearly 7
million pounds of supplies such as
frozen and dry food stores, building
materials, vehicles, and electronic
equipment and parts.
Recertified Steward Tony Spain
from the Peary submitted the photos
on these two pages. These images
and some additional ones from the
Peary are posted in the Gallery section of the SIU website, and they’re
also in an album on the SIU Facebook page.
SIU members aboard the Peary
during Operation Deep Freeze included Spain along with Bosun Ron
Paradise, AB Vincent Castellano,
AB Marie Acosta, AB Fortunato
Ranario, AB Steven Whiting, AB
William Smith, Chief Pumpman
Virgilio Demegillo, QMED Lee
Wright, Wiper Raymond Martinez,
Chief Cook Mark Keller and GSTU
Yasser Mohssen.

QMED Lee Wright

AB Fortunato Ranario

The Seafarers-crewed Maersk Peary docks at McMurdo Station.

Wiper Raymond Martinez, AB Vincent Castellano

April 2014

April 2014	

AB Steven Whiting

Chief Pumpman Virgilio Demegillo

Recertified Steward Tony Spain,
GSTU Yasser Mohssen, Chief Cook Mark Keller

Seafarers LOG 13

�4/14

14 Seafarers LOG	

April 2014

�April &amp; May 2014
Membership Meetings
Piney Point.........................................Monday: April 7, May 5
Algonac......................................................Friday: April 11, May 9
Baltimore...............................................Thursday: April 10, May 8
Guam...................................................Thursday: April 24, May 22
Honolulu..................................................Friday: April 18, May 16
Houston...................................................Monday: April 14, May 12
Jacksonville.........................................Thursday: April 10, May 8
Joliet....................................................Thursday: April 17, May 15
Mobile..............................................Wednesday: April 16, May 14
New Orleans.................................................Tuesday: April 15, May 13
New York...............................................Tuesday: April 8, May 6
Norfolk................................................Thursday: April 10, May 8
Oakland................................................Thursday: April 17, May 15
Philadelphia..........................................Wednesday: April 9, May 7
Port Everglades.....................................Thursday: April 17, May 15
San Juan..............................................Thursday: April 10, May 8
St. Louis..................................................Friday: April 18, May 16
Tacoma.....................................................Friday: April 25, May 23
Wilmington.................................................Monday: April 21, May 19
Each port’s meeting starts at 10:30 a.m.

Attention SEAFARERS
Help Keep America’s
Maritime Industry Strong!
Contribute to

SPAD
(The Seafarers Political Activity Donation)

April 2014	

Dispatchers’ Report for Deep Sea
February 16, 2013 - March 15, 2014
Port			

Total Registered	
All Groups		
A	
B	
C	

Total Shipped			
All Groups	
Trip
A	
B	
C
Reliefs	

Registered on Beach
All Groups
A	
B	
C

Algonac			
Anchorage		
Baltimore		
Fort Lauderdale		
Guam			
Honolulu			
Houston			
Jacksonville		
Joliet			
Mobile			
New Orleans		
New York		
Norfolk			
Oakland			
Philadelphia		
Piney Point		
Puerto Rico		
Tacoma			
St. Louis			
Wilmington		
TOTALS		

Deck Department
10	9	3	16	3	2	0	28	20	3	
0	3	0	1	1	0	1	1	5	0	
10	8	0	6	3	0	4	10	9	0	
9	13	2	15	8	2	7	22	21	1	
4	2	1	2	1	0	0	5	2	1	
8	5	2	8	0	1	2	15	9	1	
60	11	1	 41	6	 1	 21	109	21	2	
36	20	3	 28	12	3	 14	67	41	2	
6	3	0	7	2	0	0	10	6	1	
5	1	1	5	3	1	4	13	9	2	
10	2	2	11	0	1	4	21	3	1	
53	21	0	 36	11	0	 14	86	25	2	
16	11	3	 12	9	 5	 7	 27	30	7	
33	8	0	12	5	0	7	52	13	0	
6	3	1	4	2	0	0	9	4	4	
1	1	0	0	1	0	1	2	1	0	
5	4	0	7	5	0	2	10	10	1	
41	10	0	 30	8	 2	 12	68	20	2	
3	3	1	1	1	0	0	5	3	1	
37	14	1	 24	9	 2	 10	68	33	0	
353	152	21	 266	90	 20	 110	628	285	31	

Algonac			
Anchorage		
Baltimore		
Fort Lauderdale		
Guam			
Honolulu			
Houston			
Jacksonville		
Joliet			
Mobile			
New Orleans		
New York		
Norfolk			
Oakland			
Philadelphia		
Piney Point		
Puerto Rico		
Tacoma			
St. Louis			
Wilmington		
TOTALS		

Engine Department
2	3	2	7	5	3	0	5	7	0	
1	0	0	1	0	0	0	1	2	0	
6	6	1	1	4	0	3	6	9	1	
7	6	1	3	3	0	2	12	13	1	
1	1	0	0	0	0	0	1	1	0	
7	8	0	7	3	0	2	11	11	0	
9	14	0	9	8	0	4	23	17	0	
31	16	3	 15	11	1	 9	 47	29	3	
1	2	0	4	3	0	0	3	4	0	
8	2	1	9	1	1	2	14	3	2	
4	2	0	2	1	0	0	7	3	1	
9	13	0	11	5	0	2	25	21	1	
13	17	0	 10	5	 1	 3	 18	22	0	
13	3	0	3	3	0	5	23	11	0	
2	1	0	1	1	0	0	6	2	1	
1	2	0	0	2	0	0	1	4	1	
1	5	1	2	4	0	2	2	10	2	
14	5	3	9	3	2	3	27	7	1	
2	1	0	1	0	0	1	3	2	0	
7	13	0	5	9	0	3	21	20	0	
139	120	12	 100	71	 8	 41	 256	198	14	

Algonac			
Anchorage		
Baltimore		
Fort Lauderdale		
Guam			
Honolulu			
Houston			
Jacksonville		
Joliet			
Mobile			
New Orleans		
New York		
Norfolk			
Oakland			
Philadelphia		
Piney Point		
Puerto Rico		
Tacoma			
St. Louis			
Wilmington		
TOTALS		

Steward Department
1	2	1	2	2	2	0	7	1	1	
0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	0	
3	1	0	2	2	0	1	2	2	0	
8	5	1	7	2	0	3	15	5	1	
2	0	0	0	0	0	0	3	1	0	
8	1	0	8	1	0	3	16	3	0	
17	4	1	10	4	0	5	37	7	2	
17	6	2	14	3	0	5	28	12	3	
1	2	1	0	2	1	1	4	2	0	
5	0	0	1	0	0	0	9	2	0	
5	2	0	1	1	1	0	8	2	0	
12	9	1	5	4	0	3	33	10	1	
11	10	3	7	2	5	2	24	15	4	
29	2	4	14	1	1	6	46	5	2	
1	0	1	2	0	1	1	2	0	0	
0	5	0	3	0	0	1	2	6	1	
1	2	1	1	1	0	1	2	3	0	
10	4	0	6	2	0	4	28	3	1	
0	0	0	2	0	0	0	2	0	0	
20	5	1	13	2	1	6	39	6	1	
151	60	17	98	29	12	42	307	85	17	

Algonac			
Anchorage		
Baltimore		
Fort Lauderdale		
Guam			
Honolulu			
Houston			
Jacksonville		
Joliet			
Mobile			
New Orleans		
New York		
Norfolk			
Oakland			
Philadelphia		
Piney Point		
Puerto Rico		
Tacoma			
St. Louis			
Wilmington		
TOTALS		

Entry Department
0	8	3	2	16	2	0	2	17	16	
0	1	0	0	0	0	0	0	2	0	
1	3	4	0	3	1	1	1	2	2	
1	4	2	1	2	1	1	0	9	2	
0	1	0	0	0	0	0	0	2	0	
2	2	6	1	3	10	1	3	6	6	
3	13	0	5	6	2	3	7	21	4	
1	13	9	1	7	6	2	2	21	22	
0	7	1	1	14	0	0	1	6	1	
0	3	2	1	2	0	0	0	1	2	
0	2	0	0	0	0	0	3	7	0	
6	20	5	2	14	2	0	10	38	20	
1	14	10	0	13	6	0	1	19	32	
5	16	3	2	6	1	1	5	21	9	
0	3	1	0	2	0	0	1	3	2	
0	0	1	0	0	0	0	0	0	1	
1	0	2	0	0	0	0	1	1	2	
4	7	0	6	6	1	2	4	13	19	
0	2	0	0	1	0	0	0	2	0	
3	18	9	2	11	6	3	11	34	32	
28	137	58	24	106	38	14	52	225	172	

