Issue Date
1999-12-01
Volume
61
Issue Number
12
Plaintext
SIUJs Decade of Progress ___ Pages11-14
Congress Receives Bills
-To Strengthen U.S. Fleet
Sealifl Enhancement Act Aims to Make
Merchant Fleet More Globally Competitive
Page3
Even on the Lakes?/
lll'll!Nt SllAW J PIAIX DEAi.Eii PllOTOCRAPllEll
Captain Stavros Fotlnos or the Evangelos tells a crew member to e:xpll!in bow good the conditions on the ship are..
Ships of Shame
Cargo crew
to start
court battle
-fr, Sailors
go without
pay, food
From porr to porr 1he Slories are passed
alon . Starvin :;allors ea1rng raw, undi-
Cleveland Paper Reveals
Runaway-Flag Scandal
Citizens along the Great Lakes recently discovered their
waters are no different from any other international ship
ping lane when the Cleveland Plain Dealer exposed the
dangers of runaway-flag shipping taking place on
America's "North Coast." Page 5
Complaints
bring help
from union
for sailors
By MICHAELO'MALLEY
A diS()Ute about low pay, bad
food and filthy conditions on a
Sleet-hauling ship in Cleveland
harbor yesterday sparked a fax
and phone feud in four countries
on three continents.
Following claims by 13 Filipino llOADW.HICKllAH/l'IAlll DEAL£&PHOrooaAl'llEK
crewmen that they are not being . .
properly paid, members of the Don Thornton of the Seafarers International Union, left, talks
Seafarers International Union to Filipino sailors about conditions and pay on a foreign ship
b<>i!rded the ship Evangelos, docked in Cleveland yesterday. Local union officials
which IS ow~d by a Greek com- threatened to detain the ship and stop it from unloading until
~~~~tt~t~~ :::i ~~ti;n':J certain demands by the sailors were met.
labor agreement to make such
visits, confronted the captain, stop unloading the ship's cargo Piraeus, Greece, faxed paper
sa ·o the would detain tile shi and refuse to untie dock lines it work to the London-based Inter-
Voting Begins on
SIU-NMU Merger
Agreement Reach ..... --
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Page2
.
On ASAf Contract
Beck Notice
Page6
President's Report
Reflecting on the Decade
I have just reviewed the center spread for this month's issue of
the Seafarers LOG. It is hard to believe what we have accom
plished in the last 10 years.
While some of you started sailing this decade
and have helped us in our efforts to revitalize
the U.S.-flag merchant fleet, many others have
been very involved throughout their entire
seagoing careers.
Recall where we were in January 1990.
Outside of our membership and some others
Michael Sacco within the industry, very few thought there
would be a continued need for the commercial
fleet for economic and national security purposes when we started
the 21st century.
We knew better.
The Persian Gulf War demonstrated why America has depend
ed on its merchant mariners since this country's founding.
Seafarers and members of other maritime unions answered the
nation's call, making sure no ship loaded with materiel for our
troops in the Middle East sailed short.
Those who thought others could handle the job discovered for
eign-flag owners and crews who balked at delivering needed
goods into a war zone.
Reawakened by the war effort, military planners and politicians
alike realized action had to taken not just to preserve but strength
en the U.S.-flag fleet.
You did your part. Not only did you sail the ships, but you and
your families registered and voted, wrote letters, made phone calls
and talked with neighbors, friends and elected officials to let them
know America needs its merchant fleet.
That is why the Maritime Security Program became law.
That is why U.S.-flag tankers carry Alaska North Slope crude
oil overseas.
That is why more than half the members of the House of
Representatives signed a resolution stating the Jones Act should
be preserved.
That is why the U.S.-Flag Cruise Ship Pilot Project was enact
ed, paving the way for construction in an American yard of new
deep sea passenger ships.
That is why dredging is taking place in ports around the coun
try, especially New Y~)fk/New Jersey, to prepare for the ships of
the next century.
And that is why month after month for more than a year, we
have been able to report on the new vessels-tankers, RO/ROs,
prepositioning, tugs, car carriers-Seafarers are crewing or will
crew in the very near future, all proudly flying Old Glory.
Brothers and sisters, this isn't bragging. It's fact!
The most important thing to remember is that none of this
could have been done without you. You have demonstrated your
faith in your union by doing the best job possible each day on
your vessels. You make it very easy for representatives of this
union to speak on your behalf on Capitol Hill and in other set
tings.
Without the day-in, day-out efforts you perform on the high
seas, the Great Lakes and the inland waterways, the U.S.-flag
fleet would have been nothing more than a ghost ship.
But we knew better, have done better and will continue to get
better!
As we enter this holiday season, we have so much for which to
be thankful, not the least of which is a vibrant, growing U.S.-flag
fleet.
If the last 10 years are any indication of what the future may
bring, I can't wait to get started.
To all Seafarers aboard their vessels, to all Seafarers at home
with their families and to all SIU retirees who have helped make
this the greatest maritime union, may you have a wonderful holi
day and Happy New Year!
Volume 61, Number 12 December 1999
The SIU on line: www.seafarers.org
The Seafarers LOG (ISSN 1086-4636) is published month
ly by the Seafarers International Union; Atlantic, Gulf,
Lakes and Inland Waters District; AFL-CIO; 5201 Auth
Way; Camp Springs, MD 20746. Telephone (301) 899-
0675. Periodicals postage paid at Southern Maryland
20790-9998 and at additional offices. POSTMASTER:
Send address changes to the Seafarers LOG, 5201 Au th Way
Camp Springs, MD 20746.
Communications Director, Daniel Duncan; Managing
Editor, Jordan Biscardo; Associate Editor/Production,
Deborah A. Hirtes; Art, Bill Brower; Administrative
Support, Jeanne Textor.
Copyright © 1999 Seafarers International Union, AGLIWD
All Rights Reserved.
2 Seafarers LOG
Voting Starts in Proposed
Merger of SIU and #MU
Voting begins this month on
whether the SIU will proceed
with full merger talks with the
National Maritime Union.
As reported in the October and
November issues of the Seafarers
LOG, balloting is scheduled for
December 1, 1999 to January 31,
2000. Voting takes place in all
SIU halls between 9 a.m. and
noon local time, Monday through
Saturday, excluding holidays.
Seafarers also may request an
absentee ballot by following the
instructions printed in the
October issue of the LOG. Addi
tionally, those instructions are
available via the union's web site
(www.seafarers.org, in the LOG
section, October issue).
The current vote will deter
mine whether the SIU member
ship wants this merger and, if
approved, gives the union's exec
utive board permission to contin
ue with the merger talks. (A sim
ilar election is taking place at the
same time in the NMU.)
If the two unions' member
ships vote to proceed, then specif
ic details of the merger will be
addressed by SIU and NMU offi
cials serving on the merger com
mittee.
Next, Seafarers would vote
during the November-December
2000 general election whether to
approve needed constitutional
changes such as adding vice pres
idents and the NMU in the
union's name. (NMU members
are not eligible to vote in the gen-
eral election because the merger
would not be completed by then.)
After the general election, a
third vote would take place for
SIU members to approve or reject
many of the specific terms of the
merger. Before that vote, SIU
members would be given detailed
information on what the merger
would mean and what changes
would occur. The date for that
voting has not been determined.
Therefore, the proposed
merger involves a three-step vot
ing process. That procedure is
explained in detail in a recent
letter mailed from the SIU exec
utive board to each member.
Copies of the letter also have
been distributed aboard ship by
patrolmen and are available in
union halls.
The letter mentions that some
Seafarers have asked whether a
merger will allow an NMU mem
ber to use his seniority to beat the
SIU member out of a job. "No!
The shipping rules will continue
to apply," the letter states.
"Seafarers will maintain priority
aboard ships currently sailing
under an SIU contract. The same
would apply to NMU members
aboard vessels presently under
contract to the NMU."
Similarly, the merger commit
tee has studied the 1978 merger
involving the SIU and the Marine
Cooks & Stewards, and will fol
low that precedent to keep the
SIU and NMU pension, welfare
and vacation funds separate.
Should the merger be approved,
however, the training and hiring
hall funds probably would be
combined.
OS/Gateman Rick Hedrick (above
photo, aboard the Presque Isle)
and Cook Kay Nelson (below, on
the /TB McKee Sons) are enthusi
astic about the proposed merger.
SIU Pensioners to Get $500 Year-End Bonus
Eligible SIU pensioners will receive a year-end
bonus check of $500 this month. The Seafarers
Pension Plan Board of Trustees recently approved
the payment after union representatives to the group
recommended the bonus.
tives from the SIU and its contracted companies,
decided to issue the bonus after reviewing the plan's
successful investment performance.
More information about the bonus or the pension
plan in general may be obtained by contacting any
union hall or by calling a plan representative at l-
800-CLAIMS4. Members and pensioners also may
write to the plan at 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
MD 20746.
This bonus check will be sent to all SIU pen
sioners who currently receive monthly benefit
checks for normal, early normal or disability pen
sions from the Seafarers Pension Plan.
The Board of Trustees, composed of representa-
Breakthrough at Avondale
Union, Company Agree to Resolve
Long Battle About Representation
On the heels of Litton
Industries' purchase of Avondale
(La.) Shipyard, the AFL-CIO
Metal Trades Department last
month announced a breakthrough
in the bitter six-year fight about
union representation at Avon
dale.
The company has agreed to
adopt neutrality regarding such
representation, and will recognize
the union based on a majority of
Avondale's 4,000 employees
signing petitions for membership.
A neutral arbitrator will certify
that a majority of the employees
have signed the petitions.
The union and the shipyard
signed an agreement on Novem
ber 2 aimed at reaching an amica
ble conclusion to what has been a
nasty fight. Workers at Avondale
voted in 1993 to join a union, but
the prior owners used every
stalling tactic imaginable to
evade that election's outcome.
Avondale was purchased for
$529 million by Litton Industries
in a transaction that closed last
August. Litton's Ship Systems
consists of Avondale Shipyard
and Ingalls Shipyard in Pasca
goula, Miss. where the Metal
Trades Department has held rep
resentation rights for more than
10,000 workers since 1940.
AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney commended all con
cerned with the new agreement
between Avondale and the union.
"I applaud Litton Industries'
and Avondale's high-road deci
sion to respect these workers'
right to a free choice to improve
their lives through a union,"
Sweeney stated.
The Metal Trades Department
said the agreement "puts the issue
back in the hands of Avondale's
workers" and "sets up ground
rules for assessing the level of
support for union representation.
The agreement sets out a process
under which the union can obtain
evidence that it represents a
majority of the employees, which
will be submitted to a neutral
third party for certification. The
pact outlines procedures for
avoiding the acrimony that char
acterized the campaign from the
time it started in June 1993."
Please be advised that SIU headquarters and all SIU
hiring halls will be closed on Monday, January 17,
2000 for the obseNance of Martin Luther King Jr. 's
birthday (unless an emergency arises). Normal busi
ness hours will resume the following workday.
December 1999 - . -
Sealif t Enhancement Act
Seeks Fair Competition
For American-Flag Fleet
that will stimulate growth in the
industry," observed Rep. Je:ffer
son.
Rep. McCrery stated, "U.S.
based liner companies are subject
to significantly higher taxes than
their foreign-based counter
parts .... Strengthening the eco
nomic viability and competitive
ness of United States-flag vessel
operations requires us to adapt
the tax regime governing our
merchant marine to the realities
of today's international shipping
environment." Maritime Tax Laws Would Change
To Help Provide Level Playing Field
Both McCrery and Breaux
recalled the words of General
Colin Powell following the
Persian Gulf War in 1991. At that
time, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff said, "Our
[nation's] strategy requires us to
be able to project power quickly
and effectively across the oceans
to deal with the crisis we couldn't
avoid or predict. Sealift will be
critical to fulfilling this strategic
requirement .... In war, merchant
seamen have long served with
valor and distinction by carrying
the critical supplies and equip
ment to our troops in faraway
lands. In peacetime, the merchant
marine has another vital role
contributing to our economic
security by linking us to our trad
ing partners around the world and
providing the foundation for our
ocean commerce."
Citing the U.S. merchant
marine's key role in America's
national and economic security
and the unfair competition from
unscrupulous runaway-flag ship
operators-Senator John Breaux
(D-La.) last month introduced the
National Security Sealift En
hancement Act of 1999 (S. 1858).
Reps. Jim McCrery (R-La.)
and William Jefferson (D-La.)
introduced similar legislation in
the House (H.R. 3225).
The SIU strongly supports the
bills, which may receive hearings
in the Senate Finance Committee
and the House Ways and Means
Committee, respectively, early
next year.
"The introduction of these
measures shows that members of
Congress are looking ahead and
trying to find ways to make the
U.S.-flag fleet stronger and more
competitive in the next century,"
said SIU President Michael
Sacco.
Other U.S. maritime unions,
ship operators and shipbuilding
associations also voiced their
backing, as did the widely
respected former Maritime Ad
ministrator, Vice Admiral Albert
J. Herberger.
As its name indicates, the leg
islation is intended to strengthen
the U.S. fleet, which in tum will
boost the economy and fortify
national security.
One provision of the Sealift
Enhancement Act would extend
to U.S. mariners the existing
income tax exclusion for
Americans working abroad.
Other elements of the bill also
focus on equitable changes in dif
ferent sections of U.S. tax policy.
"This legislation is designed to
provide a tax environment for
U.S.-flag carriers that more close
ly approaches the favorable treat
ment provided by other maritime
nations to their own merchant
fleets," Breaux stated. "I am not
proposing to exempt U.S.-flag
vessel owners from U.S. income
taxes, [but rather to] alleviate the
tax burden on the U.S.-flag fleet.
"The U.S.-flag merchant
marine is an invaluable asset to
the economic and national securi
ty of this country," he continued.
"The Congress must take aggres
sive action to preserve our fleet of
U.S.-flag vessels, while creating
incentives for new, modem ships
to be registered under the U.S.
flag."
The bill has five main provi
sions. One expands the Capital
Construction Fund with the aim
of increasing revenue available
SIU Crews MIV Fisher
SIU members recently crewed
the prepositioning ship MIV
Major Bernard F Fisher as the
vessel prepared to start a five
year assignment for the U.S.
Military Sealift Command
(MSC).
Seafarers and SIU officials
took part in the vessel's christen
ing October 15 in Sunny Point,
N.C. The former Sea Fox was
renamed in honor of retired U.S.
Air Force Col. Bernard F. Fisher,
a Medal of Honor recipient who
attended the ceremony.
The 652-foot Fisher is operat
ed by Sealift, Inc. for MSC,
whose fleet also includes a differ
ent vessel with a similar name,
the USNS Fisher. It will preposi-
tion materiel for the Air Force in
Diego Garcia.
The ship's namesake received
the medal for actions in Vietnam
in 1966. The then-major rescued
a downed airman from a Special
Forces camp under attack by
2,000 North Vietnamese soldiers.
MSC noted, "While directing
his own air cover, Maj. Fisher
landed his A-lE/H aircraft, taxied
almost the full length of a debris
littered runway, and despite with
ering ground fire, rescued the
downed pilot and gained enough
speed to lift off and fly to safety."
The Fisher has a beam of 105
feet and a top sailing speed of 19
knots. It is a combination con
tainer and roll-on/roll-off ship.
One year after MSC awarded a time charter contract for the vessel ,
SIU members crewed the renamed Major Bernard F. Fisher as the ship
readied for its first prepositioning assignment.
December 1999
for domestic shipbuilding.
Another allows "the owner of
any U.S.-flag vessel engaged in
the international trade of the U.S.
to fully deduct that vessel in the
year in which the vessel is
acquired and documented under
the U.S. flag." Breaux pointed
out that many foreign-flag
shipowners and operators already
"are totally exempt from income
taxation," and this provision
therefore will help the U.S.-flag
fleet "to be internationally com
petitive."
The provision known as the
"seamen's wage exclusion" is
"consistent with the current poli
cies and objectives of section 911
of the Internal Revenue Code. It
extends the foreign earned
income exclusion to American
merchant mariners by changing
the definition of 'foreign country'
to incJude a principal place of
employment aboard a commer
cial vessel operating outside the
United States, and amending the
foreign residence test to include
work aboard a vessel."
Other components of the legis
lation include "alternative mini
mum tax relief' on shipping
income-again consistent with
foreign regulations-and expand
ing the expense deductions stem
ming from conferences or other
meetings on American-flag cruise
ships.
In announcing his support for
the Sealift Enhancement Act,
Herberger said, "If the United
States is to maintain a strong mer
chant fleet-supporting our econ
omy and our armed forces--our
U.S.-flag companies and our
American merchant mariners
must have U.S. tax treatment that
reflects the realities of interna
tional competition."
"These provisions will help
level the playing field for U.S.
shipping and provide incentives
Speaking on behalf of a coali
tion of U.S.-flag ocean carriers,
Sea-Land Service Vice President
Peter Finnerty noted that the bill
"recognizes the unique nature of
the U.S.-flag fleet, operating in
the world cargo trades."
American mariners and compa
nies compete in a market littered
with tax-exempt foreign compa
nies, he said.
Pictured from the top: Senator
John Breaux (D-La.) and Reps.
William Jefferson (D-La.) and Jim
McCrery (R-La.) last month
launched legislation intended to
boost national security by
strengthening the U.S. merchant
marine.
SIU Maintains Jobs on 6 LNG Vessels
MarAd 'Reluctantly' Approves Rejlagging
The U.S. Maritime Administration (MarAd),
while emphasizing that its decision "should not be
taken as a precedent for any other situation," on
November 3 conditionally approved the transfer of
PRONAV's fleet of eight liquefied natural gas ves
sels to foreign registry.
Maritime Administrator Clyde Hart said he
"reluctantly" issued the ruling and also stressed that
a key condition to the approval "helps to ensure the
continued availability of American mariners for
commercial operations and military readiness." He
noted that all the unlicensed jobs for six of the ships
will be held by American seafarers for the next five
years, "providing stability and employment for hun
dreds of skilled mariners."
He also pointed out, "Any further changes in
ownership, registry or operation under foreign
authority may be made only with the Maritime
Administration's approval."
The schedule for reflagging the eight ships to the
Marshall Islands has not been announced.
Seafarers will continue sailing aboard six of the
vessels- the LNG Capricorn, LNG Taurus, LNG
Libra, LNG Gemini, LNG Leo and LNG Virgo. As
reported in the September issue of the Seafarers
LOG, the economic provisions (including benefits)
of the SIU's Standard Tanker Agreement will apply
to those ships once the reflagging takes place.
The other two vessels will carry foreign crews.
After the ruling, SIU President Michael Sacco
stated, "While we are extremely disappointed by the
decision announced by the Maritime Administration
to allow the reflagging of the PRONAV LNG-vessel
fleet, the Seafarers International Union is obligated
to honor its contractual coillil)itments to crew these
vessels. The Seafarers aboard these vessels will con
tinue to perform their duties in the same profession
al, dedicated and safe manner as they always have."
It was only after painstaking analysis that the
union decided to accept continued employment on
the reflagged ships. In a detailed memo sent in
August by the SIU contracts department to Seafarers
aboard the LNG ships, the union stated, "When
weighed against the alternatives, the final decision
was based on the ultimate benefit to our members
and their families. The application of the Standard
Tanker Agreement wages and benefits will, for the
first time, [apply] American labor standards on for
eign-flag ships. The Agreement is no less than that
which is accepted by U.S.-flag SIU-contracted
tanker companies. It maintains our benefits and will
provide jobs and job security for five more years
while preserving our severance agreement."
The union also noted that SIU's crewing of the
LNG ships will help provide a continued manpower
pool of trained American mariners for U.S. national
defense purposes.
Moreover, the memo points out that the LNG
crews recently faced the unexpected prospect of all
eight ships reflagging relatively quickly-which
would have left the SIU crews without any opportu
nity for continued employment on those vessels.
(The written communication quickly was fol
lowed by SIU Vice President Government Services
Kermett Mangram meeting with SIU crews aboard
the LNG vessels to answer any other questions.)
Seafarers LOG 3
i----------------------------------------------------------------~~~~~-~ -- ~~ -
SIU President Michael Sacco poses with crew members aboard the
Sea-Land Patriot. Kneeling is AB Robert Pesulima. Standing from the
left are BREC Bobby Garcia, Wilmington (Calif.) Port Agent John Cox,
Sacco, AB Alfonso Garcia, QMED Jesse Manard, Wilmington Safety
Director Frank Gill Jr., AB Maximo Lugtu and GUDE Jose Gamboa.
Working on dinner for the Sea
Land Patriot crew is Chief Cook
James Boss.
Crews
Welcome
SIU President Michael
Sacco has maintained a busy
schedule, meeting as many
SIU members as possible dur
ing his recent travels.
From Port Everglades, Fla.
to Long Beach, Calif., he has
climbed gangways to inform
Seafarers about what is hap
pening in the union and to
answer questions they may
have concerning benefits,
contract and the proposed
merger to bring the NMU into
the SIU.
SIU President Michael Sacco (left} welcomes AB Rudy Hernandez to a
union meeting aboard the Sea-Land Patriot. Also participating in the
meeting in which members asked questions about the proposed NMU
merger into the SIU are (from the left) BREC Bobby Garcia, QMED
Jesse Manard, SA Orlando Pizzaro, AB Robert Pesulima and SREC
Daniel Payne.
Sacco to
Their Ships On this page are some of
the many Seafarers who have
welcomed him aboard their
vessels.
The Sea-Land Long Beach (Calif.) crane maintenance unit greets SIU President
Michael Sacco. From the left are Seafarers Allen Pasik Jr .. Wilmington Port Agent
John Cox, Sacco, Van X. Phan, Daran Ragucci, Kimo Togiai, Jim Dryden and
Wilmington Safety Director Frank Gill Jr.
Right: Aboard the
El Yunque are
Jacksonville (Fla.)
Port Agent Tony c
McQuay, Wiper
Pedro Gago,
BREC Michael
Eaton, SIU
President Michael
Sacco, OMU
Ramon Collazo
and AB Blair
Baker.
QMED Ron Haines (standing) meets
SIU President Michael Sacco aboard the
Sea-Land Patriot.
Offering lunch to Wilmington Port Agent
John Cox (left) is Third Cook Neil Ball of
the Lihue.
4 Seafarers LOG
SIU President Michael Sacco (right) answers a question about
the SIU-NMU merger with Crowley boatmen (from left) AB
Dave Verschoor, AB Dragi K. Odak and Eng. Bob Bouton.
The galley gang of Matson's Lihue greets the SIU president.
From the left are BR Nunu Randle, President Michael Sacco,
Chief Steward Skip Polzine and Chief Cook Willie Madison.
SIU President Michael Sacco (left) updates crew members aboard the
El Yunque on the latest happenings in the union.
Left: Welcoming
SIU President
Michael Sacco
(second from left)
to the Sea-Land
Patriot are (from
left) AB Matt Bevac,
Wilmington (Calif.)
Port Agent John
Cox and QMED
Jesse Manard.
West Coast Unions Reach
6-Year Agreement with ASM
The SIU's Pacific District unions have reached an agreement with
American Ship Management (ASM) for a new six-year contract.
The pact is retroactive to July 1 and includes a pay raise in each
of the six years covered by the contract.
The SIU Pacific District is composed of SIU Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes
and Inland Waters District members in the galley, the Sailors' Union
of the Pacific for the unlicensed deck department and the Marine
Firemen's Union providing unlicensed crews in the engine room.
ASM was created after American President Lines was purchased
by Singapore-based NOL in 1997. ASM operates the former APL
U.S.-flag fleet.
Negotiations took place throughout the fall before the agreement
was reached in late October. The ratification process involving mem
bers from the three unions covered by the new pact still was taking
place as the Seafarers LOG went to press.
December 1999
Runaway-Flag Crew's Plight Captures Newspaper's Attention
Thanks to a series of articles
published by Ohio's largest daily
newspaper, Great Lakes residents
discovered runaway-flag shipping
with its inherent problems of little
to no pay, poor working condi
tions and lack of food could be
found in their ports.
Michael O'Malley, a reporter
for the Plain Dealer, alerted read
ers to the plight of the Filipino
crew aboard a Greek-owned,
Panamanian-flagged cargo ship
delivering foreign-produced steel
to Cleveland, known for its steel
mills.
O'Malley worked with SIU
member Don Thornton, a Great
Lakes inspector for the Inter
national Transport Workers'
Federation (ITF), and Jim Given,
an SIU of Canada representative
who performs the ITF task in his
country, as they attempted to gain
back pay, food, clean linens and
other items for 12 crew members
aboard the Evangelos this fall.
(The ITF is a London-based
global organization of transport
unions. The SIU is a member.)
The crew sought help from the
ITF when the ship arrived in
Cleveland in October. The ITF
inspectors took O'Malley with
them to document their discussion
with the ship's Greek captain. The
reporter heard crew members state
they had no bread or juice, just
water, yet "the captain eats grapes
and ice cream." Longshoremen,
who originally notified the news
paper of the conditions on the
ship, threatened to stop offloading
and keep the vessel tied up until
provisions arrived.
Thornton and Given verified
food and clean linens were
brought aboard, but had to accept
assurances from the ship's owners
and the manning company that the
crew's money-more than
$100,000 in back pay-had been
sent to their families. They also
were faxed paperwork claiming to
show the mariners' pay had been
sent to their families in the
Philippines, which later proved to
be false.
The ship set sail for Thunder
Bay, Ontario to load grain for
Morocco.
When the inspectors uncovered
that the promised pay still had not
been delivered to either the crew
or their families, they met the
loaded ship in the Welland Canal.
The captain refused to allow
the newspaper reporter aboard,
then forced a crew member to tell
him everything was fine as the
vessel passed through a lock. The
Plain Dealer published a front
page full-color photo of the
anguished mariner with the cap
tain right behind him in its
Sunday, October 24 edition.
Thornton and Given spoke
with the crew member and several
others when they boarded. They
were told the captain ordered the
mariners to say those things as
well as sign papers stating they
had been paid if they wanted to
continue sailing. The crew added
they still were not being fed prop
erly. Nine crew members signed
powers of attorney requesting the
ship be arrested for breech of its
ITF contract when the Evangelos
arrived in Montreal.
Unfortunately, by the time the
vessel reached the Canadian port,
the crew members rescinded their
call for the ship's arrest. Without
it, Canadian officials were help
less. Thornton and Given specu
lated that the crew and/or their
families had been intimidated
with a possible threat of blacklist
ing being used.
The ship left for Morocco with
a spokesperson for the ITF in
London vowing to monitor the
ship's actions.
Not only did the newspaper
publicize the Evangelos situation
with photographs and articles, it
also featured the plight of other
runaway-flag crews in the front
page story of October 24 under
the headline "Ships of Shame."
O'Malley told the Seafarers
LOG the articles generated many
telephone calls from readers
unaware these conditions existed
on vessels sailing the Great Lakes.
The stories dealt with situations
around the world to show the
Evangelos was not an isolated
incident.
Photo credit: Roadell Hickman/Plain Dealer
SIU member and ITF inspector Don Thornton (left) learns more about
the problems aboard the Evangelos from crew members shortly after
the vessel docked in Cleveland.
Bad News Keeps Oozing
From Runaway-Flag Ship
Passengers on Carnival Cruise's ill-fated Tropicale recently learned
the hard way that jiggling the handle sometimes isn't enough.
The runaway-flag vessel's first voyage since a shipboard fue left
passengers stranded at sea for four days ended early, because of a
clogged sewage system. As a result of the inoperable commodes, the
more than 1,000 passengers were flown from Mexico to Tampa.
The Liberian-flag Tropicale had undergone three weeks of repairs
and safety inspections before sailing in late October, approximately
one month after a shipboard fire had left passengers adrift in the Gulf
of Mexico. U.S. Coast Guard inspectors reportedly discovered prob
lems with the ship's plumbing and directed the company to fix them.
The Coast Guard is investigating the cause of the September ship
board fue as well as the crew's reaction to it.
December 1999
The Filipino-crewed, Panamanian-flagged, Greek-owned Evangelos offloads foreign-made steel in
Cleveland. Crew members told ITF inspectors they had received no pay for several months, had no food
aboard when they came to Ohio and suffered with poor working conditions.
AFL-CIO President: WTO Talks
Must Address Workers' Rights
As representatives of the 134
member countries of the World
Trade Organization (WTO) read
ied for meetings in Seattle from
November 30 through December
3, AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney said America's working
families are mobilizing to ensure
their voices are heard.
In a speech November 19 at
the National Press Club in
Washington, D.C., Sweeney
described plans for a massive
pro-worker rally November 30 in
Seattle, involving "tens of thou
sands of working men and
women and their families from
across America and countries
across the world. We will be
joined by 200 international union
leaders representing over 135
million workers from more than
100 countries.
"We will call upon the dele
gates to the World Trade Or
ganization to address workers'
rights and human rights as well as
environmental and consumer pro
tections in the rules that govern
the global economy-demands
that are supported by workers
from Argentina to South Korea,
from South Africa to the Czech
Republic, tens of millions of
workers from developing as well
as developed countries."
The WTO meeting will launch
global negotiations to further
open markets in goods, services
and agricultural trade as well as
review some current trade rules.
The head of America's federa
tion of trade unions, to which the
SIU is affiliated, stated the WTO
"must incorporate rules to
enforce workers' rights and envi
ronmental and consumer protec
tions, and compliance should be
required of any new member.
Every worker deserves protection
of basic human rights-prohibi
tions against child labor, slave
labor and discrimination, and the
freedom to join together with oth
ers in a union."
He noted that as the WTO con
siders admitting China-notori
ous for child labor and other
worker abuse-"editorials pose a
choice between free trade and
protectionism, between engaging
China and isolating it, between
embracing the global market and
turning our backs on it. Op
ponents are being dismissed as
part of the past, and as obstacles
to the prosperous future of the
new economy.
"This is nonsense. The debate
isn't about free trade or protec
tion, engagement or isolation. We
all know we 're part of a global
AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney tells a National Press
Club audience that the WTO must
incorporate rules to enforce work
ers' rights and environmental and
consumer protections.
economy. And we're so engaged
that we're already running a $60
billion trade deficit with China.
"The real debate is not over
whether to be part of the global
economy, but over what are the
rules for that economy and who
makes them-not whether to
engage China, but what are the
terms of that engagement, and
whose values are to be represent
ed."
ITF Goes to Bat
For Scared Crew
air ambulance to Stoke Mandeville hospital in
England where still was undergoing treatment as
this issue of the Seafarers LOG went to press.
Meanwhile, the vessel proceeded from the
Azores to its intended discharge port, Antwerp.
"The crew are increasingly concerned for their
own safety," noted the ITF in a news release.
"Having suffered the trauma of the explosion and
witnessing the loss of and serious injury to three
colleagues, they are stranded on board a vessel con
taining an unstable cargo, which . . . continues to
emit explosive quantities of hydrogen gas. In addi
tion, conditions on board are becoming increasingly
difficult. There is no hot water and no laundry facil
ities for the crew."
The International Transport Workers' Federation
(ITF) has stepped in to assist crew members aboard
the foreign-flag bulk carrier Karteria some two
months after a horrific explosion on the vessel left
two dead and another mariner paralyzed with severe
bums.
The ITF (to which the SIU is affiliated) recently
reported that the Maltese-flagged ship was carrying
cargo-possibly iron oxide fines- across the
Atlantic Ocean in late August when explosions
occurred inside two of the holds. One Filipino crew
member instantly died, while another passed away a
few hours later due to burns. A third crew member,
Jing Caringal, survived but sustained a broken back
and major bums.
According to the ITF, the Karteria diverted to the
Azores and underwent temporary repairs. ITF repre
sentatives discovered Caringal awaiting repatriation
to the Philippines in a hospital in the Azores where
he could not be diagnosed or treated due to the
severity of his injuries and the lack of facilities at
the hospital.
After the ITF intervention, Caringal was taken by
David Cockroft, ITF general secretary, said it is
"unacceptable to leave (the crew) on board in these
conditions for this length of time. It seems to us that,
yet again, the safety of the crew is secondary to the
financial concerns of the owners and its P & I club."
Cockroft pointed out another concern. Both the
shipowner-Karteria Shipping Limited-and the
vessel recently were issued ISM documents of com
pliance and safety management certificates, yet
"were apparently unprepared for this emergency."
As part of the federation's ongoing campaign
against substandard shipping, the ITF is represent
ing Caringal in seeking compensation for his
injuries.
Seafarers LOG 5
Post-Hurricane Cleanup on Humacao
Among the SIU-crewed vessels
impacted by Hurricane Floyd earlier
this year was the Humacao, operat
ed by Navieras NPR. As reported in
last month's issue of the Seafarers
LOG, the ship survived Floyd's full
force on September 15 and 16,
approximately 150 miles from
Jacksonville, Fla. Despite the 60-
foot seas, 100-mph winds, 45-degree rolls and a
shipboard fire, there somehow were no serious
injuries. The vessel sustained significant dam
age, however, leading to cleanup efforts (pictured
here) when it finally arrived in San Juan, P.R.
Pictured above (from left) are AB Terry McKee,
Recertified Bosun David Murray, SIU Port Agent
Victor Nunez and Engine Utility Anthony Rosa. In
photo at right are AB Julio Matos and AB Roberto
Feliciano. At left, a damaged container is
removed from deck. "We're pretty lucky we sur
vived," Murray said.
SIL Independence Sives Independence
To Boaters Out of Sas in the Bahamas
New Carissa Beached for Winter
For residents of Coos Bay, Ore., the runaway-flag freighter New
Carissa simply won't go away.
At least not all of it.
Running out of gas, while unpleasant, usually is
just inconvenient.
miles off the starboard bow. One passenger was
waving a white cloth.
According to press reports, the beached stem section of the ves
sel-which ran aground in February-will remain on the sand until
spring. Rough seas postponed the most recent attempts to remove
the rusting, 120-foot section.
In a car, anyway.
For eight people in a small pleasure boat in the
Bahamas, it might have proven fatal.
But the SIU-crewed Sea-Land Independence
aided the stranded group, which had been adrift for
two days without food or water after their 18-foot
boat exhausted its fuel.
The Sea-Land Independence maneuvered along
side the boat and secured lines. At the same time,
the ship contacted a U.S. Coast Guard cutter in the
area.
The letter notes that although the pleasure boaters
were famished, they did not require medical attention.
Since the Coast Guard vessel would arrive shortly, the
Sea-Land ship lowered plenty of food and water to the
grateful survivors, but didn't bring them aboard.
In late October, salvage crews abandoned a three-week operation
to tow the wreckage out to sea, according to the Associated Press.
According to a letter from the Sea-Land
Independence recently received by the Seafarers
LOG, the rescue took place in May. With the vessel
sailing off the south coast of Grand Bahama island,
AB John Habib and Third Officer John Marcin
sighted the small white boat approximately two
Soon, the cutter Manitou relieved the
Independence, and the SIU-crewed ship proceeded
toward Panama. A half-hour later, the Coast Guard
confirmed that all survivors safely came aboard.
The Panamanian-flag, Japanese-owned New Carissa went
aground February 4, spilling 70,000 gallons of heavy bunker fuel.
Extraordinary measures were taken to ignite the remaining oil (and
thereby prevent it from spilling), and the 639-foot vessel resultant
ly split.
Shortly thereafter, the bow section broke loose from its tow and
drifted ashore 80 miles north. It later was towed again and sunk by
a U.S. Navy torpedo.
6
Notice to Employees Covered by Union Agreements
Regulated Under the National Labor Relations Act
The Seafarers International Union, AGLIWD assists employ
ees by representing them in all aspects of their employment and
work aboard vessels which sail deep sea, on the Great Lakes
and inland waters throughout the country. For the most part, the
union spends a majority of its financial resources on collective
bargaining activities and employee representation services. In
addition to these expenditures, the union also spends resources
on a variety of other efforts such as organizing, publications, polit
ical activities, international affairs and community services. All of
these services advance the interests of the union and its mem
bership.
This annual notice is required by law and is sent to advise
employees represented by the Seafarers International Union,
AGLIWD about their rights and obligations concerning payment
of union dues. This notice contains information which will allow
you to understand the advantages and benefits of being a union
member in good standing. It also will provide you with detailed
information as to how to become an agency fee payor. An agency
fee payor is an employee who is not a member of the union but
who meets his or her financial obligation by making agency fee
payments. With this information, you will be able to make an
informed decision about your status with the Seafarers
International Union, AGLIWD.