GRAND TOTAL:		

671	469	108	488	296	78	 207	1,243	
793	234	

Seafarers LOG 15

�Inquiring Seafarer

Seafarers International
Union Directory
Michael Sacco, President
Augustin Tellez, Executive Vice President
David Heindel, Secretary-Treasurer
George Tricker, Vice President Contracts
Tom Orzechowski,
Vice President Lakes and Inland Waters
Dean Corgey, Vice President Gulf Coast
Nicholas J. Marrone, Vice President West Coast
Joseph T. Soresi, Vice President Atlantic Coast
Kermett Mangram,
Vice President Government Services
HEADQUARTERS
5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746
(301) 899-0675
ALGONAC
520 St. Clair River Dr., Algonac, MI 48001
(810) 794-4988
ANCHORAGE
721 Sesame St., #1C, Anchorage, AK 99503
(907) 561-4988
BALTIMORE
2315 Essex St., Baltimore, MD 21224
(410) 327-4900
GUAM
P.O. Box 3328, Hagatna, Guam 96932
Cliffline Office Ctr. Bldg., Suite 103B
422 West O’Brien Dr., Hagatna, Guam 96910
(671) 477-1350

Editor’s note: This month’s question was answered by SIU members in Houston.
Question: Why did you get into this industry and why have you stuck with it?

Jay White
Bosun
I was always on
the water and around
boats all my life. I
had fished and surfed
and I ended up on
ships. I enjoy seeing
the world and also
enjoy the time off.
I first went to sea in
1978 and I joined the
union in 1987.

HONOLULU
606 Kalihi St., Honolulu, HI 96819
(808) 845-5222
HOUSTON
1221 Pierce St., Houston, TX 77002
(713) 659-5152
JACKSONVILLE
5100 Belfort Rd., Jacksonville, FL 32256
(904) 281-2622
JOLIET
10 East Clinton St., Joliet, IL 60432
(815) 723-8002
MOBILE
1640 Dauphin Island Pkwy, Mobile, AL 36605
(251) 478-0916

Marcos Clotter
Pumpman
My father was

an engineer and he
helped me out. He
encouraged me to
learn more, go to
the school. He was
NMU back then;
he retired about 25
years ago. I love
being in the industry. It’s a fantastic
job and you learn a
lot as you go.

Billy Hill Sr.
Recertified Bosun
I’m a third-generation guy. My father and grandfather
were also members.
My son is a member,
too, which makes him
fourth generation.
It’s a family tradition. You don’t see
many guys who can
say that. I went into
it because I grew up
around it. I grew up in
the port of Houston. I

used to visit my dad
on ships when I was
a boy and I’ve always
felt right at home on
a ship. I’ve stayed
because I like meeting people and it’s a
union. That’s actually the main thing,
the union. I’ve been
a union man since I
was born. This job is
a lifestyle. It’s not the
typical 8-to-5 job.

Fausto E. Aranda
GUDE
My dad was a
recertified steward,
so I sort of got in
because of him.
I originally had a
scholarship that fell
through and I asked
my dad what I should
do. He mentioned
joining the SIU. It’s
definitely a different
type of work. You

get to travel and
see open seas and
different cultures.
Plus, there’s all this
wildlife and breathing that fresh air. It
was amazing to see
a sunset at sea for
the first time. I had
never seen that before. And the union
is like a family.
They welcome you
and treat you really
well. Plus, with this
job, I’m able to support my family. I’m
thankful to my dad
for getting me in the
union.

Romualdo Medina
AB
I joined the union
in 1994; it was in
February, the same
time of year it is
now. Being a union

member has really
changed my life. It
has provided me with
great training, continuous employment
and the opportunity
to travel and see the
world. I have worked
in different capacities
aboard ship, including as bosun, which
has allowed me to
supervise other mariners. This enabled me
to help others in their
careers…. This I think
was good for me, my
shipmates and for
the union. So far, the
union has been a very
wonderful thing in my
life and I say thanks to
the SIU.

Robert Davis
Recertified Steward
Well, back in
1985, I was working
on a cruise ship sailing between Japan

and Hawaii. The vessel was under a Panamanian flag with not
too many Englishspeaking people on
board. We pulled
into Honolulu and at
the dock were all of
these young people
carrying SIU placards. They were protesting our existence
because we were not
American flag and we
were going to be sailing between Hawaii
and Tahiti. So I asked
who those people
were. I was informed
and so I decided that
I would leave the
Panamanian ship and
become an Americanflag crew member.
Once I found out
about Piney Point …
well, that’s what really sold me on the
union. So I got involved and decided to
stay. I went to Piney
Point many times to
achieve the level that
I have today. I think
the SIU offers the
greatest opportunities
for its members. With
the brotherhood being
what it is, it’s really
like a large family to
me.

Pic-From-The-Past

NEW ORLEANS
3911 Lapalco Blvd., Harvey, LA 70058
(504) 328-7545
NEW YORK
635 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11232
(718) 499-6600
Government Services Division: (718) 499-6600
NORFOLK
115 Third St., Norfolk, VA 23510
(757) 622-1892
OAKLAND
1121 7th St., Oakland, CA 94607
(510) 444-2360
PHILADELPHIA
2604 S. 4 St., Philadelphia, PA 19148
(215) 336-3818
PINEY POINT
P.O. Box 75, Piney Point, MD 20674
(301) 994-0010
PORT EVERGLADES
1221 S. Andrews Ave., Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33316
(954) 522-7984
SANTURCE
1057 Fernandez Juncos Ave., Stop 16
Santurce, PR 00907
(787) 721-4033
ST. LOUIS/ALTON
4581 Gravois Ave., St. Louis, MO 63116
(314) 752-6500
TACOMA
3411 South Union Ave., Tacoma, WA 98409
(253) 272-7774
WILMINGTON
510 N. Broad Ave., Wilmington, CA 90744
(310) 549-4000

This 1954 file photo shows the Del Oro discharging mahogany at Industrial Canal in New Orleans.
If anyone has a vintage union-related photograph he or she would like to share with other Seafarers LOG readers,
please send it to the Seafarers LOG, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746. Photographs will be returned,
if so requested. High-resolution digital images may be sent to webmaster@seafarers.org

16 Seafarers LOG	

April 2014

�Welcome Ashore

Each month, the Seafarers LOG pays tribute to the SIU members who have devoted
their working lives to sailing aboard U.S.-flag vessels on the deep seas, inland waterways or Great Lakes. Listed below are brief biographical sketches of those members
who recently retired from the union. The brothers and sisters of the SIU thank those
members for a job well done and wish them happiness and good health in the days
ahead.

DEEP SEA
NORMAN ADLER
Brother Norman Adler, 65,
was born in New York and
started sailing with the Seafarers in 1989. He
was originally
employed
on the USNS
Chauvenet.
Brother Adler
shipped in the
steward department. He enhanced his skills in 2006 at the
maritime training center in Piney
Point, Md. Brother Adler’s most
recent ship was the Noble Star.
He is a resident of Bayshore,
N.Y.

Point, Md. He sailed in all three
departments. Brother Bruno’s
most recent trip was aboard the
Horizon Trader. He calls Brooklyn, N.Y. home.
DAVID GOOSBY
Brother David Goosby, 65,
began sailing with the SIU in
1967. He originally shipped
on the Alcoa
Voyager. The
engine department member
attended classes
frequently at the
Paul Hall Center. Brother Goosby’s last ship
was the Overseas Boston. He is a
resident of Tampa, Fla.

TERRY ALLEN

BERTRAM HICKMAN

Brother Terry Allen, 63, became an SIU member in 1978
while in New York. He initially
worked aboard
the Santa Mariana. Brother
Allen sailed
in the steward
department and
upgraded often
at the Paul Hall
Center. Brother
Allen’s most recent trip to sea was on the Lightning. He now makes his home in
Long Beach, Calif.