1. Benefits of union membership - While non-members
do receive material benefits from a union presence in their work
place, there are significant benefits to retaining full membership in
the union. Among the many benefits and opportunities available to
a member of the Seafarers International Union, AGLIWD is the
right to attend union meetings, the right to vote for candidates for
union office and the right to run for union office. Members also
have the right to participate in the development of contract pro
posals and participate in contract ratification and strike votes.
Members also may play a role in the development and formulation
of union policies.
2. Cost of union membership - In addition to working
dues, to belong to the union as a full book member the cost is
$300.00 (three hundred dollars) per year or $75.00 (seventy-five
dollars) per quarter. Working dues amount to 5 percent of the
gross amount an employee receives for vacation benefits and are
paid when the member files a vacation application.
3. Agency fee payors - Employees who choose not to
become union members may become agency fee payors. As a
condition of employment, in states which permit such arrange-
Seafarers LOG
ments, individuals are obligated to make payments to the union
in the form of an agency fee. The fee these employees pay is to
support the core representational services that the union pro
vides. These services are those related to the collective bargain
ing process, contract administration and grievance adjustments.
Examples of these activities include but are not limited to, the
negotiation of collective bargaining agreements, the enforcement
and administration of collective bargaining agreements and
meetings with employers and employees. Union services also
include representation of employees during disciplinary meet
ings, grievance and arbitration proceedings, National Labor
Relations Board hearings and court litigation.
Employees who pay agency fees are not required to pay for
expenses not germane to the collective bargaining process.
Examples of these expenses would be expenses required as a
result of community service, legislative activities and political
affairs.
4. Amount of agency fee - As noted above, dues objectors
may pay a fee which represents the costs of expenses related to
those supporting costs germane to the collective bargaining
process. After review of all expenses during the 1998 calendar
year, the fee cost associated with this representation amounts to
65.43 percent of the dues amount. This means that the agency
fee based upon the dues would be $196.29 (one hundred ninety
six dollars and twenty-nine cents) for the applicable year. An
appropriate reduction also will be calculated for working dues.
This amount applies to the 2000 calendar year. This means
that any individual who wishes to elect to pay agency fees and
submits a letter between December 1, 1999 and November 30,
2000 will have this calculation applied to their 2000 dues pay
ments which may still be owed to the union. As noted below, how
ever, to continue to receive the agency fee reduction effective
January 2001, your objection must be received by December 1,
2000.
A report which delineates chargeable and non-chargeable
expenses is available to you free of charge. You may receive a
copy of this report by writing to: Secretary-Treasurer, Seafarers
International Union, AGLIWD, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
Maryland 207 46. This report is based upon an audited financial
report of the union's expenses during 1998.
Please note that as the chargeable and non-chargeable
expenses may change each year, the agency fee amount may
also fluctuate each year. Individuals who are entitled to pay
agency fees and wish to pay fees rather than dues, must elect
this option each year by filing an objection in accordance with the
procedure noted below.
5. Filing of objections - If you choose to object to paying
dues, an objection must be filed annually. To receive the deduc
tion beginning in January of each year, you must file by the begin
ning of December in the prior year. An employee may file an
objection at any time during the year, however, the reduction will
apply only prospectively and only until December 31 of that cal
endar year. Reductions in dues will not be applied retroactively.
As noted above, each year the amount of the dues reduction may
change based upon an auditor's report from a previous year.
The objection must be sent in writing to: Agency Fee Payor
Objection Administration, Secretary-Treasurer's Office, Seafarers
International Union, AGLIWD, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
Maryland 207 46.
6. Filing a challenge - Upon receiving the notice of calcu
lation of the chargeable expenditures related to core representa
tion activities, an objector shall have 45 days to submit a chal
lenge with the Secretary-Treasurer's office if he or she believes
that the calculation of chargeable activities is incorrect. Every
person who wishes to object to the calculation of chargeable
expenses has a legal right to file such an objection.
7. Appeal procedure- Upon receiving the challenge(s) at the
end of the 45-day period, the union will consolidate all appeals and
submit them to an independent arbitrator. The presentation to the
arbitrator will be either in writing or at a hearing. The method of the
arbitration will be determined by the arbitrator. If a hearing is held,
any objector who does not wish to attend may submit his/her views
in writing by the date of the hearing. If a hearing is not held, the arbi
trator will set the dates by which all written submissions will be
received.
The costs of the arbitration shall be borne by the union.
Individuals submitting challenges will be responsible for all the
costs associated with presenting their appeal. The union will have
the burden of justifying its calculations.
The SIU works very hard to ensure that all of its members
receive the best representation possible. On behalf of all the SIU
officers and employees, I would like to thank you for your contin
uing support.
Sincerely,
David Heindel, Secretary-Treasurer
December 1999
On-Site Course Helps Seafarers Meet STCW Chapter VI Regs
The Paul Hall Center has often
taken its safety courses "on the
road." Instructors from the school
have taught water survival and
fire fighting classes to Seafarers
in different ports across the coun
try, including aboard the Delta
Queen Steamboat Company ves
sels in New Orleans, and
American Hawaii Cruises' SS
Independence in Honolulu.
A recent training opportunity
in Maui was a first, however, in
that the entire curriculum needed
for meeting the requirements of
STCW Chapter VI (Basic Safety
Training) was taught at one time.
Paul Hall Center instructors Rick
Redmond and Ben Cusic con
ducted the course components,
consisting of personal survival
techniques, fire fighting and fire
prevention, elementary first aid
and personal safety/social
responsibility.
The SS Independence sails into
the port of Honolulu for one day
each week, but it spends two days
in Maui, which allowed 20
upgrading Seafarers plenty of
time to receive practical instruc
tion in water safety and survival
techniques in that ship's luxury
pool. Classroom instruction was
held at Maui Community College,
part of the University of Hawaii.
Having successfully completed the STCW basic safety course, students pose for a group shot at Maui
Community College. Rick Redmond (far left) and Ben Cusic (far right, kneeling), instructors at the Paul Hall
Center in Piney Point, Md., conducted the on-site training.
One of the course participants
leaves the emergency locker en
route to the "fire."
Redmond, who taught the fire
fighting segment, obtained the
necessary permits for setting a
fire that produced smoke, so stu
dents had the added benefit of
dealing with a true fire and not
merely a simulation.
Certificates of course comple
tion were earned by Amy
Mazurek, Shannon Rabago,
Ricardo Sebastian, Stephen
Warren II, Ronald Whitfield,
Alejo Fabia Jr., Soriano
Grande, Angelito Pertubal,
AOTOS Awards to duMoulin, TRANSCOM
Richard duMoulin, chairman and CEO
of Marine Transport Lines (MTL), and
U.S. Air Force General Charles T.
Robertson, Jr., commander of the U.S.
Transportation Command, received the
annual Admiral of the Ocean Sea
(AOTOS) award on November 5 in New
York. The prestigious award is spon
sored by the United Seamen's Service.
MTL is the parent company of SIU-con
tracted Intrepid Ship Management,
while TRANSCOM is the largest single
user of U.S.-flag vessels (with many
SIU-crewed ships among them). Above
(from left): SIU President Michael
Sacco, U.S. Maritime Administrator
Clyde Hart and (far right) U.S. Rep.
Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) congratulate
duMoulin. At right (from left): Gen.
Robertson celebrates with Sacco and
Sea-Land Service President and CEO
John Clancey.
Maersk-Sealand
Taps Los Angeles
For New Terminal
Maers~-SeaLand will be the sole user of a mas
sive new container terminal being built at the Port
of Los Angeles, the company announced on
October 28.
The Pier 400 terminal will occupy 484 acres
December 1999
upon expected completion in 2003, although some
of its sections will open as early as late 2001. The
cost of the Pier 400 project is $794 million, which
includes $466 for the container terminal facilities
and infrastructure and $328 million for two stages
of a major dredging and landfill program.
The facility reportedly will include at least 16
shore-side cranes and will work as many as six ves
sels at once.
City officials said that the 25-year lease between
the port and the company will bolster the local
economy, bringing thousands of good jobs and bil
lions of dollars in new investment.
Emo Aulelava, Adele Williams,
Laverne Berasis, Maile
McWilliams, Joseph Brooks,
Cynthia Robello, Leonicio
Casamina Jr., Jerwin Ablao,
Allan Acasio, Joachim Buetzer,
Byron Hall and Ronald Wade.
All Seafarers who sailed prior
to August 1, 1998 must have docu
mented evidence of Chapter VI
compliance by February 1, 2002.
Those who began sailing after
August 1, 1998 should already
have fulfilled the requirements.
Members of the emergency squad on board the SS Independence don
the proper equipment for a fire drill conducted while the vessel was at
anchor in Kana, Hawaii.
Gopher State Receives Bravo Zulu
SIU members as well as offi
cers and military personnel
aboard the Gopher State recently
were congratulated by U.S. Navy
Admiral Harry M. Highfill for
their accomplishments during
Operation Crocodile 99 in Glad
stone, Australia.
During the exercise, Seafarers
worked with more than 5,000
active duty and reserve U.S. ser
vice members as well as Navy,
Marine and Coast Guard person
nel. Altogether, they moved more
than 600 pieces of critical cargo
ashore and safely conducted com
plex operations at sea and ashore.
"Each and every one of you
should be proud of your accom
plishments during this exercise,"
the admiral stated. "You complet
ed an operation that no other
country in the world could have
accomplished, and you did it
safely and with style."
He continued, "As a team, you
showed our allies our impressive
capabilities as a nation and our
great nature as individuals.
Again, congratulations to all for a
job extremely well done."
The Gopher State is a preposi
tioning ship owned by MarAd
and operated by Interocean
Ugland Management Corp. It has
been stationed in Guam for the
past several years, always at the
ready to sail in support and
defense of the United States and
her military forces.
Seafarers LOG 7
8
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT
FOR MCS SUPPLEMENTARY PENSION PLAN
This is a summary of the annual report of the MCS Supplementary
Pension Plan, El N 51-6097856 for the year ended January 1, 1998 through
December 31, 1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
Benefits under the plan are provided by the Trust. Plan expenses were
$877,410. These expenses included $198,880 in administrative expenses
and $678,530 in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries. A total of
1,553 persons were participants in or beneficiaries of the plan at the end of
the plan year, although not all of these persons had yet earned the right to
receive benefits.
The value of plan assets after subtracting liabilities of the plan, was
$11,512,065 as of December 31, 1998, compared to $11,589,292 as of
January 1, 1998. During the plan year, the plan experienced a decrease in its
net assets of $(77,227). This decrease includes unrealized appreciation in the
value of the plan assets; that is, the difference between the current value of
the plan's assets at the end of the year and the value of the assets at the
beginning of the year or the cost of any assets acquired during the year. The
plan had a total income of $800, 183 including realized gains of $239, 712 from
the sale of assets and earnings from investments of $560,471.
Minimum Funding Standards
An actuary's statements show that enough money was contributed to the
plan to keep it funded in accordance with the minimum funding standards of
ERISA.
Your Rights to AddHlonal Information
Your have the right to receive a copy of the full annual report, or any part
thereof, on request. The items listed below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. actuarial information regarding the funding of the plan;
4. service provider and trustee information; and
5. reportable transactions.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part thereof, write or call
the office of Mr. Lou Delma who is the plan administrator, 5201 Auth Way,
Camp Springs, MD 207 46, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying
costs will be $2.20 for the full annual report, or $.10 per page for any part
thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan administrator, on request
and at no charge, a statement of the assets and liabilities of the plan and
accompanying notes, or a statement of income and expenses of the plan and
accompanying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annual report
from the plan administrator, these two statements and accompanying notes
will be included as part of that report. The charge to cover copying costs given
above does not include a charge for the copying of these portions of the report
because these portions are furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the annual report at the
main office of the plan (Trustees of the MCS Supplementary Pension Plan, 5201
Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746) and at the U.S. Department of Labor in
Washington, D.C., or to obtain a copy from the U.S. Department of Labor upon
payment of copying costs. Requests to the Department should be addressed to:
Public Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension and Welfare Benefit Administration,
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20210.
SlllJMARY AllNUAL REPORT FOR SEAFARERS l'EllSION TRUST
This is a summary of the annual report for the Seafarers Pension Trust,
EIN 13-6100329, Plan No. 001, for the period January 1, 1998 through
December 31, 1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
Benefits under the plan are provided through a trust fund. Plan expenses
were $34,447,742. These expenses included $5,165,016 in administrative
expenses and $29,282,726 in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries.
A total of 24, 192 persons were participants in or beneficiaries of the plan at the
end of the plan year, although not all of these persons had yet earned the right
to receive benefits.
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of the plan, was
$578,646,134 as of December 31, 1998, compared to $562,498,325 as of
January 1, 1998. During the plan year, the plan experienced an increase in its
net assets of $16, 147,809. This increase includes unrealized appreciation and
depreciation in the value of plan assets; that is, the difference between the
value of the plan's assets at the end of the year and the value of the assets at
the beginning of the year or the cost of assets acquired during the year. The
plan had a total income of $50,595,551 including employer contributions of
$6,004,371, realized gains of $31,288,778 from the sale of assets, and earn
ings from investments of $13,301,966.
Minimum Funding Standards
An actuary's statement shows that enough money was contributed to the
plan to keep it funded in accordance with the minimum funding standards of
ERISA.
Your Rights To Additional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual report, or any part
thereof, on request. The items listed below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. service provider and trustee information;
4. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets; and
5. actuarial information regarding the funding of the plan.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part thereof, write or call
Board of Trustees Seafarers Pension Trust, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
MD 20746, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying costs will be $3.40
for the full annual report, or 10 cents per page for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan administrator, on request
and at no charge, a statement of the assets and liabilities of the plan and
accompanying notes, or a statement of income and expenses of the plan and
accompanying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annual report
from the plan administrator, these two statements and accompanying notes
will be included as part of that report. The charge to cover copying costs
given above does not include a charge for the copying of these portions of the
report because these portions are furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the annual report at
the main office of the plan and at the U.S. Department of Labor in
Washington, O.C., or to obtain a copy from the U.S. Department of Labor
upon payment of copying costs. Requests to the Department should be
addressed to: Public Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension and Welfare
Benefits Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue,
N.W., Washington, DC 20210.
Seafarers LOG
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT
FOR SEAFARERS VACARON PUii
This is a summary of the annual report of the Seafarers Vacation Plan, EIN 13-5602047, Plan No. 503, for the peri
od January 1, 1998 through December 31, 1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal Revenue Service,
as required under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of the plan, was $28,541,567 as of December 31, 1998, com
pared to $26, 146,074 as of January 1, 1998. During the plan year, the plan experienced an increase in its net assets
of $2,395,493. This increase includes unrealized appreciation and depreciation in the value of plan assets; that is, the
difference between the value of the plan's assets at the end of the year and the value of the assets at the beginning of
the year or the cost of assets acquired during the year. During the plan year, the plan had a total income of $39, 776,560
including employer contributions of $38, 157,696, realized gains of $162,334 from the sale of assets, and earnings from
investments of $1,456,530.
Plan expenses were $37,381,067. These expenses included $4,026,033 in administrative expenses and
$33,355,034 in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries.
Your Rights To AddHional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual report, or any part thereof, on request. The items listed below
are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets; and
4. service provider and trustee information.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part thereof, write or call Board of Trustees Seafarers Vacation
Fund, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying costs will be $1.70 for
the full annual report, or 10 cents per page for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan administrator, on request and at no charge, a statement of the assets
and liabilities of the plan and accompanying notes, or a statement of income and expenses of the plan and accompa
nying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annual report from the plan administrator, these two statements
and accompanying notes will be included as part of that report.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the annual report at the main office of the plan (Board of
Trustees Seafarers Vacation Fund, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746) and at the U.S. Department of Labor in
Washington, D.C., or to obtain a copy from the U.S. Department of Labor upon payment of copying costs. Requests to
the Department should be addressed to: Public Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension and Welfare Benefits
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20210.
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT
FOR GREAT LAKES TUG & DREDGE PENSION
PUii
This is a summary of the annual report for the Great
Lakes Tug & Dredge Pension Plan, EIN 13-1953878, Plan
No. 003, for the period January 1, 1998 through
December 31, 1998. The annual report has been filed with
the Internal Revenue Service, as required under the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
Benefits under the plan are provided through a trust
fund. Plan expenses were $1,397,982. These expenses
included $201,945 in administrative expenses and
$1, 196,037 in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries.
A total of 592 persons were participants in or beneficiaries of
the plan at the end of the plan year, although not all of these
persons had yet earned the right to receive benefits.
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of
the plan, was $25,004,-173 as of December 31, 1998,
compared to $24,527,804 as of January 1, 1998. During
the plan year, the plan experienced an increase in its net
assets of $476,669. This increase includes unrealized
appreciation and depreciation in the value of plan assets;
that is, the difference between the value of the plan's
assets at the end of the year and the value of the assets
at the beginning of the year or the cost of assets acquired
during the year. The plan had a total income of $1,874,651
including employer contributions of $232,063, realized
gains of $550,523 from the sale of assets, and earnings
from investments of $1,092,065.
Minimum Funding Standards
An actuary's statement shows that enough money was
contributed to the plan to keep it funded in accordance
with the minimum funding standards of ERISA.
Your Rights To AddHional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual
report, or any part thereof, on request. The items listed
below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. service provider and trustee information:
4. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets; and
5. actuarial information regarding the funding of the plan.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part
thereof, write or call Board of Trustees of Great Lakes Tug
& Dredge Pension Plan, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
MD 20746, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying
costs will be $1 .80 for the full annual report, or 10 cents
per page for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan admin
istrator, on request and at no charge, a statement of the
assets and liabilities of the plan and accompanying notes,
or a statement of income and expenses of the plan and
accompanying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the
full annual report from the plan administrator, these two
statements and accompanying notes will be included as
part of that report. The charge to cover copying costs
given above does not include a charge for the copying of
these portions of the report because these portions are
furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine
the annual report at the main office of the plan (Board of
Trustees of Great Lakes Tug & Dredge Pension Plan,
5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746) and at the
U.S. Department of Labor in Washington, D.C., or to
obtain a copy from the U.S. Department of Labor upon
payment of copying costs. Requests to the Department
should be addressed to: Public Disclosure Room, N-
5638, Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20210.