Brother Bertram Hickman, 67,
started shipping with the SIU in
1990. He initially sailed aboard
the Independence. Brother Hickman enhanced his skills three
times at the Piney Point school.
He worked in the steward department and concluded his career on
the Maersk Peary. Brother Hickman settled in Perkasie, Pa.

CONSTANTINE BAILEY
Brother Constantine Bailey, 71,
signed on with the Seafarers
in 2001 during the SIU/NMU
merger. The engine department
member was
born in the West
Indies. Brother
Bailey attended
classes in 2001
at the Paul Hall
Center for Maritime Training and Education. His
last ship was the Mary Ann Hudson. Brother Bailey lives in Port
Arthur, Texas.
HARRY BROWN
Brother Harry Brown, 65, joined
the SIU ranks in 2001 when the
NMU merged into the Seafarers
International
Union. His most
recent ship was
the Houston.
Brother Brown
worked in the
deck department.
He upgraded in
2002 at the Piney
Point school. Brother Brown resides in Mobile, Ala.
ANGEL BRUNO
Brother Angel Bruno, 63,
donned the SIU colors in
1971. He initially shipped on
the Brooklyn. Brother Bruno
enhanced his skills on two occasions at the union-affiliated
maritime training center in Piney

April 2014	

MILTON HOLLIS
Brother Milton Hollis, 68, joined
the Seafarers in 1990 in Houston.
The deck department member’s
earliest trip was
on the Sealift
Caribbean.
Brother Hollis
upgraded often
at the Paul Hall
Center. His most
recent trip was aboard the Horizon Challenger. Brother Hollis
makes his home in Coldspring,
Texas.
BERNARD HUTCHERSON
Brother Bernard Hutcherson, 65,
donned the SIU colors in 1978.
He originally sailed with Manhattan Tankers Corporation. Brother
Hutcherson
shipped in the
deck department.
He enhanced his
skills frequently
at the unionaffiliated school
in Piney Point,
Md. Brother Hutcherson’s most
recent trip was on the Alliance
Charleston. He resides in Lynn
Haven, Fla.
ANTHONY JONES
Brother Anthony Jones, 65,
signed on with the Seafarers in
1968. The engine department
member first sailed aboard the
City of Alma. Brother Jones took
advantage of educational opportunities at the SIU-affiliated
school in Piney Point, Md. He
last shipped on the Alliance Norfolk. Brother Jones calls Jacksonville, Fla., home.

EDWARD KING
Brother Edward King, 65, joined
the union in 1978 while in San
Francisco. He initially sailed on
the Santa Maria.
Brother King
was a member
of the steward
department. His
most recent ship
was the Independence. Brother
King continues
to live in his native state, California.
CHARLES LARSON
Brother Charles Larson, 65,
began sailing with the Seafarers in 1991. He first shipped
aboard the Sea
Fox. Brother
Larson sailed
in the deck department. He
upgraded often
at the maritime
training center
in Piney Point,
Md. Brother Larson’s most recent voyage was on the Cape
May. He is a resident of Kitty
Hawk, N.C.
ROLANDO LOPEZ
Brother Rolando Lopez, 65,
joined the SIU in 1989. His initial trip was aboard the USNS
Harkness. Brother Lopez attended classes on numerous occa-

ALBERT HOLMES

sions at the Paul
Hall Center. The
steward department member
last sailed on
the Charger.
Brother Lopez
calls Vacaville,
Calif., home.

Brother Albert Holmes, 62,
signed on with the SIU in 1989.
Brother Holmes was a member of
the deck department. He worked
aboard vessels operated by Orgulf Transport Company. Brother
Holmes makes his home in Blytheville, Ark.

INLAND
WILLIAM CHARNOCK
Brother William Charnock,
65, became an SIU member in
1993. Brother Charnock initially
worked with
Piney Point
Transportation.
In 2001 and
2003, he enhanced his skills
at the maritime
training center.
Brother Charnock shipped as a member of
both the steward and deck departments. He was last employed
with Allied Transportation Company. Brother Charnock lives in
Hampton, Va.
LEONARD DOWNS
Brother Leonard Downs, 62,
started sailing with the union in
1995. He primarily worked with
McAllister Towing of Virginia.
Brother Downs was a member of
the deck department. He resides
in Diggs, Va.

GARY LAVINDER
Brother Gary Lavinder, 62, first
donned the SIU colors in 1976.
He was originally employed with
Steuart Transportation Company.
Brother Lavinder
attended classes
on two occasions
at the Seafarersaffiliated school
in Piney Point,
Md. He last
sailed with Moran Towing of
Maryland. Brother Lavinder is a
resident of Annapolis, Md.
JULIO SANTIAGO
Brother Julio Santiago, 64, began
shipping with the union in 2003.
For the duration of his career he
sailed with Puerto Rico Towing &amp; Barge. Brother Santiago
worked in the deck department.
He lives in Trujillo Alto, P.R.

This Month In SIU History
Editor’s note: The following items are reprinted
from previous editions of the Seafarers LOG.
1939
A strike of the crew of the SS Cuba and members
of the ILA who unload the Cuba, last week tied up the
Havana-Tampa vessel to back up the strike called by
the SIU crew on the Florida at Miami. Both vessels are
operated by the Peninsular and Occidental Steamship
Co., the Florida running between Miami and Havana.
U.S. Commissioner H.T. Colvin of the Department of
Conciliation of the Department of Labor called together
union and company officials in an attempt to straighten
out the difficulty.
The strike began when the car ferry Joseph R. Parrott shipped several men off the dock, and the real
union men aboard the ship walked off in protest against
this violation of a bona fide contract. The Parrot, however, is still running with a finky crew.
The crew of the Florida struck last Friday, and the
Cuba crew walked off Saturday, following a joint meeting held aboard the ship. The Longshoremen, in sympathy with the crew, refused to unload the Cuba, and a
picket line was thrown around the dock. Altogether, a
total of 200 seamen are on strike in the two ports.
1949
As the phony “strike” of the Canadian Seamen’s
Union against the 100-odd SIU contracted deep sea
ships operating from the eastern ports of Canada neared
the end of its third week, the Canadian District of the
SIU was in a stronger position in the area than ever before. In the past week, hundreds of CSU members, expressing disgust with communist control of their union,
have come into the SIU Canadian District.
SIU international officers from the United States,
who are now in Canada, reported that crew after crew
of CSU men were swinging to the SIU…. Paraphrasing

the slogan used in the successful Isthmian organizing
campaign of two years ago, Canadian seamen are now
jubilantly proclaiming: Canada, too, will be SIU!”
1959
SIU-manned Alcoa Steamship Company vessels
have won the first-prize award for 1958 in the annual
safety competition among operators of U.S.-flag seagoing dry cargo and passenger vessels sponsored by the
National Safety Council’s Marine Section. Alcoa won
with the best safety record ever attained in the contest.
The SIU-contracted company won the second-place
award in the 1957 contest, narrowly missing the top
spot by one-tenth of a point. The award is based on the
rate of lost-time accidents aboard ship in a year’s time.
Alcoa’s 1958 score was an accident-frequency rate of
2.94, computed on the basis of only 18 accidents serious enough to cause a man to miss his watch or work.
Well over 1,000 crew members were employed on
the 16 ships operated by the company during the year.
1969
The Charles S. Zimmerman, a modern floating
school ship named in honor of the vice president of
the International Ladies’ Garment Workers Union, was
christened at the SIU’s Harry Lundeberg School of Seamanship here last month. Attending the ceremonies – at
which Zimmerman’s wife, Rose, wielded the bottle to
officially christen the vessel – were many labor leaders, members of Congress, civic and church leaders and
ranking representatives of the military.
In introducing Zimmerman to the assembled wellwishers, SIU President Paul Hall described the veteran
trade unionist as a longstanding friend of the SIU –
“one of the very few” who came to its assistance in the
days when it was small and weak. “Because of the efforts of Zimmerman,” Hall declared, “the lives of many
people, including our Seafarers, are much better today.”