2000 - A Year of Personal Commitment
So much has and continues to
be written about the coming
year-2000. On the one hand,
it's just a new year; on the other
hand, it's the beginning of a new
decade . . . a new century . . . a
new millennium.
Seafarers, their spouses and
dependent children can truly
make 2000 a memorable begin
ning by applying for one of seven
scholarships being awarded by
the Seafarers Welfare Plan in
May of next year.
Three of the scholarships are
reserved for SIV members. One is
in the amount of $15,000 for
study at a four-year college or uni
versity. The other two are for
$6,000 each and are intended as
two-year awards for study at a
post-secondary vocational school
or community college.
Four scholarships are awarded
in the amount of $15,000 to the
spouses and dependent children of
Seafarers.
The first step is to send away
for the 2000 SIV Scholarship
Program booklet (see form at
right). Once the scholarship book
let has been received, applicants
should check the eligibility infor
mation to make sure that certain
conditions are met.
Since the completed applica
tion form (and other required
paperwork) is due no later than
April 15, 2000, applicants should
start collecting the necessary docu
ments as soon as possible. These
include transcripts and certificates
of graduation, letters of recom-
me-ndation, a photograph and cer
tified copy of birth certificate.
Also, arrangements should be
made to take the SAT or ACT
tests by February.
Filling out the coupon below is
the first step toward pursuing your
hopes, dreams and goals for a
higher level of education. Make
the year 2000 special-in more
ways than one.
r--------------------------------------------------,
Please send me the 2000 SIU Scholarship Program booklet
which contains eligibility information, procedures for apply
ing and a copy of the application form.
Name
Mariner's Social Security Number
Street Address
------------------~
City, State, Zip Code
Telephone Number
This application is for: D Self D Dependent
Mail this completed form to Scholarship Program,
Seafarers Welfare Plan,
5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746 12199
L--------------------------------------------------~
December 1999
He Sb.oats, He Scores!
Retired Bosun Revives Hockey Passion
Retired Bosun Peter Loik has spent
much of his life on water, in one form or
another.
He enjoyed a prosperous, 44-year
career with the SIU before retiring in
1991. Sandwiched around his sea time is a
hockey calling that began when Loik was
a toddler and now sees him competing in
"over-70" tournaments throughout North
America.
That's a long time between shifts, eh?
"When I started walking, I started skat
ing," recalls the Saskatchewan, Canada
native, who now resides in Baltimore.
Left: Retired Bosun Peter Loik helped lead
his over-70 team to first place in a recent
ice hockey tournament in Vancouver.
Philly Teamsters Win Strike,
Thank Seal arers for Support
Members of Teamsters Local 463 in
Philadelphia recently won their strike
against Wawa Dairies, thanks in part to
widespread backing from fellow trade
unionists.
SIU members repeatedly joined Team
sters on the picket line, demonstrating their
support. Other union members from as far
as New York and Virginia also showed
their encouragement.
There are approximately 3,200 mem
bers of Local 463, some 280 of whom were
on strike against Wawa. After the 11-day
action, members in October ratified a new
contract that included wage and benefit
increases while eliminating all of the give
backs proposed by the company.
In a letter addressed to the SIU execu
tive board and the entire SIU membership,
Local 463 Secretary-Trea'surer Robert
Ryder stated, "Your support during our
strike made the difference for our members
and their families. When Wawa was con
fronted by the show of solidarity from
unions across the tri-state area, they came
back to the table and negotiated a fair
agreement for our members. This would
not have been possible without your help.
"I want you and your members to know
that you can always count on the support of
this Local."
Picketing in behalf of striking Teamsters in
Philadelphia are (from left) OS Lafe Fraley,
SIU Representative Joe Mieluchowski, AB
John Gallagher and AB Michael Maronski.
This demonstration took place in early
October.
Seafarers show their support for Teamsters Local 463 as a television cameraman covers
the demonstration outside a Wawa facility in Philadelphia.
ATTENTION ALL SEAFARERS
Check Your Z-Card; Your Job May Be at Stake
Merchant Marainer 's Document Must Be Renewed
According to a law that took effect in
1995, the U.S. Coast Guard requires all
merchant mariners to renew their merchant
mariner's documents (z-cards) in order to
continue sailing. All mariners MUST pos
sess a renewed z-card in order to sail
aboard U.S.-flag vessels by the end of
1999. That means as of January 1, 2000, all
active z-cards must have been issued no
earlier than January 1, 1995.
You may renew your z-card beginning
one year before its expiration date. No
merchant mariner is allowed to ship with
an expired document. (Mariners may
renew their z-cards up to one year after the
expiration date. However, mariners lose
December 1999
their endorsements if they renew beyond
that one-year extension.)
The expiration date is five years to the
day after the card was issued. Z-cards list
the expiration date in two different loca
tions: (1) near the mariner's photo on the
front and (2) near the mariner's fingerprint
on the back. For those z-cards without an
expiration date, the date of issuance is
located on the back of the document beside
the fingerprint. However, any z-cards that
do not have an expiration date printed on
them will be void as of January 1, 2000.
If you have any questions concerning
the status of your z-card, contact your port
agent or patrolman.
"But I went to sea when I was 19, and
didn't play hockey again for 50 years. I
just got back into it a couple years ago."
Gerard Quinn, winning a Seafarers
Welfare Plan scholarship two years ago.
(Quinn attends college in New York.)
Playing in nearby Laurel, Md., Loik
revived his hockey skills and then put
them to good use in a recent tournament
in Vancouver. His team (the Crawlers)
placed first out of 10 squads in the divi
sion for players ages 70 and older.
"The union has done a lot for the mem
bers," states Loik, who frequently upgrad
ed at the school. "I enjoyed sailing for the
SIU, and my family was well taken care
of."
Loik, 73, played center, scoring a goal
with two assists in the championship
game. But he seems more proud of losing
a tooth earlier in the tournament.
"That made me feel like I'd been chris
tened," he recalls.
From the rink to the sea and back, Loik
says he's always felt at home.
Even in retirement, Loik maintains an
active interest in the union. He usually
drops in at the Baltimore hall each week,
and occasionally attends membership
meetings there and in Piney Point. He also
attended the ceremonial opening of the
Joseph Sacco Fire Fighting and Safety
School last summer.
He played for successful junior league
and semi-pro hockey teams as a teenager
before trading his sweater and skates for
coveralls and work boots.
"I guess I was a little wild in those
days, and didn't really know what I want
ed to do," Loik says. "I was looking for
work, and I'm just glad I found the mer
chant marine. With the SIU, I had a rep
utable job with good money coming in. It
was hard work, but if you did your job,
there were no problems. It was a good fit.
"You just can't get that 'ship talk' with
neighbors," Loik chuckles. "With guys
who are Seafarers, you can always com
municate, catch up on the latest news and
people's whereabouts."
"Plus in those days, ships would stay
in port for days or a week. You really got
to see the world."
Likewise, he plans to keep honing his
reborn puck prowess-although the tour
naments largely are luck-of-the-draw.
There are very few over-70 squads in
North America, Loik explains, so individ
ual players from throughout the continent
are matched up on-site to form temporary
teams.
Loik's fortune worked well in the
Vancouver tournament in September. His
team included Toronto Maple Leafs 1946
rookie of the year Howie Meeker (perhaps
more commonly known among younger
hockey fans as the longtime voice of
Hockey Night in Canada broadcasts).
Asked about his fondest seafaring
memories, the recertified bosun describes
a 1985 voyage aboard the Long Lines.
"We laid the first fiber-optic cable in the
world, in the Canary Islands. That was
special."
He also mentions helping with con
struction of the Seafarers Harry
Lundeberg School in Piney Point, Md.,
which opened in 1967; and his grandson,
"After 50 years of not being on skates,
it was a big change from climbing ladders
and walking decks," Loik says. "But it's
been great, and now I'm looking forward
to more tournaments."
Steward Kamer Cooks Up
Better Life witb. tb.e Union
When Mohamed
Kamer immigrated to the
United States 14 years ago,
about the only thing he
brought with him from his
native Egypt was his abili
ty to cook.
Today, the 39-year-old
Seafarer is upgrading at
the Paul Hall Center for
Maritime Training and
Education to become a
chief steward.
In between has been a
tremendous ride from the
lowest ranks of the restau
rant world to where he is
today.
"I started at the bot
tom," he told a reporter for
the Seafarers LOG recent
ly. "I was a line cook."
Since then, he has
worked his way up as well
as graduated from New
York Chefs School in
Manhattan. Not only has
he learned the skills and
techniques needed to sur
vive in his field, he also
has owned several restau
rants in New York.
In fact, he discovered
the SIU through the clien
tele of his last business, a
seafood restaurant in
Brooklyn's Bay Ridge.
"My customers were
Seafarers. They told me all
about what they did and
talked me into it."
Kamer sold his
business and start
ed sailing as a sec
ond baker and
chief baker in 1997
aboard the SS
Independence.
While he enjoyed
the work, he did
notice quite a dif
ference between
operating a restau
rant for himself
and cooking aboard
ship for others.
"I have to fol
low the directions I
am given," the gal
Mohamed Kamer works in the Paul ley gang member
Hall Center's culinary institute to stated. "The menu
upgrade his ga lley skills. is already prepared
and we have to follow
what we have been given.
There is very little oppor
tunity to be creative,
unless there is a special
birthday or other event."
Despite the change in both
working and living situa
tions, Kamer admits, "I
love to sail."
Even when he is not
aboard ship, the Brooklyn
based member can be
found in the kitchen.
During the last four sum
mers, he has taken a month
off from sailing to work
with the same family in
the mountains of upstate
New York when they gath
er for their annual vaca
tion.
Kamer was selected by
the family because of his
high grades at the
Manhattan school. He pre
pares the menus, does the
shopping and cooks for as
many as 30 people. He
said he really enjoys doing
this because it allows him
to work on new dishes,
especially seafood.
Another benefit is he can
take his daughter with him
so they can spend time
together.
An American citizen for
10 years, Kamer plans to
continue his career with
the SIU. "This has been
very good for me."
Seafarers LOG 9
A
To all Seafarers and families
Holiday greetings and best
wishes to you and yours. God
bless.
Felix P Amara Sr.
To Becky Sleeper
Happiest of holidays and
peace and prosperity in the
coming year for you, your
family and your staff. Our
"Orgulf Angel" is still tops!!
Nancy Avery and your
Orgulf members
To Orgulf cooks
Happy holidays! May all
our crews be merry and the
rivers all run smooth. And ban
appetit!
Nancy Ave1y
To "Uncle Mel"
Merry Christmas! At this
time of new beginnings, I wish
you all smooth seas and peace.
Nancy Avery
To Bosun Jeremiah Harrington
and all SIU members
Merry Christmas and a
very happy, prosperous New
Year. Smooth sailing.
Pete M Amper
JB3
To Carmine Barbati
Your family loves you
always. We miss you tremen
dously. Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year! Lots of hugs
and kisses 2 U. Happy birthday
ol' man of mine!
RoseMary, Jim and Rachel
Barbati
To Tricia Gerlach and the Bull fam
ily
Have a happy holiday sea
son and Happy New Year in
2000. Merry Christmas.
Jeffery Bull
c
To William G. Rackley, Vilma and
Tommy Lee
Hope you all have a Merry
Christmas and a happy, healthy
New Year. Remember all the
Christmases we shared as a
family. Love you all. Your lov
ing family,
Mom (Charlotte E.
Canion), Beverly, Tommy,
Marylee, Bruce and Rob
To Jose F. Castillo
Wishing you a very Merry
Christmas and Happy New
Year. We wish you were home
with us. We love you very
much.
Your family (Maricela,
Maria, Jose, Glenn and
Mama Castillo)
To Augusto B. Cerame
Merry Christmas and a
Happy New Year. I love and
miss you so much. Also,
thanks for everything. Your
loving wife,
Sandra Cerame
To Augusto B. Cerame
Dad, Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year. We love and
miss you so much. Your loving
kids,
Anthony, Junior and
Audrey Cerame
To Roderick Coleman
Christmas is a special time
of the year. And we wish you
were here. We love you.
There's no Christmas without
you. (Happy birthday.)
Van, Nita and Rodd
Coleman
To Vanessa, Lovenita and
Rodderick Coleman
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year. I love you
all and miss you very much.
Xmas is just not Xmas without
the ones you love.
Roderick Coleman
JO)
To Judy Chester, Ruti DeMont,
Lanette· Lopez and Susan Taylor-Moe
Wishing all my sisters the
best during this holiday season
and always. Congratulations
10 Seafarers LOG
T b.e h.oliJ&y greetings ap;peari11g on th.is pa.ge were written bi ' Se11.f11,re1•s, pensioners, friends 11.nJ la.m.
ily members. Ti1ey a.re lislertl in 11.lphabetical order by the name of tlu~ inJiviJua sending tl1e ines
sage. T lie Seafarers LOG joins vitb those appearing below in extending se11.son's greeetings to all.
girls, finally we are getting
more female recertified stew
ards. Sometimes it takes a
woman to add the right touch
to make it all come together.
Good luck and happy sailing,
Donna DeCesare
To Lanette Lopez and Paul
Sending you this holiday
greeting with much happiness
for you. Congratulations on
your engagement and may
your first Christmas together
be one to always remember.
Mele Kalikimaka.
Donna DeCesare & Johnny
To my old shipmates
Wishing you all a very
Merry Christmas and a Happy
New Year.
Jimmie Dies
JF
To all current and retired SIU
members
I wish you the best this hol
iday season. Have a prosper
ous and healthy New Year.
Stand up for your union, and
use Piney Point to upgrade.
Capt. Louis F. Flade
To Jesse
Merry Christmas to you
and your family.
Les and Mike Freeburn
To the SIU membership
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year. Wishing
you safe voyages in 2000 and
forever.
Les and Mike Freeburn
To beloved brothers and sisters of
the SIU, SUP, MC&S and MFOW
Peace and greetings this
holiday season. May you sail
with bountiful joy and always
find safe harbors. Much love
always,
Richard J Fuller
G
To all members
"Remember When ... "
Ernest Gibbons
To Seafarers & their families
Bless you and all your fam
ilies always.
Domingo Gordian
To Monica Guffey
To the love of my life, that
I couldn't live without, sorry I
can't be home. You're always
with me! Happy holidays,
babe. Love ya'
T.J Guffey
To all SIU members
I would like to wish all the
members a Merry Christmas
and a Happy New Year. Happy
holidays to all!
T.J Guffey
JHl
To Lee Hardman
Merry Christmas, daddy. I
love you!
Kailan Hardman
To my brothers and sisters at sea
and on the beach
We pray that God will bless
you with goodness and happi
ness, great memories and the
gifts of His perfect love.
Hazel Jr. (Hayes) and
Doretha Johnson
To Seafarers around the world
Best wishes for the holiday
season. You are my favorite
people. May God bless you all.
Hubert "Red" House
To my shipmates and Capt.
Murphy
I wish you all a great holi
day.
Willard Huggins
To Lesa Arnold
Thanks for your endearing
"crazy nuts" love that makes
me feel as special as you are in
my life! Never far away, Love
Blair (Humes)
To friends and family
Alive and kick'n! With
continued growth, strength and
faith, may we all share these
holidays in spirit as we have
together over all the years.
Blair (Humes)
JK_
To Amir Kasim
I am so happy that you
will be home this Christmas
and for the new year 2000.
This holiday will be full of
To Donald S. Ling
Happy holidays to you and
your family. Enjoyed our trip
this summer. We will have to
do it again.
David Ling
To Phil Kleinebreil
Best wishes to you and
your family over the holidays
and into the new year.
David Ling
To Debra Loureiro
Best wishes and happiness
this holiday season. Always
thinking of you . . ..
J. Carlos Loureiro
To Joel Lechel and Anthony
Sabattini and their families
Best wishes and happiness
this holiday season. Have a
great 2000 ! ! !
J Carlos joy and happi- -----
ness. Let the
Clockwise
from the top:
Van, Ntta and Rodd
Coleman; Capt. Louis F.
Flade; Roderick
Coleman; Amir and trma
Kasim; Sandra.
Alexander and Alicia
Panko; Tom Tobias
and Lester
Moore.
year.
My best
wishes also
to all SIU mem
bers and their families. With
love from your wife,
Irma Kasim
JL
To all Seafarers
I wish you all a joyful
Xmas and a happy, healthy and
safe New Year.
Jean LaCorte
To dad, mom, grandma, Mark and
Leo
Although I'm spending
another holiday season out at
sea, I want you to know that I
think of you each and every
day! Have a Merry Christmas
and a Happy New Year. I look
forward to "seaing" you soon.
Love always,
Jeff Lagana
To Kasandra and Harper
Merry Christmas and we're
going to have a very merry
New Year. The Christmas hol
idays are a special time for us.
The lights are bright and the
tree will be up with presents
and then our special presents
in January and April. Love,
your husband and daddy,
Joel Lechel
To the crew and officers on the
Sea-Land Producer
I want to say: very happy
holidays to a great bunch of
guys and gals and an excellent
bunch of people to sail with.
Feliz Navidad, and Happy
New Year.
Bosun Joel Lechel
To Judy E. McBurney
Merry Christmas and a
Happy ew Year to Judy and
the kids and puppy Lewis and
Boo and Kitty and Moxie and
Tori and Cody Boy and Kelly
and Darrin and Stephanie and
David. Miss y'all. Love y'all.
See y'all soon.
Guy (Richard L. Lewis)
Ml
To Rod "Bronco" Matsuura
Honey, I just wanna tell
you that I honestly love you
with all my heart. Happy holi
days. Your wife,
Helen (Matsuura)
To the deck, navigation and
engine departments on the
Mississippi Queen
I would like to extend holi
day greetings to all of you and
your families. I hope you enjoy
your upcoming time off during
layup. Have a great 2000 sail
ing season.
Robert Mclemore
To Mary and Craig
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year!
Mac (Tom McNellis)
To Kathy Parent
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year!
Mac (Tom McNellis)
To my wife, Hattie
Merry Xmas, a prosperous
New Year. God bless you.
Your husband,
A. Minors
To SIU officials and members, espe
cially at the NY hall
Season's greetings to all.
God bless you all.