Seafarers LOG 17

�Final
Departures
DEEP SEA

ALEJANDRO ALDAIZ
Pensioner Alejandro Aldaiz, 67, died
Oct. 10. He began sailing with the
Seafarers in 1974 while in Houston.
Brother Aldaiz initially worked with
Dixie Carriers. He was born in Kingsville, Texas. A member of the deck
department, Brother Aldaiz was last
employed aboard the Liberty Pride.
He retired in 2011 and called San Antonio, Texas, home.

ROBERT BEATTIE
Brother Robert Beattie, 81, passed
away Aug. 14. He joined the union in
1991 in Seattle. Brother Beattie first
sailed on the Gem State. He was an
engine department member. Brother
Beattie most recently shipped aboard
the Tacoma. He was a resident of Tacoma, Wash.

BILLY BROWN

Oct. 10. Brother
Cruz signed on with
the union in 1993.
The engine department member’s
ships included the
Independence and the
Innovator. Brother
Cruz was born in the Philippines. He
became a pensioner in 2004. Brother
Cruz continued to reside in the Philippines.

FRANCISCO DACRUZ
Pensioner Francisco Dacruz, 62,
passed away Oct. 15. Brother Dacruz
first donned the SIU colors in 2001
during the SIU/NMU merger. The
steward department member was born
in Cape Verde. Brother Dacruz’s final
ship was the Yorktown Express. He
went on pension in 2013 and lived in
Pawtucket, R.I.

JOHN DEBOS

Pensioner Billy Brown, 84, died Sept.
22. He became a union member in
1966 while in Seattle.
Brother Brown first
shipped on the Del
Sol. He sailed in the
steward department.
Brother Brown’s final
trip was aboard the
President Madison.
He went on pension in 1992 and
called Portland, Ore., home.

Pensioner John Debos, 82, died Oct.
25. He started sailing
with the union in 1963.
Brother Debos was a
native of Indonesia.
He initially sailed with
Victory Carriers Inc.
Brother Debos was a
member of the deck
department. He was last employed
aboard the Explorer. Brother Debos
started receiving his pension in 1997.
He made his home in Las Vegas.

ISHMAEL BRYAN

PEDRO FLORES

Pensioner Ishmael Bryan, 83, passed
away July 23. He started shipping with
the Seafarers in 1970. Brother Bryan’s
first vessel was operated by Michigan
Tankers Inc. He was
born in the Cayman
Islands and shipped
in the deck department. Brother Bryan
last sailed on the Ambassador. He became a pensioner in
1997 and settled in Margate, Fla.

JOSEPH COLANGELO
Pensioner Joseph Colangelo, 59, died
Oct. 2. He began sailing with the
union in 1972. Brother Colangelo was
born in New York. He was originally
employed with Connecticut Transport
Inc. Brother Colangelo worked in the
deck department, most recently aboard
the Horizon Producer. He began collecting his retirement pay in 2012 and
was a resident of Jacksonville, Fla.

GEORGE CRAWFORD

Pensioner Pedro Flores, 85, passed
away Nov. 22. Brother Flores was born
in Puerto Rico. He
joined the union in
1969. Brother Flores
originally worked
with Waterman
Steamship Corporation. The deck department member’s final
ship was the Value.
Brother Flores began collecting his
retirement pay in 2000. He settled in
Brooklyn, N.Y.

CHARLES GASKINS
Pensioners Charles Gaskins, 88, died
Sept. 22. Brother Gaskins became an
SIU member in 1951 in New Orleans.
His earliest trip was on the Del Norte.
Brother Gaskins was born in Florida.
His final ship was operated by Mt.
Vernon Tankers Corporation. Brother
Gaskins was a member of the engine
department. He retired in 1987 and
called Starks, La., home.

Pensioner George Crawford, 88, passed
away Sept. 7. Born in Alabama, he
started shipping with the SIU in 1952
while in Mobile.
Brother Crawford
initially sailed on a
Waterman Steamship
Corporation vessel. He
was a member of the
steward department.
Brother Crawford’s
last trip was aboard the Stonewall Jackson. He retired in 1992 and made his
home in Mobile.

JAMES GLEATON

BENJAMIN CRUZ

GLORIA HOLMES

Pensioner Benjamin Cruz, 81, died

18 Seafarers LOG	

Pensioner James Gleaton, 85, passed
away Sept. 10. Brother Gleaton signed
on with the Seafarers in 1961. He
initially sailed on a Transeastern Shipping vessel as a steward department
member. Brother
Gleaton was born in
South Carolina. He
last shipped aboard the
Green Island. Brother
Gleaton went on pension in 1993 and lived
in North Charleston, S.C.

Pensioner Gloria Holmes, 65, died

Sept. 2. Sister Holmes joined the SIU
in 1978 in San Francisco. The Louisiana native sailed in the steward department. Sister Holmes’ earliest trip
was aboard the Santa Magdelena. She
most recently sailed on the Charger.
Sister Holmes started receiving her
retirement pay in 2012 and settled in
Mather, Calif.

last worked aboard
the Galveston Bay.
He was an engine
department member.
Brother Quinn began
collecting his retirement compensation
in 1994. He called
Cherry Valley, N.Y., home.

Young originally sailed on a Waterman Steamship Corporation vessel.
He was a member of the steward department. Brother Young last sailed on
the Paul Buck. He retired in 2006 and
lived in his native state, Texas.

EVARISTO JIMENEZ

RAYMOND REID

Pensioner Evaristo
Jimenez, 90, passed
away Sept. 11.
Brother Jimenez was
born in Santurce,
P.R. He became a
pensioner in 1986
and made his home
in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Pensioner Raymond Reid, 85, passed
away Sept. 16. Brother Reid became
a union member
in 1947. He was a
member of the deck
department. Brother
Reid’s final trip was
aboard the Montpelier
Victory. He went on
pension in 1984 and
made his home in Belle Chasse, La.

Pensioner George Collier, 68, died
Sept. 28. Born in Pasadena, Texas, Brother
Collier signed on
with the SIU in
1963. His earliest
trip was aboard the
Steel Rover. Brother
Collier worked in
the deck department. He was last employed with G&amp;H Towing. Brother
Collier became a pensioner in 2002.
He called Cisco, Texas, home.

TUIFAGALILO MALIGA
Pensioner Tuifagalilo Maliga, 71, died
Sept. 12. Brother Maliga began sailing with the Seafarers
in 1978 while in San
Francisco. His first
ship was the Santa
Magdelena; his last,
the Innovator. Brother
Maliga was born in
America Samoa. The
steward department
member retired in 2000. Brother Maliga was a resident of Long Beach,
Calif.

DENIS MANNING
Pensioner Denis Manning, 84, passed
away Oct. 24. Born in Brooklyn, N.Y.,
he began sailing with
the union in 1951.
Brother Manning
initially worked with
Blidberg Rothchild
Company. He was
a deck department
member. Brother
Manning last shipped on the Philadelphia. He went on pension in 1987 and
resided in Eugene, Ore.

SYLVESTER MASON
Pensioner Sylvester Mason, 75, died
Sept. 21. Brother
Mason first donned the
SIU colors in 1967.
The steward department member was born
in Alabama. Brother
Mason’s final ship was
the President Roosevelt. He became a pensioner in 2001.
Brother Mason lived in Reno, Nev.

JOSE ORTIZ
Pensioner Jose Ortiz, 69, passed away
Oct. 8. Brother Ortiz started shipping
with the SIU in 1968. His first vessel was the Seatrain
New Jersey; his last,
the Maersk Carolina.
Brother Ortiz was born
in Ponce, P.R. and
shipped in the deck department. He retired in
2009 and lived in Brooklyn, N.Y.

ARLEN QUINN
Pensioner Arlen Quinn, 82, died Oct.
9. He signed on with the SIU in 1956.
Brother Quinn’s earliest trip was with
Standard Oil Company. He was born
in Brooklyn, N.Y. Brother Quinn

TERESO ROCHEZ
Pensioner Tereso Rochez, 73, died
Sept. 9. Brother Rochez was a native
of Honduras. He joined the SIU in
1990, initially sailing on the Independence. The steward department
member’s final trip was aboard the
Patriot. Brother Rochez started receiving his pension in 2005. He resided in
Houston.

JULIAN SALAZAR
Pensioner Julian Salazar, 81, passed
away Sept. 25. He began sailing with
the Seafarers in 1970. Brother Salazar
originally worked on the Steel Flyer.
A member of the engine department,
Brother Salazar last shipped on the
LNG Libra. He retired in 2000 and
settled in Houston.

RICARDO SANCHEZ
Pensioner Ricardo Sanchez, 73, died
Oct. 16. Brother Sanchez joined the
union in 1977. He
first sailed aboard
the USNS Potomac.
Brother Sanchez was
a member of the deck
department. Prior to
his retirement in 2005,
he shipped on the
Maersk Colorado. Brother Sanchez
called New York home.

FRANK WHITTINGTON
Pensioner Frank Whittington, 86,
passed away Oct. 4. Brother Whittington was born in Blade, La. He went on
pension in 1998 and was a resident of
Galveston, Texas.

PERLEY WILLIS
Pensioner Perley Willis, 85, died Sept.
27. Brother Willis became an SIU
member in 1951.
He sailed aboard the
John Hanson early
in his career. Brother
Willis worked in
the steward department. His final trip
was aboard the OMI Wabash. Brother
Willis began collecting his pension in
1981. He resided in Houston.

ADOLPHUS YOUNG
Pensioner Adolphus Young, 79,
passed away Oct. 21. He started shipping with the union in 1976. Brother

INLAND

GEORGE COLLIER

KENNETH HUDGINS
Pensioner Kenneth Hudgins, 86, passed
away Oct. 19. Brother Hudgins began
sailing with the union in 1971. A Virginia native, Brother
Hudgins, sailed in the
deck department, and
worked with Allied
Transportation Company for the duration
of his career. He became a pensioner in 1993 and resided
New Point, Va.

LORRAINE JUDD
Pensioner Lorraine Judd, 93, died
Aug. 15. Sister Judd joined the SIU in
1973. She primarily
worked with Orgulf
Transportation Company. Sister Judd was
member of the steward department. She
went on pension in
1984 and lived in Glendale, Ariz.

BOBBY SKINNER
Pensioner Bobby Skinner, 76, passed
away Oct. 10. Brother Skinner join
the union in 1969 and initially shipped
with Norfolk Barge Company. He last
worked with Steuart Transportation
Company. Brother Skinner became a
pensioner in 2002 and was a resident
of Bath, N.C.

CHARLES TUCK
Pensioner Charles Tuck, 62, died Nov.
27. He was a native of Newton, Mass.
Brother Tuck joined
the SIU in 1986 and
made his first trip with
Moran Towing of
Texas. He last worked
aboard the Achievement. He retired in
2011 and called Miami, Fla., home.
NATIONAL MARITIME UNION

DENIS VILLALOBOS
Pensioner Denis Villalobos, 78, died
Aug. 29. Brother Villalobos was born in
Nicaragua. The deck
department member’s
final trip to sea was
aboard the Maersk
Vermont. He became
a pensioner in 2003 and continued to
call Nicaragua home.

April 2014

�Digest of Shipboard
Union Meetings
MAERSK HARTFORD
(Maersk Line, Limited),
December 23 – Chairman
Ion Irimia, Secretary
Johnnie B. McGill,
Educational Director
Ronald M. Pheneuf, Engine
Delegate Jozef Dudas,
Steward Delegate Alonzo
Belcher. Chairman thanked
everyone for a smooth
voyage. Secretary reported
broken oven and dishwasher;
parts have been ordered.
Educational director
noted very good crew and
pleasant sailing. Treasurer
stated $6,000 in ship fund.
No beefs or disputed OT
reported. Requests were
made for increase in food
budget, two new computers
for crew with Wi-Fi and
DVD players. Next port:
Newark, N.J.
USNS HENSON (Maersk
Line, Limited), December
27 – Chairman Mark A.
Grzegorczyk, Secretary Roger
M. Chrappa, Educational
Director Sutthipong M. Ticer.
Chairman talked about changes
to medical benefits. Treasurer
reported $1,363 in ship’s
fund; suggestion was made to
purchase movies. Crew members
were reminded to be safe in foul
weather and secure doors. No
beefs or disputed OT reported.
Concerns were expressed related
to changes in health insurance
due to new health care law. Next
port: Subic Bay.

Aboard Observation Island
SIU members are pictured in mid-March aboard the Observation Island in Mobile, Ala., as the vessel is prepped for the mothball fleet in
Beaumont, Texas. From left, front row: Oiler Major Brooks and AB James Pierce. From left in the back: Oiler Shawn Haber, Bosun Travis
Austin, and Oiler Fred Green. The ship will be replaced by the
USNS Howard O. Lorenzen, which completed final contract trials
late last year.

HORIZON KODIAK
(Horizon Lines), January 5
– Chairman Christopher K.
Pompel, Secretary Richard
B. Sanderson, Educational
Director Chris Earhart,
Deck Delegate Dan Lovely,
Engine Delegate Jan Haidir,
Steward Delegate Strode V.

Kudos for Maersk Memphis ABs

Maersk Memphis vessel master Capt. William Dutour had good
things to say about AB Godocel Pascua (left) and AB Eduardo
Barlas in a mid-March communication to the LOG. Dutour, who
sent this photo of the Seafarers loading stores in Salalah, Oman,
wrote, “Both men are a credit to themselves and the SIU by
continually exceeding expectations while always maintaining a
cheerful atmosphere about themselves.”

April 2014	

The Seafarers LOG attempts to print as many digests of union shipboard minutes as
possible. On occasion, because of space limitations, some will be omitted.
Ships’ minutes first are reviewed by the union’s contract department. Those issues
requiring attention or resolution are addressed by the union upon receipt of the ships’
minutes. The minutes are then forwarded to the Seafarers LOG for publication.

Call. Chairman explained
new sea time requirements
for health care coverage.
He advised crew not wait
too long and get ahead. He
also explained that TWIC
and MMD must be valid for
180 days to get a rotary job
and 120 days for a relief
job, so watch expiration
dates. Educational director
encouraged mariners to
keep all documents up-todate including new security
credential. They were
advised to take advantage of
upgrading courses available
at the Paul Hall Center in
Piney Point, Md. No beefs or
disputed OT reported. Special
recognition was given for the
memory of Brother Jim Ott,
who worked at the Tacoma
Hall. He would do anything
for anyone and will be sorely
missed. Recommendations
were made to help reliefs
qualify for new sea time
requirements for medical
benefits. Suggestions were
also made regarding vacation
benefits. Next ports: Tacoma,
Wash., Anchorage and
Kodiak, Alaska.
LIBERTY PRIDE (Liberty
Maritime), January 5
– Chairman Willie M.
Marsh, Secretary Shirley
M. Bellamy, Deck
Delegate Michael Stein.
Chairman thanked crew
for a safe, smooth voyage.
He recommended members
continue training at the
Piney Point school and keep
documents current. No beefs
or disputed OT reported. It
was reported that steam table
needs to be fixed. Request
was made for more linen and
provisions for voyages.