A. Minors
To PRMMI shoregang
Merry Christmas. God
bless you all.
A. Minors
To my friend and retired member
James Robinson
Merry Xmas and a prosper
ous ew Year.
A. Minors
To /TB Groton officers and crew
Merry Christmas to all of
you. I'm happy to be working
with you guys on Christmas
Day, and I'm looking fonvard
to working with you again.
You make me feel good.
Chief Cook Joel Molinas
To the Seafarers Welfare Plan
Merry Christmas and wel
come to the Year 2000. Thanks
for your help-and thanks to
Janice in the Houston hall.
Lester J Moore
To all active and retired members
of the best union in the world
A very Merry Christmas
and Happy New Year!
William Morris Jr.
To Elsa Moreira and my beloved
children Laurie, Marquita,
Vanessa, Zinzi and Al'Rashid
Best wishes on Christmas,
the New Year, the new century
and the new millennium.
Filiberto Moreira
To all former shipmates and their
families
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year.
Jimmy Moye
N
To Nancy Avery
T'was the LOG before
Christmas to Nancy's surprise/
A message from Steve greeted
her eyes ... /Merry Christmas,
Nancy, way down in Ole
Miss./Merry Christmas, Nan
cy, I blow you a kiss ...
Steve "The Kid" Nelson
To Mrs. Virginia L. Ollivierre
Season's greetings to my
wonderful wife, Virginia. The
most precious things in life are
found in a good wife. I love
you so much.
Roger S. Ollivierre
JP>
To all my shipmates in MSC
Oakland
I wish all of you best wish
es for a safe holiday season. I
am well and kicking. Fair
winds to all of you.
Edward Palmer
To Sandra, Alexander and Alicia
Panko
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year. You guys
are always on my mind. Have
a nice holiday. I will be home
soon.
Dasril Panko
To Neng, Eric and Ryan Peck
Happy holidays to my won
derful wife, Neng, and my
sons Eric and Ryan. The past
lives we've spent together
can't compare to this one.
Michael Peck
To all Seafarers and their families
Have a wonderful millenni-
um.
Michael Peck
To Dawn and Jared Pinkham
Merry Christmas to my
loving wife and wonderful son.
I miss you both very much and
I can't wait to see you again.
Love,
Mark Pinkham
JR~
To Vilma and Tommy Lee Rackley
I would like to wish my
wife and son a Merry
Christmas and a Happy New
Year in the year 2000.
Bill Rackley
To mom, Marylee, Bruce, Bob,
Beverly and Tom
From the Philippines, I
would like to wish my family a
great New Year and a Merry
Christmas.
William, Vilma and
Tommy Lee Rackley
To all my shipmates, retired and
active, in the Gov't. Services
Division (MSCPAC)
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year!
James D. Rae
To Bill Romig
Happy holidays! Thank
you for all you do for us all
year! You are the greatest dad
and husband. We love you!
Kori, Curtis and
Jacob Romig
To G. Jane Hullsiek Sanchez
Merry Christmas, cat
woman. Hope you have a purr
fect Christmas holiday. Thanks
for the joy and happiness you
have given me. Your Juan and
only,
Juan D. Sanchez
To all Seafarers and shoreside
personnel
Yuletide greetings and a
salute to the best maritime
union worldwide.
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo
Siddons
To my son, Matthew Thomas
Sjaastad
I love you, son, and hope to
see you soon.
Dad (Arthur N. Sjaastad)
To John G. Katsos
Season's greetings to you,
the keeper of the light (aka
Lighthouse John). Thank you.
Arthur Sjaastad (aka Turtle)
To all Railroad Marine and deep
sea members
A very merry, healthy and
happy holiday to all. [P.S. W.
Hinko, call (516) 781-4385.]
Orrin "O.D. "Smith and
family
1~
To Mike, George, Jack, Carl and
Bill
Have a very Merry Xmas.
And to our future brothers and
sisters at Piney Point, welcome
aboard.
Thomas Tobias
To the Andrew Furuseth class of
'69, upgraders of '73 and '81, and
trainees in the basic engine class
of '73
Merry Xmas
Thomas Tobias
To all my SIU brothers and sisters
at sea, on shore and abroad
Merry Xmas and Happy
New Year.
Thomas Tobias
To Howard Yaekel
Happy holiday, my love.
It's so wonderful to have you
home for all three holidays.
Together forever i the best
holiday gift you can give me.
God bless. Love,
To all active seamen
God bless.
Lucy Yaekel
Lucy Yaekel
To all my brothers and sisters
I used to sail and loved
every day of life. Then I got
hurt. It has been eight years
since I last sailed, and I miss it
and all the good people very
much. Best wishes for a very
happy and healthy holiday sea
son. Have a good year.
Sy Yaras
MlJisc
To the Sea Monkeys Group
We wish you a joyous sea
son as we all continue on our
voyage to a happy destiny.
Bo G. and Bill W
To Mike Gramer
Merry Christmas sweet
heart. I hope you have a great
Christmas and New Year. The
kids and I will keep you in our
hearts and prayers. We miss
you!
Brenda
December 1999
HE LAST 1 O YEARS have seen tremendous change affecting all
Americans.
For instance, many people-not just major businesses-in 1990
were realizing how effective overnight delivery services were in
transmitting documents. Then came the fax machine, making
overnight too slow. Now, items are transmitted in seconds via e
mail.
Encyclopedias have given way to the internet. Friendly personal service from
your local bank teller-even your local bank-has been replaced by pay-for-ser
vice cash machines operated by major multi-state financial institutions. Cellular
phones are everywhere and young people do not understand where the term "dial
the telephone" came from.
Minivans and sport utility vehicles have replaced station wagons as the choice
for family transportation. The Saturn has become one of the major nameplates on
highways while the Plymouth is being eliminated. Even the United States curren
cy has been redesigned.
Yes, no one entering the 1990s could have foreseen the many, many transfor
mations that would occur in just a decade.
The same is true for the SIU and the U.S.-flag merchant fleet.
As new 1990 calendars were being hung, some truly believed Old Glory would
not be seen on the high seas when the year 2000 arrived. An American merchant
fleet was an anachronism. Let someone else move the goods.
But events in the Middle East changed that thinking. The vital role played by
Seafarers and the rest of the U.S. merchant marine in supplying troops during
Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm set in motion a sea of change.
New ships-especially prepositioning vessels-would be needed for future
crises. Well-trained American mariners would have to crew them because the
armed forces discovered some of their materiel was delayed when foreign crews
refused to sail into a war zone.
Militarily useful U.S.-flag commercial vessels and their crews so proved their
worth that Congress with the Bush and Clinton administrations worked for five
years on legislation to revitalize the fleet.
The U.S.-flag tanker fleet was rejuvenated when legislation allowed the export
of Alaska North Slope crude oil while new double-hulled tankers, built in a union
ized U.S. yard, began sailing in the Jones Act trade.
The deep sea fleet was not the only place where change occurred. New inland
tugs and barges provided additional jobs for Seafarers. The American Queen
joined the Delta Queen Steamboat Company fleet of paddlewheelers, while the
Columbia Queen sets sail next year.
The U.S.-flag cruise industry came back to life thanks to American Classic
Voyages. Two new deep sea passenger ships are being built by union workers and
will begin sailing early in the next decade. Joining them will be five 225-passenger
coastal cruise ships, the first of which will cast off in 2000.
And the decade ended with members of the SIU and National Maritime Union
voting whether the NMU should be merged into the Seafarers.
Obviously, those cries about the demise of the U.S.-flag merchant fleet are only
a bad memory.
With all this change, there has been one constant. The main priority of the SIU
has been job security for its members.
"We dedicated ourselves to one thing," noted SIU President Michael Sacco.
"That was making sure Seafarers had safe, good-paying jobs. That was our prior
ity in 1990 and it remains our priority going into the 21st century."
Many other events have taken place during these 10 years that have changed
the lives of Seafarers and their families. On the next four pages, the Seafarers
LOG recalls some of the issues, actions and people that have guided this voyage
during the decade of the 1990s.
HE DECADE OPENS with the SIU expressing its concern over an annual report issued by the U.S.
Department of Transportation that all but dismissed the presence of a U.S.-flag merchant fleet.
In a column published in the April 1990 edition of the Seafarers LOG, SIU President Michael Sacco states,
"There can be no mistaking now that the Department of Transportation hasn't the slightest intention of making
any serious creative effort to reverse the decline of the American-flag shipping industry .... Aside from some
----• acknowledgement that maritime is vital to the national security and some vague references to the need for
shipping reform so that it can improve its competitive position, the statement of policy gave not the slightest sign of encour
agement."
At the same time, multi-national agribusinesses with their runaway-flag fleets lobby Congress to eliminate cargo prefer
ence laws.
Then, a Middle Eastern event changes everything. Iraq invades Kuwait. American forces are ordered to Saudi Arabia to
serve in a multinational force designed to remove the aggressors.
The Ready Reserve Force fleet joins with MSC prepositioning ships and U.S.-flag commercial vessels to supply troops
with tanks, ammunition, food and other materiel. Seafarers come out of retirement and union halls stay open around the clock
to ensure no U.S.-flag vessel sails short.
During this period, SIU Secretary-Treasurer Joe DiGiorgio retires and John Fay is named by the executive board to take
his place. Byron Kelley becomes vice president for the lakes and inland waters and Dean Corgey moves up to Gulf Coast
vice president. Brother DiGiorgio passes away at year's end. The Seafarers Harry Lundeberg School upgrades its curricu
lum with an advanced fire fighting course.
While 1990 wraps up with the supply effort continuing, Seafarers also crew the
first of three new AT&T cable ships: the Global Sentinel .
.-----. AYS INTO THE NEW YEAR, Operation Desert Shield gives way to Operation Desert Storm. Allied bombs 1991 rain on Iraq for several weeks before the ground invasion overruns Iraqi forces. The Persian Gulf War lasts
43 days.
The U.S.-flag fleet is praised by military and government officials who review how each element of the
build-up and combat performed. The head of the armed forces' logistics deployment calls the industry "the
bedrock of America's defense transportation system. In the past six months, we have asked a great deal
from America's maritime unions and you have responded by giving us everything we have asked for and
more," adds General Hansford T. Johnson, who oversees the U.S. Transportation Command. Seafarers proudly march with
America's armed forces in Washington, D.C.'s national victory parade.
Further reviews during the year cite the need for a strong U.S.-flag fleet. After saluting the work done by the merchant
marine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Colin Powell, tells the Senate, "Our nation's sealift capability
needs improvement."
By the end of the year, the SIU and other maritime unions jointly call for action to revitalize the U.S.-flag fleet. (Earlier,
these unions start the push to keep maritime out of the world trade talks, known as GATT.)
The union opens a new hall in Honolulu and initiates a series of conferences around the country to educate members
about the union's benefit programs. The training center in Piney Point, Md. is named in memory of the late SIU president
who oversaw its creation: the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education.
The first vessel that will be covered by a Seafarers Entertainment and Allied Trades Union contract-the Alton
Be/le-begins sailing.
SIU President Michael Sacco is elected to the AFL-CIO executive council.
The U.S. Coast Guard announces it intends to charge mariners for their z-cards and to implement a renewal program
for the documents.
December 1999 SeafanNS LOG 11
Decade of Progress
CTION BEGINS ON WHAT will eventually become the Maritime Security Program.
A Pentagon study cites the need for more sealift capability based on its analysis of the Persian Gulf
War.
Then, Transportation Secretary Andrew Card presents during a Senate Merchant Marine
Subcommittee hearing the Bush administration's plan for a seven-year effort to help fund the U.S.-flag
fleet. The maritime unions praise the proposal: "American maritime labor, the industry and Congress
have demonstrated a willingness to work for a revival of a U.S.-flag shipping capability. With the addition of administra
tion support to the equation, we are hopeful that what once looked to be a formidable task now has become a reachable
goal."
Congress takes no further action on the measure before it adjourns.
Seafarers climb the gangway on the first new U.S.-flag containership built since 1987, Matson's R.J. Pfeiffer. The SIU
crewed Pride of Texas becomes the first U.S.-flag vessel to sail into Lithuania since 1939.
"Red" Campbell steps down as contracts vice president. Augie Tellez replaces him. Retired Atlantic Coast Vice
President Leon Hall passes away.
President Bush signs legislation allowing gaming aboard U.S.-flag deep sea vessels. Delta Queen Steamboat
Company announces plans to build a new paddlewheel vessel to ply the Mississippi and its tributaries.
In the wake of the Coast Guard's new regulation governing benzene exposure, the Paul Hall Center offers classes to
protect Seafarers.
The Persian Gulf sealift operation wraps up, but vessels start sailing with supplies to Somalia.
1992
1993
HE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION shows its interest in a maritime revitalization program within its first days in
office.
New Transportation Secretary Federico Pena calls representatives from maritime labor and industry togeth
er in Washington, D.C. to learn more about the needs of the U.S.-flag fleet. Former merchant mariner and
retired Navy Vice Admiral Albert Herberger, who had served as deputy chief of TRANSCOM, is nominated to
head the Maritime Administration. The White House sends legislation for a 10-year program to Capitol Hill. It
is well received by the bipartisan leadership of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee. The package makes
its way through the House and passes 34 7-65.
As the effort to enact revitalization grows, American President Lines and Sea-Land Service ask MarAd to allow the reflag
ging of 20 vessels. The SIU, with the other maritime unions, fights this request.
Workers at the Avondale (la.) Shipyard begin a six-year battle to gain a union contract by voting almost 2-1 for repre
sentation.
The UIW-contracted Queen Mary reopens after a year-long battle in Long Beach, Calif. Delta Queen Steamboat Company
purchases American Hawaii Cruises, which operates the SIU-crewed SS independence and SS Constitution. The two com
panies will comprise American Classic Voyages. SIU Government Services Division members crew the Navy's first SWATH
design T-AGOS vessel.
Under the new standard freightship and tanker agreements ratified by the membership, medical coverage is extended to
dependents and the pension cap is lifted.
Tom Fay replaces Ken Conklin, who retired as vice president for the Paul Hall Center. Retired Gulf Coast Vice President
Lindsey Williams passes away.
International trade representatives agree to exclude maritime from GATT.
HE YEAR STARTS WITH President Clinton becoming the first sitting chief executive to tour the Paul Hall
Center.
After Transportation Secretary Federico Pena tells the AFL-CIO Maritime Trades Department that the admin
istration has included funds for maritime revitalization in its Fiscal Year 1995 budget, the White House sends a
revised 10-year initiative to Congress. AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland, a former merchant officer, announces
the unions' support: "Labor as a whole embraces the administration's maritime security program as an impor
tant step toward the revitalization of the American merchant marine."
The House passes the measure 294-122. However, it is blocked in the Senate by farm-state legislators. The White House
vows to bring the measure back in the next Congress. Because of the lack of a program, APL flags out its six new C-11 con
tainerships and Sea-Land asks to reflag five of its vessels (which is granted in early 1995).
The SIU and other maritime unions call for the repeal of the 21-year export ban of Alaska North Slope crude oil as long
as the petroleum is carried by U.S.-flag tankers.
Boatmen aboard E.N. Bisso tugs in New Orleans vote 45 to 27 for SIU representation. The effort to gain a contract begins.
The Brooklyn union hall moves a block to its new location.
The Paul Hall Center launches a series of EPA-approved refrigeration certification classes around the ports. It revises its
steward department curriculum and purchases new vessels for hands-on training.
SIU-crewed vessels return from Somalia and receive praise for their work, while other ships assist U.S. forces deployed
to return democracy to Haiti.
In national elections, the GOP gains control of Congress for the first time in 40 years.
12 Seafarers LOG
1994
December 1999
1995
HE NEW CONGRESS disbands the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee while merging the
Senate Merchant Marine Subcommittee with one on surface transportation.
However, the effort to gain maritime revitalization continues to push forward. The administration reintro
duces its legislation. Senate Majority Whip Trent Lott (R-Miss.), the son of a union shipyard worker, tells the
AFL-CIO Maritime Trades Department: "I want a U.S.-flag fleet, manned by American crews, and U.S. ships
built by American labor."
The bill goes to the Senate after the House approves it in a bipartisan voice vote.
A measure to end the export ban of Alaska North Slope crude oil makes its way through Congress. SIU President
Michael Sacco tells a Senate subcommittee many U.S.-flag tankers are tied up or scheduled for scrapping, thus keeping
American mariners from sailing and keeping their skills sharp. He noted America's economic circumstances had changed
since the 1970s when the ban went into effect.
In May, the Senate approves lifting the ban 7 4-25. The House clears a dif
ferent version in July 324-77. A conference committee irons out the differ
ences. Congress again approves lifting the ban and President Clinton signs
the measure on November 28.
New jobs for Seafarers are gained. The American Queen is christened.
Maersk brings two foreign-flag RO/ROs into the U.S. registry and reconfig
ures them as prepositioning vessels. Penn Maritime adds an ITB to its fleet.
And five former Maersk foreign-flag vessels are earmarked to become Army
prepositioning ships.
The SIU-crewed Cape Race breaks out to assist U.N. efforts in Bosnia.
The Paul Hall Center dedicates part of its Harry Lundeberg School facility as the Thomas 8. Crowley Sr. Campus for
Higher Learning. The union opens a hall in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Center Vice President Tom Fay succumbs to cancer.
John Sweeney is elected president of the AFL-CIO.
ARAD ANNOUNCES A SERIES of double-hulled Double Eagle tankers will be built at unionized Newport News (Va.) Shipbuilding. Construction
funding comes from a Title XI shipbuilding loan guarantee. These are the first tankers to be built in an American yard since the Oil Pollution Act of
1990 became law.
Laid-up tankers begin sailing with SIU crews to move Alaska North Slope crude oil. Maritrans launches another ITB and the Paul Hall Center
develops inland tankermen courses.
Action moves to the Senate for a maritime revitalization program. The head of TRANSCOM, General Robert Rutherford, calls for its passage.
In July, Trent Lott (R-Miss.) becomes Senate Majority Leader when Bob Dole (R-Kansas) resigns to run for president. Two months later, the legislation is debated by
the full Senate where it passes 88-10.