MAERSK MISSOURI
(Maersk Line, Limited),
January 17 – Chairman
Arsenio I. Obenza, Secretary
Glenn C. Bamman,
Educational Director Alfred
O. Cuevas, Deck Delegate
John O’Shaughnessy, Engine
Delegate Ricardo B. Duchy,
Steward Delegate Abdul
Syarbaini. Bosun thanked
crew for their hard work and
professionalism. Secretary
asked crew to leave cabins
clean for reliefs. Educational
director reminded fellow
members to keep an eye on
document expiration dates,
and allow plenty of time for
renewals. Everyone was also
encouraged to upgrade at the
maritime training center in
Piney Point, Md. No beefs or
disputed OT reported. Vote of
thanks was given to steward
department for a job well
done. Next ports: Elizabeth,
N.J., Charleston, S.C.,
Savannah, Ga., Houston and
Mobile, Ala.
GLOBAL SENTINEL
(Transoceanic Cable Ship),
February 27 – Chairman
Timothy B. Fogg, Secretary
Vicki L. Haggerty,
Deck Delegate Todd C.
Conley, Engine Delegate
Christopher J. Boronski,
Steward Delegate Robert
J. Haggerty. Chairman
discussed sea time
requirements for medical
benefits and urged members
to take basic safety refresher.
Secretary talked about
Serv Safe requirements.
Educational director advised
crew members to enhance
skills at Piney Point school.
Treasurer reported $2,600
in ship’s fund. No beefs

or disputed OT reported.
Mariners were reminded that
computer is for web searches,
not personal files.
MAERSK ARKANSAS
(Maersk Line, Limited),
February 9 – Chairman
Albert C. Williams,
Secretary Mark S. Scardino,
Educational Director
Timothy P. Price, Deck
Delegate Cory Mulligan.
Chairman expressed his
gratitude to crew members
for working well together
and being safety conscious.
Secretary thanked crew
for helping keep house
clean. Educational director
stressed the need to keep
documents up-to-date
and he urged mariners to
donate to SPAD (Seafarers
Political Activity Donation).
No beefs or disputed OT
reported. Suggestions were
made pertaining to vacation
benefits. Crew thanked
steward department for good
food and great service. Next
port: Mersin, Turkey.
YORKTOWN EXPRESS
(Crowley), February 2
– Chairman Nathaniel
Leary, Secretary Donald
B. Ganung, Educational
Director Jerome D.
Culbreth, Engine Delegate
Robert Ott. Bosun
encouraged everyone to
upgrade at the Paul Hall
Center. He reminded fellow
members to keep an eye
on document expiration
dates, and allow plenty of
time for renewals. No beefs
or disputed OT reported.
Recommendations were made
regarding medical and dental
benefits.

Seafarers LOG 19

�It’s Not Too Late to Donate a Piney Point Brick
Engraved Slabs May Honor Groups, Individuals
Launched last year, the brick donation
program at the union-affiliated Paul Hall
Center for Maritime Training and Education has proven popular with active
and retired Seafarers, their families, and
employees of the school and the SIU.
Others have joined in supporting the
program, too, including SIU-contracted
companies and former members.
Commemorative bricks highlight
the waterfront renovation project at
the school, located in Piney Point,
Md. With a donation, bricks can
be engraved with text and graphics
designed to honor groups and individuals. The waterfront park’s scenic
addition to the campus ensures those
being honored will have a permanent
and fitting place of remembrance
within the maritime community.
The donation of a brick also comes
with an entry in the program’s name-thepark contest, offering donors yet another
chance to leave their mark.
The bricks come in two sizes and may
be ordered online at: http://seafarers.org/
SIUBricks.htm.
The sizes include a traditional-sized
brick (4 x 8 inches x 2.25) with three
lines of engraving for a donation of $125
and a larger brick (8 x 8 inches x 2.25)
with six lines of engraving for a donation
of $250. The larger version also may be
ordered with a corporate logo and up to

three lines of text (subject to space limitations based on the logo) for a donation
of $300. If submitting a logo, please
note that it cannot be sent through the
online order form. Logos (either in EPS,
AI, PDF or high-resolution JPG, BMP
or TIF format) should be emailed to
siubricks@seafarers.org. Please include
your contact information.
While proceeds from brick donations are being used to help offset
some of the costs of the overall waterfront restoration (a multi-million dollar
endeavor), the program’s larger aim is
to beautify the area while giving people an opportunity to share memories
and honor others in a lasting way. For
instance, an engraved brick may be for
a particular lifeboat class, an instructor, or a crew that performed a heroic
rescue. Brick donators may want to
honor the memory of a departed loved
one, or some other person who helped
them along the way. Or, they may want
to salute a company or an individual
that’s made a difference for the U.S.
Merchant Marine. The possibilities are
almost limitless, and the engravings do
not have to be related to the school.
Everyone is encouraged to join in and
support this worthwhile project. Questions as well as name-the-park submissions may be emailed to SIUBricks@
seafarers.org.

These photos show some of the bricks
that have been donated and the waterfront park. For more information, visit:
http://seafarers.org/SIUBricks.htm

Know Your Rights
FINANCIAL REPORTS. The Constitution of the SIU Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes and Inland Waters District/NMU makes specific
provision for safeguarding the membership’s
money and union finances. The constitution
requires a detailed audit by certified public accountants every year, which is to be submitted
to the membership by the secretary-treasurer.
A yearly finance committee of rank-and-file
members, elected by the membership, each
year examines the finances of the union and
reports fully their findings and recommendations. Members of this committee may make
dissenting reports, specific recommendations
and separate findings.
TRUST FUNDS. All trust funds of the SIU
Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes and Inland Waters District/NMU are administered in accordance with
the provisions of various trust fund agreements.
All these agreements specify that the trustees
in charge of these funds shall equally consist
of union and management representatives and
their alternates. All expenditures and disbursements of trust funds are made only upon approval by a majority of the trustees. All trust
fund financial records are available at the headquarters of the various trust funds.
SHIPPING RIGHTS. A member’s shipping rights and seniority are protected exclusively by contracts between the union and the
employers. Members should get to know their
shipping rights. Copies of these contracts are
posted and available in all union halls. If members believe there have been violations of their
shipping or seniority rights as contained in the
contracts between the union and the employers,
they should notify the Seafarers Appeals Board

20 Seafarers LOG	

by certified mail, return receipt requested. The
proper address for this is:
Augustin Tellez, Chairman
Seafarers Appeals Board
5201 Auth Way
Camp Springs, MD 20746
Full copies of contracts as referred to are
available to members at all times, either by
writing directly to the union or to the Seafarers
Appeals Board.
CONTRACTS. Copies of all SIU contracts
are available in all SIU halls. These contracts
specify the wages and conditions under which
an SIU member works and lives aboard a ship or
boat. Members should know their contract rights,
as well as their obligations, such as filing for overtime (OT) on the proper sheets and in the proper
manner. If, at any time, a member believes that
an SIU patrolman or other union official fails to
protect their contractual rights properly, he or she
should contact the nearest SIU port agent.
EDITORIAL POLICY — THE SEAFARERS LOG. The Seafarers LOG traditionally has refrained from publishing any article
serving the political purposes of any individual
in the union, officer or member. It also has refrained from publishing articles deemed harmful to the union or its collective membership.
This established policy has been reaffirmed
by membership action at the September 1960
meetings in all constitutional ports. The responsibility for Sea­farers LOG policy is vested in an
editorial board which consists of the executive
board of the union. The executive board may
delegate, from among its ranks, one individual
to carry out this responsibility.

PAYMENT OF MONIES. No monies are
to be paid to anyone in any official capacity in
the SIU unless an official union receipt is given
for same. Under no circumstances should any
member pay any money for any reason unless
he is given such receipt. In the event anyone
attempts to require any such payment be made
without supplying a receipt, or if a member is
required to make a payment and is given an
official receipt, but feels that he or she should
not have been required to make such payment,
this should immediately be reported to union
headquarters.
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS. Copies of the SIU Constitution
are available in all union halls. All members
should obtain copies of this constitution so as
to familiarize themselves with its contents. Any
time a member feels any other member or officer is attempting to deprive him or her of any
constitutional right or obligation by any methods, such as dealing with charges, trials, etc., as
well as all other details, the member so affected
should immediately notify headquarters.
EQUAL RIGHTS. All members are guaranteed equal rights in employment and as
members of the SIU. These rights are clearly
set forth in the SIU Constitution and in the contracts which the union has negotiated with the
employers. Conse­quently, no member may be
discriminated against because of race, creed,
color, sex, national or geographic origin.
If any member feels that he or she is denied
the equal rights to which he or she is entitled,
the member should notify union headquarters.
SEAFARERS POLITICAL ACTIVITY

DONATION — SPAD. SPAD is a separate
segregated fund. Its proceeds are used to further its objects and purposes including, but not
limited to, furthering the political, social and
economic interests of maritime workers, the
preservation and furthering of the American
merchant marine with improved employment
opportunities for seamen and boatmen and the
advancement of trade union concepts. In connection with such objects, SPAD supports and
contributes to political candidates for elective
office. All contributions are voluntary. No contribution may be solicited or received because
of force, job discrimination, financial reprisal,
or threat of such conduct, or as a condition of
membership in the union or of employment. If
a contribution is made by reason of the above
improper conduct, the member should notify
the Seafarers International Union or SPAD by
certified mail within 30 days of the contribution for investigation and appropriate action
and refund, if involuntary. A member should
support SPAD to protect and further his or her
economic, political and social interests, and
American trade union concepts.
NOTIFYING THE UNION — If at any
time a member feels that any of the above
rights have been violated, or that he or she has
been denied the constitutional right of access
to union records or information, the member
should immediately notify SIU President Michael Sacco at headquarters by certified mail,
return receipt requested. The address is:
Michael Sacco, President
Seafarers International Union
5201 Auth Way
Camp Springs, MD 20746

April 2014

�Paul Hall Center Upgrading Course Information
The following is a schedule of courses at the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training
and Education in Piney Point, Md., for the next several months. All programs are geared
toward improving the job skills of Seafarers and promoting the American maritime industry.
Please note that this schedule may change to reflect the needs of the membership, the
maritime industry and—in times of conflict—national security.
Students attending any of these classes should check in the Saturday before their
course’s start date. The courses listed here will begin promptly on the morning of the start
dates. For classes ending on a Friday, departure reservations should be made for Saturday.
Seafarers who have any questions regarding the upgrading courses offered at the Paul
Hall Center may call the admissions office at (301) 994-0010.
Title of					
Start			
Date of
Course					Date			 Completion
Deck Department
Able Seafarer (Deck)			

May 24			

June 20

Bosun Recertification			July 12			August 4
Fast Rescue Boat				May 3			May 9
					May 17			May 23
ECDIS					June 7			June 13
					July 12			July 18
Lifeboatman/Water Survival		
April 26			
May 9
					May 24			June 6
					June 21			July 4
Radar Renewal (One day)			
April 28			
April 28
					June 3 			June 3
			
RFPNW					April 26			May 23
Engine Department
Basic Auxiliary Plant Operations (BAPO)	 May 24			

June 20

FOWT (Able Seafarer Engine)		

July 18

June 21			

Junior Engineer				May 17			July 11
Machinist				May 17			June 6
Marine Electrician			June 21			August 15
Marine Refer Technician			

May 3			

June 13

Welding					May 3			May 23
Safety Upgrading Courses
Advanced Firefighting			April 19			April 25
					May 31			June 6
	

UPGRADING APPLICATION
Name_________________________________________________________________________
Address_______________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
Telephone (Home)_________________________ (Cell)_________________________
Date of Birth___________________________________________________________________
Deep Sea Member o Lakes Member o
Inland Waters Member o

Title of					
Start			
Date of
Course					Date			 Completion
Basic Firefighting/STCW			May 10			May 16
					May 31			
June 6
BST Renewal/VPDSD			April 19			April 25
					May 24			May 30
Government Vessels			April 12			April 18
					June 21			June 27
						
Medical Care Provider			
April 26			
May 2
					June 7			June 13
Tanker Asst, Cargo DL			

April 12			

April 25

Steward Department Upgrading Courses
Galley Operations		
These classes start every other week. The most recent class began March 29. The
next class will commence April 12.
Certified Chief Cook
These modules begin every other week. The most recent class started March 29. The
next class will commence April 12.
Chief Steward				May 17			June 27
Advanced Galley Operations 			
These modules start every other week. The most recent class started March 22. The
next class will begin April 5.
ServeSafe				April 12			April 18
					May 10			May 16
					June 21			June 27
					August 2		August 8
					September 13		September 19
	

Notice:

NMC Website Provides
Useful Mariner Resources

The National Maritime Center (NMC),
the licensing authority for the U.S. Coast
Guard, offers a comprehensive website
covering mariner credentialing, medical guidelines and much more. The site
features a wide range of applications and
forms, deck- and engine-department exam
information, lists of Coast Guard-approved
courses and more. Seafarers are encour-

Important
Notice to Students

aged to check out the site at: www.uscg.
mil/nmc/
Mariners may call the NMC at
1-888-IASKNMC (1-888-427-5662). Operational hours are 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. EST,
Monday through Friday. (The NMC is
closed for all federal holidays.) Various
email forms also are available through the
NMC website.

Students who have registered for classes at the Paul Hall Center for
Maritime Training and Education, but later discover - for whatever reason
- that they can’t attend, should inform the admissions department immediately so arrangements can be made to have other students take their places.

COURSE			
				
____________________________

START 		
DATE	
	_______________

DATE OF
COMPLETION
_______________________

____________________________

_______________

_______________________

____________________________

_______________

_______________________

____________________________

_______________

_______________________

____________________________

_______________

_______________________

If the following information is not filled out completely, your application will not be processed.
Social Security #_______________________ Book #__________________________________
Seniority_____________________________ Department_____________________________
Home Port____________________________________________________________________
E-mail_______________________________________________________________________
Endorsement(s) or License(s) now held_____________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
Are you a graduate of the SHLSS/PHC trainee program? o Yes o No
If yes, class #___________________________________________________________________
Have you attended any SHLSS/PHC upgrading courses? o Yes o No
If yes, course(s) taken____________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________

NOTE: Transportation will be paid in accordance with the scheduling letter only if you present
original receipts and successfully complete the course. If you have any questions, contact your
port agent before departing for Piney Point. Not all classes are reimbursable. Return completed
application to: Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education Admissions Office, P.O.
Box 75, Piney Point, MD 20674-0075; or fax to (301) 994-2189.

With this application, COPIES of the following must be sent: One hundred and twenty-five (125)
days seatime for the previous year, one day in the last six months prior to the date your class
starts, USMMD (z-card) front and back or relevant pages of merchant mariner credential, front
page of your union book indicating your department and seniority, qualifying seatime for the
course if it is Coast Guard tested, 1995 STCW Certificate, valid SHBP Clinic Card and TWIC.

The Seafarers Harry Lundeberg School of Seamanship at the Paul Hall Center for Maritime
Training and Education is a private, non-profit, equal opportunity institution and admits students, who are otherwise qualified, of any race, nationality or sex. The school complies with
applicable laws with regard to admission, access or treatment of students in its programs or
activities.
4/14

April 2014	

LAST VESSEL: ___________________________________ Rating: ____________________
Date On: _______________________________ Date Off:____________________________
SIGNATURE ____________________________________ DATE______________________

Seafarers LOG 21

�Paul Hall Center Classes

Apprentice Water Survival Class #782 – Twenty-three Phase I apprentices finished their requirements in this course Feb. 14. Graduating (above, in alphabetical order) were: Jose Argueta, Roger
Attanasio, Michael Banks, Aaron Beasley, Jackson Blaty, Cole Briggs. Nathan Byrant, Kenneth
Cabrera, Dylan Casuga, Gregory David, Devyn DuSaules, Derreck East, Fernando Haber, Cody
Higgs, Taylor Jefferies, Aquan Jones, Joshua Kidd, Harlan Ouellette, John Paul, Dwuan Reed, Patrick Spark, Derrick Williams and Morgan Wright. (Note: Not all are pictured.)

UA to AB – The following individuals (above, in alphabetical order) graduated from this
course Feb. 28: James DeMarco, Adrian Fraccarolli, James Hargrove, Michael Hunnicutt,
Jenny Marcelin, Derek Minnix, Jose Panlilio III, Adam Poole, Christopher Sanicola, Ethan
Sims, Edward Wright and John Zotti. Their instructor, Tom Truitt, is at the far right.

Radar Observer – Six upgraders completed their studies in this course Feb.
28. Graduating (above, in alphabetical order) were: Charles Brown Jr., Michael
Cousin, John Curran, Ronel Guerzon, Jared Smith and Jerry Wilder.

Junior Engineer – Twelve upgraders completed the enhancement of their skills in this
course Feb. 28. Graduating (above, in alphabetical order) were: Jason Billingsley, Tyrone Ellis, Steven Fanega, Bobbie Gibbs, Yuri Hernandez, Mahare Kidane, James Ross,
Abdulnaser Saeed, Teon Shelton, Samuel Shuebrooks, Christopher Sykes and Alexandra Tittsworth. John Wiegman Jr., their instructor, is at the far right.