1996
CLINTON
SIGNS
SHIP BILL I ~~, -
10-Year Program Salls Through
Senate with Bipartisan Support
December 1999
On October 8, President Clinton signs the measure enacting the Maritime Security Program, which will provide funds
for 1 O years for approximately 50 militarily useful U.S.-flag vessels. It is the first major piece of maritime legislation enact
ed since 1970. MarAd announces the first contract awards in December.
The celebration was tempered by the unexpected loss of SIU Executive Vice President Joseph Sacco to a heart
attack.
In other developments, SIU Secretary-Treasurer John Fay becomes chairman of the ITF Seafarers' Section. A new
hall in Tacoma opens. Members are urged to acquire STCW certificates. The new standard freightship and tanker agree
ments expand medical benefits and create a money purchase pension plan.
The Jones Act fight continues. More than 70 flag officers inform Congress of the need for the nation's freight cabo
tage law. Seafarers and their families travel from North Carolina to attend a congressional hearing on the subject and
meet with their representatives.
Finally, MSC Pacific Fleet vessels are deployed in the Persian Gulf because of Iraqi attacks on the Kurds.
Seafarers LOG 13
Decade of Progress
EEPING UP WITH THE ever-changing needs of the industry, the Paul Hall Center continues its
efforts to meet and exceed what is required of American mariners. The facility starts issuing train
ing record books which will allow Seafarers to show their compliance with international safety and
training regulations without having to carry all kinds of papers.
The facility revamps its syllabus for beginning mariners. The new nine-month unlicensed appren
----- tice program continues hands-on and classroom training at Piney Point but allows students to work
for three months aboard U.S.-flag ships to learn more about the trade.
The center also begins anti-terrorist training for members upgrading in government vessels courses.
Enemies of the Jones Act renew their assault on the freight cabotage law. However, a bipartisan resolution sup
porting the act is introduced in the House of Representatives early in the session. By fall, more than half the mem
bers of the House have signed on as co-sponsors, effectively killing any action against the Jones Act.
The executive board names John Fay executive vice president for the union, while Dave Heindel becomes sec
retary-treasurer. George McCartney retires as West Coast vice president. The board chooses Nick Marrone as his
successor. A new SIU hall opens in Anchorage, Alaska.
The SIU launches its web site.
Seafarers continue to gain additional jobs as new tugs and vessels-including four reflagged Maersk container
ships-come under contract.
Bisso boatmen ratify the company's first union contract in its 117-year history.
President Clinton signs legislation that includes the U.S.-Flag Cruise Ship Pilot Project, which provides funding
to assist in new passenger ship development.
NOL announces the purchase of APL which brings four C-11s to the U.S. registry. Tyco acquires the AT&T cable
ship fleet. Efforts are announced to convert the mothballed Philadelphia Naval Yard into a commercial shipbuilding
facility.
1997
ALKS AIMED AT A POSSIBLE AFFILIATION of the National Maritime Union into the SIUNA are announced
during the NMU's convention, held in March at the Paul Hall Center. The effort culminates on December 10
when SIUNA President Michael Sacco and NMU President Rene Lioeanjie sign the document, thus bringing
all the nation's major unlicensed maritime unions within the same organization.
._,,__"'
~'· ~.~ R~ht Things
Seafarers sail to the Persian Gulf again to supply American and allied forces as Iraq once more rattles its
sword. The delivery effort is praised by TRANSCOM while the president of the U.S. Navy League calls for
more support for the U.S.-flag merchant fleet.
Right Place
Right Time
Delta Queen Steamboat Co.mpany announces its intention to build five 225-passenger coastal cruise ships. They would
sail along the Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific Northwest coasts with the first coming on line by 2000. In testimony before
Congress, the SIU talks favorably about the prospects for expanding the U.S.-flag cruise fleet. Senator John Breaux (O
la.) introduces legislation to help rebuild that fleet.
The Clinton administration announces approval for dredging to begin in the port of New York/New Jersey so it can han
dle proposed deeper draft commercial vessels.
The first two Double Eagle tankers-the Cape Lookout Shoals and Nantucket Shoals-set sail, joining other new ships
in providing more job opportunities for Seafarers.
SIU pensioners benefit when a new prescription drug program is initiated.
Steel dumping by foreign nations adversely affects Seafarers working on the Great Lakes. The sailing season ends early
after an extended run of record-setting years.
Veterans Day takes on new meaning for merchant mariners who sailed between August 16, 1945 and December 31,
1946 as President Clinton signs into law an extension of World War II veterans' status for these Americans. The dates now
coincide with all other veterans of that era.
XPANSION OF THE U.S. PASSENGER SHIP FLEET becomes more of a reality when the president of
American Classic Voyages and the president of Ingalls Shipbuilding sign a contract in the U.S. Capitol to build
two 1,900-passenger vessels for the Hawaiian trades. Construction was made possible through the passage
of the U.S.-Flag Cruise Ship Pilot Project of 1997.
Later in the year, American Classic Voyages announces the new ships will become part of a subsidiary
._ ___ • which will resurrect the United States Lines name. The company purchases the Nieuw Amsterdam, will reflag
and upgrade it, and rename the ship the MS Patriot when it starts sailing around Hawaii late next year.
Another subsidiary, Delta Queen Steamboat Company, releases its plans to offer paddlewheel service in the Pacific
Northwest aboard the Columbia Queen.
While all of these represent new job opportunities for Seafarers, SIU members climb the gangways to new car carriers,
the Green Dale and the Tanabata, as well as other new vessels.
SIU-crewed vessels continue to supply U.S. troops stationed in the Persian Gulf and the Balkans.
The Paul Hall Center opens the Joseph Sacco Fire Fighting and Safety School, providing a world-class facility for classroom
and hands-on instruction minutes from the main Piney Point campus.
Roy "Buck" Mercer retires as government services vice president. Kermett Mangram is named to replace him. Don Nolan
becomes vice president of the Paul Hall Center.
The union opens a new hall to serve the membership in New Orleans while the facility in Norfolk gets a facelift.
Following talks throughout the year, a proposed merger to bring the NMU within the ranks of the SIU Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes
and Inland Waters District is announced in September. The year ends with members of both unions voting to see if the talks
should proceed.
14 Seafarers LOS
1999
New Ships
For Seafarers!
To Come Al Sea
December 1999
Dispatchers' Report for Deep Sea
OCTOBER 16 - NOVEMBER 15, 1999
*TOTAL REGISTERED
All Groups
Class A Class B Class C
Port
New York
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk
Mobile
New Orleans
Jacksonville
San Francisco
Wilmington
Seattle
Puerto Rico
Honolulu
Houston
St. Louis
Piney Point
Algonac
Totals
Port
23
8
5
10
14
23
36
29
26
24
6
12
26
5
1
249
New York 15
Philadelphia 4
Baltimore 5
Norfolk 4
Mobile 5
New Orleans 8
Jacksonville 20
San Francisco 12
Wilmington 8
Seattle 10
Puerto Rico 5
Honolulu 4
Houston 24
St. Louis 3
Piney Point 2
Algonac 0
Totals 129
Port
New York 12
Philadelphia 7
Baltimore 0
Norfolk 7
Mobile 4
New Orleans 13
Jacksonville 14
San Francisco 22
Wilmington 14
Seattle 17
Puerto Rico 2
Honolulu 7
Houston 12
St. Louis 2
Piney Point 0
Algonac 0
Totals 133
Port
New York 7
Philadelphia 1
Baltimore 1
Norfolk 0
Mobile 4
New Orleans 3
Jacksonville I
San Francisco 6
Wilmington 7
Seattle 6
Puerto Rico 3
Honolulu 8
Houston 1
St. Louis 0
Piney Point 0
Algonac 0
Totals 48
Totals All
Departments 559
11
3
2
12
6
11
17
6
17
6
8
5
13
2
2
122
8
4
1
6
4
11
9
8
5
6
3
8
9
0
3
86
5
0
2
8
7
2
4
2
5
3
2
2
0
45
25
2
12
6
3
13
20
6
17
3
30
12
0
6
2
158
411
6
3
5
6
5
8
2
6
5
2
2
10
1
2
4
68
5
0
4
2
0
4
2
1
6
7
1
5
5
2
0
2
46
1
2
0
2
2
0
0
0
0
5
I
0
0
16
13
0
5
11
1
8
9
5
11
6
4
86
4
0
6
170
300
TOTAL SHIPPED
All Groups
Class A Class B Class C
1l
4
2
7
9
23
23
19
17
24
8
8
19
4
2
181
DECK DEPARTMENT
7 5
4
4 0
6 8
7
11 3
8 6
6 2
9
3 4
5 7
2 3
12 7
3 2
0 3
2 2
86 58
Trip
Reliefs
7
2
2
2
1
12
6
5
6
10
2
9
1
68
ENGINE DEPARTMENT
6
3
6
4
8
10
14
4
4
9
2
4
14
1
3
0
92
5
4
1
8
2
3
15
12
15
13
1
8
9
1
0
98
5
1
0
2
1
3
l
0
2
4
1
5
l
0
0
27
398
9
3
2
5
2
6
7
6
5
6
3
5
I
3
0
64
4
I
5
4
3
6
3
0
1
0
5
I
0
2
0
36
4
0
1
4
0
5
3
3
7
1
6
3
l
2
0
41
0
0
0
2
0
1
0
0
4
0
0
1
12
1
1
2
2
3
1
7
2
3
2
3
1
0
0
30
2
1
0
2
2
7
6
6
4
2
1
4
0
0
0
38
ENTRY DEPARTMENT
19
0
0
7
5
8
5
9
11
13
1
19
5
0
2
2
106
292
14
4
9
0
1
9
8
8
13
3
51
3
0
19
0
143
254
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
136
**REGISTERED ON BEACH
All Groups
Class A Class B Class C
44
9
8
25
22
23
61
41
45
43
13
15
37
3
2
2
393
22
2
5
6
8
10
32
21
16
18
8
9
25
2
2
0
186
21
6
2
10
8
15
29
40
24
27
2
14
16
3
4
0
221
11
0
4
4
6
11
13
11
7
13
4
0
0
87
887
20
8
2
21
6
15
31
9
20
11
4
12
20
3
3
1
186
12
5
1
9
7
13
19
9
11
12
4
8
IO
2
5
128
12
1
2
10
3
15
12
5
9
4
1
7
3
3
3
0
90
28
3
3
22
10
17
31
25
10
24
4
38
19
1
7
243
647
9
3
5
9
7
12
3
18
7
0
6
11
4
2
4
101
4
0
3
2
1
8
2
0
7
6
0
4
6
2
1
2
48
1
3
0
3
2
3
4
1
0
6
1
0
1
0
27
33
l
3
12
2
11
17
3
12
9
5
104
10
0
11
2
235
411
*"Total Registered" means the number of Seafarers who actually registered for shipping at the port.
**"Registered on Beach" means the total number of Seafarers registered at the port.
December 1999
January & February 2000
Membership Meetings
Deep Sea, Lakes, Inland Waters
Piney Point ............. Monday: January 3, February 7
Algonac .................. Friday: January 7, February J 1
Baltimore ................ Thursday: January 6, February 10
Duluth ..................... Wedne day: January 12, February 16
Honolulu .... ........ ..... Friday: January 14, February 18
Houston .................. Monday: January 10, February 14
Jacksonville ............ Thursday: January 6, February IO
Jersey City .............. Wednesday: January 19, February 23
Mobile .................... Wednesday: January 12, February 16
New Bedford .......... Tuesday: January 18, February 22
New Orleans ........ ... Tuesday: January 11, February 15
New York. .... ........... Tuesday: January 4, February 8
Norfolk ................... Thursday: January 6, February 10
Philadelphia ............ Wednesday: January 5, February 9
San Francisco ......... Thursday: January 13, February 17
San Juan .................. Thursday: January 6, February LO
St. Louis ................. Friday: January 14, February 18
Tacoma ................... Friday: January 21, February 25
Wilmington ............... Tuesday: January 18*, February 22*
(*changes created by Martin Lutherc King Jr. s
birthday and Presidents Day holidays)
Each port's meeting starts at 10:30 a.m.
Personals
TO MY FELLOW
BROTHERS OF THE SEA
Arthur N. Sjaastad, who sailed as an AB from the
port of Houston, is presently incarcerated and would
love to hear from some of his former shipmates. His
address is TDCJ-ID #681264, Estelle Unit, Foscil K-2-
205, Huntsville, Texas 77340.
THOMAS CHIN
Please contact Cyd Reagan, c/o Sylvia Westbrook,
P.O. Box 1150, Mt. View, Hawaii 96771; or telephone
(808) 968-6492.
Preventive Medicine in Tacoma
Seafarers in the Tacoma, Wash. area lined up at the SIU
hall for their annual flu shot on October 22. Among those
taking the inoculation were (above) Recertified Steward
Henry Jones and (below) SA Kaid Adam. Administering
the shots is RN JoAnn Kauffman.
Seafarers LOG 15
<
Seafarers lntemational Union
Directory
Mid1ael Sac® ·
President
John Fay .
Executive Vice President
Da\'id Heindel
Secretary-Treasurer
Augustin TeUez
Vice President Contracts
Jack Caffey
Vice President Atlantic Coast
Byron Kelley
Vice President Lakes and Inland Waters
Dean Corgey
Vice President Gulf Coast
Nicholas J. Marrone
Vice President West Coast
Kermett Mangram
Vice President Government Services . ..
HEADQUARTERS
520 l 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., # IC
Anchorage, AK 99503
(907) 561-4988
BALTIMORE
1216 E. Baltimore St.
Baltimore, MD 21202
(410) 327-4900
DULUTH
705 Medical Arts Building
Duluth, MN 55802
(218) 722-4110
HONOLULU
606 Kalihi St.
Honolulu, HI 96819
(808) 845-5222
HOUSTON
1221 Pierce St.
Houston, TX 77002
(713) 659-5152
JACKSONVILLE
3315 Liberty St.
Jacksonville, FL 32206
(904) 353-0987
JERSEY CITY
99 Montgomery St.
Jersey City, NJ 07302
(201) 435-9424
MOBILE
1640 Dauphin Island Pkwy.
Mobile, AL 36605
(334) 478-0916
NEW BEDFORD
48 Union St.
New Bedford, MA 02740
(508) 997-5404
NEW ORLEANS
3911 Lapalco Blvd.
Harvey, LA 70058
(504) 328-7545
NEW YORK
635 Fourth Ave.
Brooklyn, NY 11232
(718) 499-6600
NORFOLK
115 Third St.
Norfolk, VA 23510
(757) 622-1892
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
SAN FRANCISCO
350 Fremont St.
San Francisco, CA 94105
( 415) 543-5855
Government Services Division
(415) 861-3400
SANTURCE
1057 Fernandez Juncos Ave., Stop 16'l2
Santurce, PR 00907
(787) 721-4033
ST. LOUIS
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
16 Seafarers LOG
Dispatchers' Report for Great Lakes
OCTOBER 16 - NOVEMBER 15, 1999
CL - Company/Lakes
*TOTAL REGISTERED
L-Lakes NP - Non Priority
All Groups
Class CL Class L Class NP
Port
Algonac 0 29 21
Port
Algonac 0 18 17
Port
Algonac 0 7 12
Port
Algonac 0 24 19
Totals All Depts 0 78 69
TOTAL SHIPPED
All Groups
Class CL Class L Class NP
DECK DEPARTMENT
0 15 7
ENGINE DEPARTMENT
0 8 7
STEWARD DEPARTMENT
0 4 6
ENTRY DEPARTMENT
0 12 7
0 39 27
**REGISTERED ON BEACH
All Groups
Class CL Class L Class NP
0 11 9
0 2 2
0 2 6
0 12 13
0 27 30
*"Total Registered" means the number of Seafarers who actually registered for shipping at the port.
**"Registered on Beach" means the total number of Seafarers registered at the port.
Dispatchers' Report for Inland Waters
OCTOBER 16 - NOVEMBER 15, 1999
*TOTAL REGISTERED
All Groups
TOTAL SHIPPED
All Groups
**REGISTERED ON BEACH
All Groups
Class A Class B Class C Class A Class B Class C Class A Class B Class C
Region DECK DEPARTMENT
Atlantic Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Gulf Coast 1 0 3 2 0 3 0
Lakes, Inland Waters 40 0 0 20 0 0 20 0
West Coast 1 0 4 6 3 2 8 2
Totals 42 0 7 28 3 5 29 2
Region ENGINE DEPARTMENT
Atlantic Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Gulf Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lakes, Inland Waters 25 0 0 10 0 0 15 0
West Coast 1 0 1 1 0 2 0
Totals 26 0 1 11 0 1 17 0
Region STEWARD DEPARTMENT
Atlantic Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Gulf Coast 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0
Lakes, Inland Waters 15 0 0 4 0 0 11 0
West Coast 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
Totals 16 0 1 4 0 1 12 0
Totals All Depts 84 0 9 43 3 7 58 2
*"Total Registered" means the number of Seafarers who actually registered for shipping at the port.
**"Registered on Beach" means the total number of Seafarers registered at the port.
PIC-FROM-THE-PAST
This photo was sent to
the Seafarers LOG by pen
sioner Ewing "Ed" Rihn of
Franklinton, La.
The picture was taken
aboard the Waterman ship
Mirabeau B. Yamar on a trip
to Trieste in 1947. The ves
sel crewed in New Orleans
and paid off in Baltimore.
Standing (from the left)
are Joe Huber, Chad Galt,
Red Smith, Bill Grega! and
Ed Rihn. Bosun Tom
Freeman is kneeling at left.
Rihn, 75, joined the SIU
in 1944 in the port of
Galveston and graduated
from the bosun recertifica
tion program in 1973. He
won the Seafarers Safety
Poster Contest of 1960-61 .
Before retiring in 1984, Rihn
worked with the Delta
Steamship Lines shore
gang in New Orleans.
0
15
0
23
38
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
2
2
41
December 1999
--------------.... _.-~....-ri __ .,.....,. ________ _ _ _ ___ -·--
Three recertified bosuns and
one recertified steward are
among the 19 Seafarers
announcing their retirements this
month.
Representing more than 130
years of active union membership,
Recertified Bosuns Kenneth W.
Craft, Ronald W. Dailey and
Neil D. Matthey and Recertified
Steward Harold Fielder are grad
uates of the highest level of train
ing available to members in the
deck and steward departments,
respectively, at the Sill's training
school in Piney Point, Md.
Including the four recertified
graduates, 14 of the retiring Sea
farers sailed in the deep sea divi
sion, four shipped on inland ves
sels, and one plied the Great
Lakes.
Nine of the retiring pensioners
sailed in the deck department,
eight worked in the steward
department and two shipped in the
engine department.
On this page, the Seafarers
LOG presents brief biographical
accounts of the retiring Seafarers.
DEEP SEA
ABDULR.
ABDO, 67,
began his
career with the
Seafarers in
1967 in the
port of San
Francisco. His
first ship was
the Halcyon Panther. Born in
Arabia, he worked in the steward
department. Brother Abdo last
sailed in 1996 aboard the
President Chester B. Arthur, an
American President Lines vessel.
He has retired to San Francisco.
RITA M. BALLARD, 60, joined
the Marine Cooks & Stewards
(MC&S) in 1965 in the port of
San Francisco, first sailing aboard
Matson Navigation Co. 's Lurline.
A member of the steward depart
ment, Sister Ballard last sailed
aboard the SS Independence, an
American Hawaii Cruises vessel.
Born in Switzerland, she makes
her home in Santa Rosa, Calif.
KENNETH
W.CRAFT,
59, started his
career with the
SIU in 1969 in
the port of
Seattle. His
first ship was
the Raleigh,
operated by Crest Overseas
Shipping Co. Born in North
Dakota, he sailed in the deck
department and upgraded his
skills at the Sill's school in Piney
Point, Md., where he graduated
from the bosun recertification pro
gram in 1984. Prior to retirement,
Brother Craft sailed aboard the
Sea-Land Innovator. From 1957
to 1963, he served in the U.S.
Navy. He has retired to Winter
haven, Calif.
RONALDW.
DAILEY, 66,
began his
career with the
Seafarers in
1977 from the
port of Tampa,
Fla., sailing in
the inland
division aboard the Dixie Prag-
December 1999
ress. The deck department mem
ber later transferred to deep sea
vessels. Brother Dailey frequently
upgraded his skills at the Paul
Hall Center for Maritime
Training and Education in Piney
Point, Md., where he graduated
from the bosun recertification
program in 1992. The Ohio
native served in the U.S. Navy
from 1950 to 1954 and served in
the U.S. Army from 1955 to
1964. Prior to retirement, he
sailed aboard the Newark Bay, a
Sea-Land Service vessel. Jack
sonville, Fla. is where he calls
home.
ARLIE A. DILLARD, 65, started
sailing with the SIU in 1962 in the
port of Houston. His first ship was
the Cathy, operated by Sea
Transport Co. A native of Texas,
he worked in the deck department
and upgraded his skills at the
Seafarers Harry Lundeberg School
of Seamanship in Piney Point,
Md. Brother Dillard last sailed in
1980 aboard the Overseas Anchor.
He has retired
to Houston.
HAROLDH.
FIELDER,
65, first sailed
with the Sea
farers in 1952
from the port
of Mobile,
Ala. A native of Alabama, he
graduated from the Andrew
Furuseth Training School in 1958
and upgraded at the Seafarers
Harry Lundeberg School in Piney
Point, Md., where he graduated
from the steward recertification
program in 1980. The steward
department member last sailed in
1989 aboard the Sea-Land
Crusader. Brother Fielder makes
his home in Mobile.
HERBERT
HOLLINGS,
65, started
sailing with
the Seafarers
in 1951 aboard
the Afoundria.
A native of
Mobile, Ala., he worked in the
steward department, last sailing as
a chief cook aboard the Sgt.
William R. Button, an American
Overseas Marine Corp. vessel.
Brother Hollings makes his home
in Mobile.
MARCOSC.
LEGASPI,
64, graduated
from the
MC&S train
ing school in
1963 and
joined the
union in the port of San
Francisco. His first ship was the
President Wilson, an American
President Lines vessel. Prior to
retiring, he worked on the
Mokihana, operated by Matson
Navigation Co. Brother Legaspi
calls San
.---........... =------,Francisco
home.
THOMAS
MARTINEZ,
79, began his
career with the
Seafarers in
~-~~-~ 1945 in the
port of Philadelphia. Born in
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.
Ecuador, he sailed in the engine
department and upgraded his
skills at the Paul Hall Center for
Maritime Training and Education.
He last sailed aboard the USNS
Able, operated by Maersk Line,
Ltd. He makes
his home in
Philadelphia.
NEILD.
MATTHEY,
70, first sailed
with the SIU
in 1947,
aboard the
Marine Phoenix. Born in
California, the U.S. Navy veteran
worked in the deck department
and upgraded his skills at the
union's school in Piney Point,
Md., where he graduated from the
bosun recertification program in
1976. Prior to retirement, he
worked aboard the Equality State,
an Interocean Ugland
Management Corp. vessel.
Brother Matthey has retired to La
Marque,
Texas.
NEWTON
RADER, 61,
graduated
from the
MC&S train
ing school in
Santa Rosa, Calif. in 1961. Born
in the Philippines, he became a
U.S. citizen. Brother Rader
worked in the steward depart
ment, last sailing aboard the
President Grant, an American
Ship Management vessel. He calls
San Pedro,
Calif. home.
ANASTACIO
SERENO, 68,
began his
career with the
MC&S in
1972 from the
port of San
Francisco, after graduating from
the MC&S training school in
Santa Rosa, Calif. His first ship
was the Achilles, operated by
Newport Tankers Corp. Brother
Sereno worked in the steward
department, last sailing aboard the
Manukai, a Matson Navigation
Co. vessel. A native of the
Philippines, he has retired to
Milpitas, Calif.
RAY F. SIMS, 65, first sailed
with the Seafarers in 1969 in the
port of New York aboard the
Seatrain Florida. Born in
Tennessee, he worked in the
engine department and upgraded
his skills at the union 's school in
Piney Point, Md. From 1952 to
1957, he served in the U.S. Navy.
Brother Sims last sailed in 1992
aboard the Overseas Juneau. He
calls San Francisco home.
ANTONIOB.
TREVINO,
65, joined the
SIU in 1968 in
the port of
New Orleans.
Brother
Trevino was a
member of the deck department.
Born in Honduras, he last sailed
in 1983 aboard the Cove Sailor,
operated by Cove Shipping. He
makes his home in Dallas.
INLAND
BETTYC.
ADAMS, 63,
started her
career with the
Seafarers in
1985. Born in
Illinois, she
worked in the
steward de
partment. Sister Adams sailed pri
marily aboard Orgulf Transport
Co. vessels. She has retired to
Effmgham, Ill.
ALBERTB.
CHURCIIlLL,
63, joined the
SIU in 1952.
The Texas
native sailed as
a captain, pri
marily aboard
vessels operat
ed by G&H Towing Co. Boatman
Churchill makes his home in
League City, Texas.
BILLYM.
MARE LL,
60, first sailed
with the Sea
farers in 1959
aboard deep
sea vessel
Chiwawa,
operated by
Interocean Management. He later
transferred to the inland division,
working in the deck department
and upgrading his skills at the
union's school in Piney Point,
Md. Prior to retiring, he sailed
aboard the Maritrans tug Colum
bia. Boatman Marell calls
Middleburg, Fla. home.
CARLK.
MOOR, 71,
joined the SIU
in 1976 in the
port of
Norfolk, Va.
Born in
Tennessee, he
sailed in the
deck department and graduated
from the towboat scholarship pro
gram in 1979 at the union's
school in Piney Point, Md. During
his career, he continued to
upgrade his skills at the school.
He last sailed aboard the Falcon,
an Allied Towing Co. vessel.
From 1948 to 1967, he served in
the U.S. Navy. Boatman Moor has
retired to Norfolk.
GREAT LAKES
AHMEDS.
SHAIBI, 65,
began his
career with the
Seafarers in
1970 in
Detroit. His
first ship was
the Harris N.
Snyder. A native of Yemen, he
became a U.S. citizen in 1974.
Brother Shaibi worked in the deck
department, last sailing aboard the
Medusa Challenger, operated by
Cement Transit. He makes his
home in Dearborn, Mich.
Reprinted from past issues of the Seafarers LOG strong belief in independence is also the long
term goal of America during this current ener
gy crisis .... 1950
The SIU Atlantic and Guff District became the
first seamen's union to negotiate a company
Vice President and former House Minority
Leader Gerald R. Ford (R-Mlch.) outlined for
financed Welfare Plan
for its members. This
was established in an
agreement signed with
m==============================~ the delegates of the
SIUNA convention
THI 0 T what he feels will be
his responsibility in
his new post as
America's 4oth vice
nine contracted
steamship companies on
December 28.
'N SIU HJ TO Y
Although the compa-
nies will make all the contributions to the wel
fare fund, the agreement provides for joint
administration by a committee representing
the union and the steamship companies.
Under the terms of the contract each compa
ny will contribute into a common fund, the
sum of 2 5 cents per day for each man
employed aboard its vessels.
1973
Addressing a standing-room only audience at
the SIUNA convention, President Richard M.
Nixon stressed that the Seafarers' traditionally
president.
1990
An additional breakout of Seafarers will crew
another 13 ships from the government's
Ready Reserve Force ( RRF) fleet which has
been activated by the military to support the
massive deployment of supplies and equipment
to the Persian Gulf ....
As part of the massive logistical effort supply
ing Operation Desert Shield, the most recently
deployed RRF ships will carry heavy vehicles
and other materiel for the soon-to-be
430,000 American military personnel
assigned to duty in the Persian Gulf.
Seafarers LOG 17
f ,
f
DEEP SEA
RONALD J. ADRIAN!
Ronald J.
Adriani, 59,
passed away
August 26. He
began sailing
with the Sea
farers in 1980.
Born in
Connecticut, he
.__ _____ ___J started out in
the steward department and later
transferred to the deck department.
Brother Adriani upgraded his skills
at the Seafarers Harry Lundeberg
School in Piney Point, Md. From
1958 to 1961, he served in the U.S.
Army. He was a resident of Friday
Harbor, Wash.
JOSE CIRO A. ALVARADO
Pensioner Jose
Ciro A. Alva
rado, 76, died
October 11.
Born in Mexico,
he started his
career with the
SIU in 1951 in
Galveston,
Texas. His first
ship was the Republic. During his
career, he worked in the engine
department, last sailing aboard the
Spirit of Texas, a Titan Navigation
vessel. Brother Alvarado made his
home in Dickinson, Texas and
retired in June 1986.
PAULL. BAKER
Pensioner Paul
L. Baker, 72,
passed away
October 10. A
native of Ohio,
he joined the
Marine Cooks
& Stewards
(MC&S) in
1952 in the port
of San Francisco. Brother Baker
sailed in the steward department and
began receiving his pension in
November 1984. From 1945 to
1946, he served in the U.S. Marine
Corps. He was a resident of San
Francisco.
SERVANDO J. CANALES
Pensioner
Servando J.
Canales, 66,
died October 16.
Brother Canales
began sailing
with the Sea
farers in 1948 in
the port of New
Orleans. A
native of Louisiana, he worked in the
deck department as a bosun. He last
sailed in 1976 aboard the Mayaguez,
operated by Puerto Rico Marine
Management. A resident of Metairie,
La., he retired in January 1998.
BIAGIO DiMENTO
Pensioner
Biagio
DiMento, 77,
passed away
August 26,
1998. Born in
Pennsylvania,
he started his
career with the
SIU in 1963 in
the port of Philadelphia. During his
career, he worked in all three depart
ments, last sailing in 197 5 in the
deck department aboard the Samuel
Chase, operated by Waterman
Steamship Corp. Brother DiMento
lived in the Philippines and started
receiving his pension in June 1989.
HARVEY E. FAIRBURN
Pensioner Harvey E. Fairburn, 81 ,
died October 6. He began his career
18 Seafarers LOG
with the
Seafarers in
1946. The
Louisiana
native sailed in
the engine
department and
started receiv
ing his pension
lot!!!:il:.........1~.-.'""--.-....L_-11 in October
1976. Brother Fairburn was a resi
dent of Fort Worth, Texas.
GEORGE E. FRIES
fR Pensioner · = George E. Fries,
i\ 55, passed away
:~~' October 10.
Born in New
York, be gradu
ated from the
entry level
training pro
~mi!~11...-_jPSi\'(/j gram at the
Seafarers Harry Lundeberg School
in 1965 and joined the SIU in the
port of Wilmington, Calif Brother
Fries worked in the deck depart
ment, last sailing as a bosun aboard
the Sea-Land Innovator. A resident
of Paramount, Calif., he retired in
November 1998.
JACK GOTTLIEB
Pensioner Jack Gottlieb, 92, died
August 17. Brother Gottlieb was a
member of the MC&S. He sailed in
the steward department and started
receiving his pension in October
1970. Brother Gottlieb was a resi
dent of Boston.
EUGENE R. HALL
Pensioner
Eugene R. Hall,
85, passed
away Septem
ber 11. A native
of Ohio, he
joined the Sea
farers in 1944
in the port of
'-''----"--:>..---L..J~ Norfolk, Va. He
sailed in the deck department and
upgraded his skills at the SIU's
training school in Piney Point, Md.
During his career, he was active in
union organizing drives. Prior to re
tiring in September 197 5, he worked
aboard the Sea-Land Anchorage.
Brother Hall made his home in Sea
Level, N.C.
CARY V. HAYWOOD
Pensioner Cary
V. Haywood,
68, died
September 21.
He first sailed
with the SIU in
1947 aboard the
Half Knot.
Brother Hay
wood worked in
the deck department, last sailing
aboard the Flickertail State, operated
by Interocean Management. From
1948 to 1952, the Virginia native
served in the U.S. Air Force. Brother
Haywood was a resident of Virginia
Beach, Va. and began receiving his
pension in December 1995.
CHARLES H. HURLBURT
Pensioner
Charles H.
Hurlburt, 69,
passed away
August 17.
Born in New
~ York, he joined
the Seafarers in
1952, sailing
~~"'-3flii.;Jl...;..iL....::...J1UiL.J aboard the
Sultana, operated by Nicholson
Steamship Co. Brother Hurlburt
worked in the steward department.
Prior to retiring in February 1991 ,
he sailed aboard the Newark Bay, a
Sea-Land Service vessel. From 1947
to 1951 , he served in the U.S. Navy.
Galveston, Texas was his home.
ARTHUR R. McCREE
-._~;;;;;;jjjj.---t Pensioner
Arthur R.
1 Mccree, 71,
died September
26. Brother
1 McCree began
· his career with
the SIU in 1952
"--......,.--...;;;;;;;;;....j from the port of
L-::===========~ San Francisco.
Born in South Africa, he worked in
the deck department, last sailing
aboard the Westward Venture, oper
ated by Interocean Management. He
was a resident of Federal Way,
Wash. and started receiving his pen
sion in September 1996.
COOPER H. McMILLIN
Pensioner
Cooper H.
McMillin, 86,
passed away
September 25.
A native of
Missouri, he
started his sail
ing career with
the Seafarers in
1966 aboard the Oberlin Victory.
Brother McMillin worked in the
steward department, last sailing as a
chief cook aboard the Sea-Land
Philadelphia. A resident of
Caldwell, Idaho, he retired in April
1984.
ERNEST E. MULIERI
Pensioner
Ernest E.
Mulieri, 80,
died September
3. Born in
Boston, he first
sailed with the
SIU in 1947 in
the port of
Baltimore.
Brother Mulieri worked in the
engine department and upgraded his
skills to a licensed officer in 1966. A
veteran of World War II, he served
in the U.S. Navy from 1943 to 1946.
He made his home in Salem, Mass.
and began receiving his pension in
September 1983.
ARON B. NEDDIO
Pensioner Aron B. Neddie, 84,
passed away October 1 7. Brother
Neddie was a member of the
MC&S. He sailed in the steward
department and retired in September
1973. He made his home in New
Orleans.
VIRGINIA M. PENA
Virginia M. Pena, 65, died
September 15. She joined the
MC&S in 1961. Sister Pena worked
in the steward department, last sail
ing in 1989 aboard the President
Harrison, an American President
Line vessel. Seattle was her home.
ALFREDO RIOS
_.....,.....__, Pensioner
Alfredo Rios,
77, passed
away
September 14.
A native of
Puerto Rico, he
began his career
with the Sea
'-'-----""-.n.u:-~ .......... farers in 1943
from the port of New York. He
worked as a member of the engine
department. Prior to retiring in June
1985, he sailed aboard a Sea-Land
Service vessel. Brother Rios made
his home in Brooklyn, N. Y.
CHARLESW.
ROSENBERGER
Charles W. Rosenberger, 73, died
September 6. Born in Iowa, he start
ed his career with the SIU in 1970,
sailing aboard the Rose City, a Sea-
,,
Land Service vessel. Brother
Rosenberger sailed in the engine
department and upgraded frequently
at the SIU's training school in Piney
Point, Md. From 1948 to 1969, he
served in the U.S. Navy. He last
sailed in 1989 aboard the Rover,
operated by Ocean Carriers. San
Francisco was his home.
MATTHEW X. RYAN
Matthew X. Ryan, 34, passed away
September 14. He graduated from
the entry-level training program at
the Seafarers Harry Lundeberg
School in 1988 and joined the SIU
in Piney, Point, Md. His first ship
was the Sea-Land Commitment. The
New Jersey native sailed in the
engine department and upgraded at
the school. Brother Ryan last sailed
aboard the Osprey. He made his
home in Washington, Maine.
DAVID R. SUMULONG
Pensioner
David R.
Sumulong, 85,
died August 29.
Brother
Sumulong
began sailing
with the SIU in
1949 from the
port of New
York. Born in the Philippines, he
sailed as a member of the steward
department. Prior to retiring in
October 1975, he worked aboard the
Transcolumbia, operated by Hudson
Waterways Corp. He was a resident
of the Philippines.
RALPH H. TAYLOR
Pensioner Ralph
H. Taylor, 94,
passed away
September 19.
A charter mem
ber of the Sea
farers , he joined
the union in
November 1938
in the port of
Mobile, Ala. The Alabama native
sailed in the steward department.
During his career, he was active in
union affairs and organizing drives.
A resident of Mobile, he began
receiving his pension in April 1973.
MANUEL A. TONGSON
Pensioner
Manuel A.
Tongson, 97,
died September
25. Born in the
Philippines, he
joined the
MC&S in 1943,
first sailing
aboard the
Aleutian. Brother Tongson worked
in the steward department. He
signed off the Great Falls Victory
prior to retiring in August 1968. He
was a resident of Seattle.