Marine Electrician – The following mariners (above, in alphabetical order) finished their requirements in this course Feb. 28: Van Dixon, Grant Gutter, Braden Horne, William Hryhorchuk,
Boyko Kovathev, Michael Maldonado, Timothy McKibbon, Lamar Pinckney, Mark Santoli, Roy
Saranthus, Grayson Ross and Aleksey Vigovskiy. Class instructor Jay Henderson is at the far
right. (Note: Not all are pictured.)

BAPO – Twenty-one Seafarers graduated from this course Feb. 28. Completing
their requirements (above, in alphabetical order) were: Nasser Ahmed, Austin
Anderson, Gregory Attawora, Allan Bombita, Joel Boyd, Mark Cabasag II, Dustin
Curtichfield, Tyree Delk, Bobby Dunn Jr., Jarrett Ford, Anthony Fraccalvieri, Kadeem John, Matthew Meehan, Kyle Miller, Edward Molesky Jr., Michael Montanez,
Hector Moralez Ortiz, Peter Morrison Jr., Kevin Parrilla Alicea, Garland Scott and
Shewana Stephenson. Class instructor Tim Achorn is at the far left. (Note: Not all
are pictured.)

Safety Leadership (Maersk) - The following Seafarers (photo at right, in alphabetical order) completd this course Feb. 20. The full roster included:
AB Mohamed Abdelwahab, Chief Cook Harlan
Alonzo, AB Tracy Austin, AB Joseph Barnes,
Bosun William Barrett, AB Julius Dagoldol, QMED
David Dunklin, AB Danilo Fullante, SA Agnes Gamboa, Electrician Tesfay Gebregziabher, AB Douglas Hemphill, Chief Steward Michele Hopper, AB
Sherman Hudson, Chief Cook Thomas Johnson,
Bosun Gerald Kelly, AB James Kuck, Bosun Jeff
Libby, Chief Cook Monell Liburd, AB Marc Marcus,
Chief Steward Willie Massaline, AB Miguel Matos,
Chief Cook Karen Mischel, QMED Alan Nelson,
Chief Steward Scott Opsahl, Bosun Robert Pagan,
AB Michael Penkwitz, AB Mikhail Pinchevskiy,
Bosun Anthony Sanchez Villarrubia, Chief Cook
Abigail Schubert, Bosun Frank Sena, AB Steven
Sidler and AB Joevanny Soto.

22 Seafarers LOG	

April 2014

�Paul Hall Center Classes
BST (Crowley) - The following individuals (photo at left, in alphabetical order) completed this course Feb. 26: Wilie Abrams,
John Andrade, Andrew Bissonette, Jerron Broussard, Thomas
Caballero, Charles Crim, Daniel Cronan, William Davis, Roderick
Franklin, David Grader, Freddy Hamilton, Jonathon Hendrickson,
Rodney McCaslin, Edward O’Connell, Ernesto Rios-Pratt, Daniel
Smith, Marc Tomuschat, Anto Tunjic, James Vrettos and Rick
Weaver. Their instructor, Joe Zienda, is at the far right.

Important Notice to Students
Students who have registered for classes at
the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and
Education, but later discover - for whatever reason - that they can’t attend, should inform the
admissions department immediately so arrangements can be made to have other students take
their places.
Basic &amp; Advanced Firefighting – Ten upgraders completed the enhancement of their skills in this course March
14. Those graduating (photo at right, in alphabetical order)
were: Charles Brown Jr., John Curran, Ernest Frank III,
Ronel Guerzon, Kendric Henry, Vincent Ippolito Jr., Michael
Ratigan, Jared Smith, Elaine Watts and Jerry Wilder. Class
instructors Wayne Johnson Sr., and John Thomas are at
the far left and far right respectively.

BST Renewal (SIU) – The
following individuals (photo
at left, in alphabetical order)
graduated from this course
March 12: Dominic Brunamonti, Leighanne Deano,
Timothy DeWine, Jonamie
Encarnacion-Rivera, Nathaniel Fitzpatrick, Carlo
Gentile, Richetta Jackson,
Damir Josipovic, Anthony
Lieto, Terrance Murphy,
Craig Nebbia, Louella
Sproul, Sean Sullivan,
Jesse Sunga and Todd Williams. Joe Zienda, their instructor, is at the far left.

Certified Chief Cook – Five steward department upgraders graduated from this
course recently at the Paul Hall Center. Completing their requirements (above,
in no particular order) were: Jorge Roman, Prasert Mastrototaro, Claude Young,
Steven Osovitz and Richard Howard.

April 2014	

Galley Operations – Two upgraders recently completed this steward department course at
the union-affiliated school in Piney Point, Md. Completing their requirements were Alberto Jose
(above, left) and Roxanne Fike, right. Jessy Sunga, their instructor is in the center.

Seafarers LOG 23

�F APRIL
E B R U A2014
RY 2014

o
V OVOLUME
L U M E 7 676
N
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2
NO.

Text the Word “Join”
To 97779 to Sign Up
For Alerts from the SIU

Members of the deck gang include (from left) ABs Randell Paredes, Kosar Iqbal, Santiago
Rodriguez and OS Nagi Obad.

AB Xerxes Cunanan (left) and AB Randell Paredes work on cables.

Soderman Seafarers Sail in Support of Military
For SIU members sailing aboard the USNS Soderman, helping
maintain America’s sealift capability is all in a day’s work.
The Seafarers-crewed ship, operated by Ocean Shipholdings
for the U.S. Military Sealift Command (MSC), is part of a prepositioning program deemed “essential” by the Navy.
As described by MSC, “Prepositioning ships provide quick
and efficient movement of military gear between operating areas
without reliance on other nations’ transportation networks. These
ships give U.S. regional combatant commanders the assurance
that they will have what they need to quickly respond in a crisis –

Storekeeper Joseph Zagrocki orders supplies for the
vessel.

anywhere, anytime. During a contingency, troops are flown into
a theater of operations to rapidly employ the cargo from these
ships.”
The Soderman, one of many SIU-crewed military support vessels, is 950 feet long and has a beam of approximately 106 feet.
It is part of the Watson class of large, medium-speed, roll-on/
roll-off vessels (LMSR) and can sail at 24 knots.
Recertified Bosun James Orlanda emailed these recent photos of mariners at work aboard the ship in the western Pacific
Ocean.

OS Gonzalo Sarra (right) uses a three-finger rust
scaler while OS Gonzalo Sarra joins in chipping
decks.

Recertified Bosun James Orlanda is
ready to mix paint.

SA Robert Goren puts together a
fruit salad for breakfast.

SIU hawsepiper Third Assistant Engineer Robert
Brown keeps a close eye on the monitor for a fuel
transfer.

Chief Cook Efren Matias is a blur in the
galley as he quickly prepares a meal.

QMED George Rose paints drain pipes
after welding.

AB Harold Magallon

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OBAMA ANNOUNCES NOMINEE FOR POSTS AT USTRANSCOM, U.S. COAST GUARD&#13;
PRESIDENT OUTLINES MARITIME PRIORITIES&#13;
NAVY TAKES DELIVERY OF NEW TONNAGE, MORE ON WAY&#13;
CONSTRUCTION STARTS ON LNG-POWERED CONTAINERSHIP&#13;
SIU-CREWED CROWLEY TUGS DELIVER&#13;
SEAFARERS FONDLY REMEMBER RETIRED DISPATCHER JESSE SOLIS&#13;
SENATORS SHOOT DOWN FALSE ATTACKS ON JONES ACT&#13;
MARITIME COALITION ALSO SETS RECORD STRAIGHT IN JERSEY SALT SAGA&#13;
NMC, SIU CLARIFY MEDICAL CERTIFICATE REQUIREMENTS&#13;
WORKERS SHOULD SHARE IN WEALTH THEY HELP CREATE&#13;
ALASKA RANKS THIRD IN NATION PER CAPITA IN MARITIME JOBS&#13;
A MERCHANT SEAMAN IN KOREA APRIL TO DECEMBER 1948- PART 2&#13;
SEAFARERS DELIVER IN DEEP FREEZE 2014&#13;
IT’S NOT TOO LATE TO DONATE A PINEY POINT BRICK&#13;
ENGRAVED SLABS MAY HONOR GROUPS, INDIVIDUALS&#13;
SODERMAN SEAFARERS SAIL IN SUPPORT OF MILITARY&#13;
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