ERNEST A. TRADER
Pensioner
Ernest A.
Trader, 71 ,
passed away
September 27.
A native of
North Carolina,
~
he started his
career with the
........ .......1•111:1:•LI~ Seafarers in
1947 in the port of Norfolk, Va. His
first ship was the John Gibbon. He
sailed as a member of the deck
department. From 1955 to 1957, he
served in the U.S. Navy. Brother
Trader last worked in the inland
division aboard a Steuart
Transportation Co. vessel. A resident
of Havelock, N.C., he began receiv
ing his pension in January 1993.
INLAND
WILMER P. GASTON
Pensioner Wil
mer P. Gaston,
81, died Octo
ber 3. A native
of Texas, he
joined the SIU
in 1963 in Port
Arthur, Texas.
Starting out in
the deck depart
ment, he later transferred to the en
gine department. Prior to retiring in
June 1982, he worked aboard a
Sabine Towing & Transportation Co.
vessel. During World War II, he
served in the U.S. Army from 1941
to 1945. Boatman Gaston made his
home in Nederland, Texas.
JAMES T. MALONE
Pensioner
James T.
< Malone, 74,
, passed away
October 3. He
" began his career
,- with the Sea
farers in 1953
• in the port of
......... ...._--" Mobile, Ala.
The Alabama native worked in the
engine department, last sailing as a
chief engineer. Boatman Malone
sailed primarily aboard vessels oper
ated by Crescent Towing and
Salvage Co. A resident of Mobile,
he started receiving his pension in
December 1987. From 1943 to 1946,
he served in the U.S. Army.
ROBERT F. SCHWATKA
Pensioner
Robert F.
Scbwatka, 71,
died October 1.
Born in Mary
land, he began
sailing with the
SIU in 1956
from the port of
Baltimore.
Boatman Schwatka worked as a
chief engineer and started receiving
his pension in June 1984. He was a
resident of Monkton, Md.
RICHARD A. TANNER
Pensioner
Richard A.
Tanner, 76,
passed away
September 14.
Boatman Tan
ner first sailed
with the Sea
farers in 1973.
Born in Massa
chusetts, he worked in the deck
department, sailing primarily aboard
Sheridan Transportation Co. vessels.
In 1993, he was honored by the
United Seamen's Service for his role
in the rescue of a badly burned mari
ner in Tampa Bay. Prior to retiring
in January 1994, he signed off the
Ocean Star. He made his home in
Tampa, Fla.
GREAT LAKES
STEVEN KOCAK
Pensioner
Steven Kocak,
87, passed away
September 11.
He started his
career with the
Seafarers in
1960 in the port
of Detroit. His
.____..'--"---~---' first ship was
the Diamond Alkali. The Ohio native
worked in the engine department,
last sailing aboard the Saginaw Bay .
Both first and last ships were operat
ed by American Steamship Co.
Boatman Kocak was a resident of
Toledo, Ohio. He started receiving
his pension in April 1977.
December 1999
Jhe $11;1fartJ~J06 atte11]pls to print as many digests of union shipboard
inliluteg 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.
COURIER (Intrepid Ship Mgmt.),
June 2-Chairman Gabriel I.
Bonefont, Secretary Eva M.
Myers, Educational Director Rikk
Parker, Deck Delegate John
Gilliam. Butterworth wages
resolved from last meeting.
Chairman announced payoff in
Marcus Hook, Pa. June 4. All's
well aboard ship with no acci
dents, beefs or disputed OT. Crew
reminded that education means
higher wages and that upgrading
facilities at Paul Hall Center in
Piney Point, Md. available to all
members in good standing. Bosun
also encouraged everyone to con
tribute to SPAD: "In the long run,
you will gain." Educational direc
tor echoed bosun's urging of crew
members to attend upgrading
classes. Treasurer announced
$1,400 in ship's fund. Vote of
thanks given to steward depart
ment "for their endless effort to
please." Next ports: Marcus Hook;
Hog Island, Pa.; Paulsboro, N.J.
MAYAGUEZ (Navieras NPR),
June 24-Chairman Al Caulder,
Secretary Richard K. Ward,
Educational Director Michael C.
Martykan, Engine Delegate
Michael S. McClinton. Couch
from crew lounge removed in
l>hiladelphia last month. Crew
waiting for its repair or replace
ment. Secretary stressed impor
tance of upgrading skills at Piney
Point. Educational director asked
that unsafe conditions be reported:
"Safety first." He also reminded
crew to keep on top ofSTCW
requirements. No beefs or disputed
OT reported. Suggestion made for
receipt of vacation check after 60
days or completion of relief peri
od. Also requested change in pen
sion rules where if a Seafarer
acquires 20 years of sea service or
7,300 days, he or she can retire
with full pension (similar to mili
tary air traffic controllers and other
unions). Suggestions to be sent to
contracts department. Crew mem
bers expressed concern about
recent random drug test conducted
by San Juan customs agents.
Unlike traditional drug testing,
individually chemically treated
cloth was used for sampling on
hands. Samples placed in ordinary
mail envelopes containing each
person's name. Concern is with
possible contamination, tampering,
identity checks and verification.
Steward department doing fine
job, and ship camaraderie is excel
lent. Next port: Jacksonville, Fla.
HMINANTUCKETSHOALS
(illM), July 30-Chairman James
A. Jowera, Secretary Lonnie W.
Jones, Educational Director Han
able Smith Jr., Deck Delegate
Roderick Coleman, Engine Dele
gate Milton Israel, Steward Dele
gate Ron Davis. Chairman stressed
need to work together aboard ves
sel. Any problems should be taken
to department head first. No beefs
or disputed OT reported. Next port:
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
CLEVELAND (Sealift Inc.),
September 12-Chairman David
J. Garoutte, Secretary Miguel E.
Vinca, Educational Director
Guadalupe A. Campbell, Deck
Delegate Nick Jocce, Steward
Delegate Julio C. Arzu. Chairman
reported good trip. Everyone
working well together. Crew
December 1999
received new TV and VCR.
Discharge in port of Mombasa,
Kenya went smoothly. First port
back in U.S. scheduled to be Lake
Charles, La. Sanitary inspection
due after fire and boat drill.
Everyone getting off ship should
have room ready for next person.
Educational director urged crew
members to upgrade at Piney Point
and get endorsements necessary to
continue sailing. Treasurer
announced $160 in ship's fund
which will be used to purchase
new movies. No beefs or disputed
OT reported. Several items
requested, including new furniture
for TV lounge, place to exercise
(gym) and repair to starboard
gangway. Vote of thanks given to
steward department for good food.
HM/ BRETON REEF (IUM),
September 30-Chairman Victor
Beata, Secretary Josef Wouthuy
zen, Educational Director Charles
W. Thompson Jr., Deck Delegate
Kenneth G. Boone, Steward
Delegate Randy A. Stephens.
Chairman noted smooth voyage
with no beefs or disputed OT. He
stated captain will reimburse crew
members for movies purchased.
Educational director reminded
crew of necessity of applying for
TRBs. Clarification requested in
engine department on penalty time
for cleaning closed spaces.
Suggestion made to improve ship
board gym. Everyone asked to
help keep ship living areas clean.
Thanks given to steward depart
ment for job well done. Next
ports: New York and Philadelphia.
HUMACAO (Navieras NPR),
September 12-Chairman David
Murray, Secretary Janet Price,
Educational Director Angel
Hernandez, Deck Delegate
William G. Rackley, Engine
Delegate Anthony Rosa, Steward
Delegate Samuel A. Sotomayor.
Chairman told crew members of
letter of understanding which
states that as long as steward
department has four men, no one
will get paid extra for cleaning
own fo'c'sle. He also noted new
washing machine installed and bid
received for fixing tiles. Crew now
awaiting approval of bid by com
pany as well as transportation from
ship to gate in Jacksonville. Until
tile repairs are completed, crew
will be inconvenienced for about a
week-"but it will be well worth
it," according to bosun. Everyone
asked to save wooden boxes and
bread boxes for bosun. Secretary
asked crew to be aware of steve
dores in house and call captain if if
any are seen. Messhalls should be
kept locked while in port. Educa
tional director urged crew to up
grade skills at Piney Point as often
as possible and to get STCW
endorsements. Treasurer an
nounced $50 in ship's fund. No
beefs or disputed OT reported. Vote
of thanks given to steward depart
ment for cleanliness and great
menus. Suggestion made to ask
welfare plan for dependents' pre
scription coverage. Next ports:
Jacksonville, Fla. and San Juan, P.R.
LTC CALVIN P. TITUS
(Osprey), September 27-
Chairman Robert B. F. Lindsay
Jr., Secretary Steven Dickson,
Educational Director Richard D.
Hannon, Deck Delegate Thomas
Gagnon, Steward Delegate
Richard Garcea. Chairman noted
ship at berth in Apra Harbor,
Guam until next trip to Saipan in
October. New fumitw-e for lounge
requisitioned last month and cable
hook-up for TV in budget for next
year. Educational director urged
members to upgrade at Paul Hall
Center and take full advantage of
facilities there. No beefs or disput
ed OT reported. Parts of recent
LOG read, including proposed
merger of SIU and NMU and pass
ing of former AFL-CIO President
Lane Kirkland. Everyone remind
ed to have rooms clean upon
departure from ship. Request made
to improve transportation for crew
and officers since shuttle service
not dependable.
NEWARK SAY(Sea-Land
Service), September 12-Chairman
Calvain A. James, Secretary
Gwendolyn Shinholster,
Educational Director Michael Las
Dulce, Deck Delegate Keith D.
O'Bryan, Engine Delegate
Gerardo Moreno, Steward
Delegate Charles N. Ratcliff.
Chairman announced payoff in
Jacksonville upon arrival. He also
reminded crew to observe safety
practices on deck. Secretary noted
collection to be sent to Bosun Pete
Sanchez's family and thanked offi
cers and crew for contributions.
Brother Sanchez passed away
aboard ship. Educational director
reminded crew members of impor
tance of upgrading and need for
STCW endorsements required to
sail after February 1, 2002. No
beefs or disputed OT reported.
Clarification requested regarding
day's pay in lieu of day off. Vote
of thanks given to steward depart
ment for good meals and keeping
ship clean. Radio and VCR in
need of repair, and new dryer
requested for crew laundry room.
OOCL INNOVATION (Sea-Land
Service), September 19-Secretary
Edward Dunn, Deck Delegate
Oscar Lopez, Engine Delegate
Owen Duffy. Secretary thanked
crew for keeping ship clean. Edu
cational director urged members to
attend upgrading courses at Piney
Point. No beefs or disputed OT
reported. Suggestion made to
request contracts department to
look into getting vacation check
every 90 days and having pension
raises retroactive for members in
retirement. Prescription drug plan
also requested. New toasters need
ed in both messhalls. Next port:
Portsmouth, Va.
RICHARD G. MATTHIESEN
(Ocean Shipholding Inc.), Septem
ber 12-Chairman Donald C.
Coggins, Secretary Lovell Mc
Elroy Sr., Educational Director
Kelly Mayo, Deck Delegate
Robert Hayes, Engine Delegate
Gilbert Tedder, Steward Delegate
Evan Verveniotis. Educational
director stressed importance of
upgrading skills at Paul Hall Cen
ter and getting STCW endorse
ments. Treasurer announced $110
in ship's fund. No disputed OT
reported. Beef noted by steward
delegate. Everyone reminded to
help keep ship in tip-top condition
by cleaning dryer vents and having
rooms ready for replacements.
Vessel heading to Greece and Italy.
ROVER (Intrepid Ship Mgmt.),
September 12-Chairman Russell
F. Barrack Jr., Secretary Juan B.
Gonzalez, Educational Director
Clyde D. Smith, Deck Delegate
Terrence P. Kane, Steward
Delegate Leoncio Castro.
Chairman stated clarification
received from VP Contracts Augie
Tellez regarding OT rates for tank
cleaning. He said everything run
ning smoothly. Payoff expected
September 17 in Portland, Ore.
Educational director urged crew
members to upgrade at Piney Point
and keep up-to-date on TRBs, z-
card renewals and STCW endorse
ments. Treasurer announced cap
tain holds $1,700 belonging to
ship's fund. Whoever goes ashore
for movies or games should pro
vide captain with receipt for reim
bursement. Some disputed OT
reported in deck and steward
departments. Suggestion made for
contracts department to look into
lowering eligibility requirements
for vacation. Vote of thanks given
Oh, to Be in England
to steward department for great
food and clean ship.
SEA-LAND EXPEDITION (Sea
Land Service), September 12-
Chairman Frank Lyle, Secretary
Edgar Vazquez, Educational
Director Oswald Bermeo.
Everything running smoothly with
no beefs or disputed OT, according
to secretary. Educational director
advised crew members to take
opportunity to upgrade skills at
Paul Hall Center. Chairman read
president's report from LOG
regarding SIU and NMU members
upgrading side by side at Piney
Point. Crew sorry to hear about
death of former AFL-CIO Presi
dent Lane Kirkland. Next port:
Elizabeth, N.J.
SEA-LAND PRODUCER (Sea
Land Service), September 12-
Chairman Joel A. Lechel,
Secretary David A. Cunningham,
Educational Director Christopher
M. Devonish, Deck Delegate
William D. Brinson Jr., Engine
Delegate Victor Sapp, Steward
Delegate Clifford B. Elliot.
Chairman reported payoff and
loading of stores to take place
September 14 in Jacksonville. He
reminded everyone of hurricane
season and to secure room TVs
and stereos. Bungee cords avail
able for anyone needing them.
Educational director advised mem
bers to check STCW certificates
and z-cards to make sure they have
not expired. Treasurer announced
$100 remaining in ship's fund.
Crew voted to use assets to get
satellite system working. Disputed
OT reported in all three depart
ments. Discussion held regarding
articles in LOG including new
ships, jobs and proposed merger
between Sill and NMU. Suggestion
made and sent to contracts depart
ment regarding lowering amount of
sea time required to receive full
pension. Second ice machine
requested since vessel operates in
tropics and current machine cannot
keep up with demand. Bosun
thanked steward department for job
well done. Crew remembered late
Steward Beau James. Next ports:
Jacksonville and San Juan, P.R.
SGT MATEJ KOCAK
(Waterman Steamship), September
19-Chairman Angelo Urti,
Secretary Lonnie Gamble Jr.,
Educational Director Jerald
Graham, Deck Delegate Robert
A. Hudas, Engine Delegate
Robert C. Hines Jr., Steward
Delegate Clarence Robinson.
Captain and chief mated thanked
everyone for job well done. Ship
passed Coast Guard and ABS
inspections with no problems.
Chairman noted crew has not
received economic price adjust
ment for this year but other two
Waterman ships have. He also
reminded members about union's
new fire fighting school.
Educational director stressed need
to get STCW endorsements. Crew
The Gopher State and its crew
were in Southampton, England
this past spring. The preposi
tioning vessel then returned to
Guam, where it remains on
stand-by alert, ready to sail at a
moment's notice to provide
ammunition, stores, vehicles
and other material needed by
American ground forces in times
of rapid deployment. In this
photo, the captain and some of
the ship's crew take time out in
London to pose in front of that
city's famous tower.
members have until end of year to
take advantage of U.S. Coast
Guard relaxed assessment period.
No beefs or disputed OT reported.
President's report from LOG read
regarding SIU-NMU merger. Sug
gestion made and sent to head
quarters regarding payment of pre
scription drugs for dependents.
Steward department given vote of
thanks for outstanding job. Next
port: Rota, Spain.
COAST RANGE (Crowley Petro
leum Transport), October 4-
Chairman Gregory A. Agren,
Secretary Lanette A. Lopez,
Educational Director E. Olson,
Engine Delegate Giuseppe Ciciul
la, Steward Delegate Robert W.
Gilliam. Chairman read presi
dent's report from LOG regarding
SIU-NMU merger. Educational
director stressed importance of
upgrading skills at Paul Hall Cen
ter and reading monthly LOG
two ways to keep abreast of union
activities. No beefs or disputed OT
reported. Steward department
given vote of thanks for job well
done. Next port: Portland, Ore.
LNG TAURUS (Pronav Ship
Mgmt.), October 3-Chairman
Daniel Marcus, Secretary Judi L.
Chester, Educational Director
Curtis Jackson, Deck Delegate
John Ray, Engine Delegate John
Orr, Steward Delegate Ben
Opaon. Chairman thanked all de
partments for working well togeth
er, and steward thanked deck and
engine departments for keeping gal
ley equipment and storerooms orga
nized. Educational director remind
ed everyone to take opportunity to
attend classes at Paul Hall Center,
especially new fire fighting com
plex. Treasurer announced $561 in
ship's fund. Will look into purchase
and installation of satellite dish. No
beefs or disputed OT reported.
Report read concerning SIU-NMU
merger. Crew expressed mixed feel
ings. Main concerns have to do with
seniority issues and competition for
jobs. Secretary informed them that
thousands of jobs will become
available in next few years because
of new ships coming under SIU
contract. Thanks given to VP Gov't
Services Kermett Mangram for vis
iting vessel to inform crew of
reflagging changes that may occur.
Bosun thanked steward department
for excellent work: "Food has been
so good that we'll all have to buy a
new set of larger clothes when we
get home!" Next ports: Nagoya,
Japan; Bontang, Indonesia; Tobata,
Japan.
Seafarers LOG 19
Letters to the Editor
(Editors note: the Seafarers
LOG reserves the right to edit
letters for grammar as well as
space provisions without
changing the writer s intent.
The LOG welcomes letters from
members, pensioners, their
families and shipmates and will
publish them on a timely basis.)
Proud Veterans Keep
WWII Facts Straight
(The following letter was
first published in The Daily
News, McKeesport, Pa. ,
October 11, 1999.)
A recent fact sheet from the
national headquarters of the
American Merchant Marine
Veterans, which revealed the
newest casualty figures of
World War II, included the fol
lowing statistics: Merchant
Marine - 1 in 29, Marines - 1 in
34, Navy - 1 in 114.
Many people tried to make
us feel cheap and like second
rate citizens, but no more. We
are proud veterans and our
group had the highest casualty
rate of any of the armed ser
vices.
Do these sound like figures
we should be embarrassed
about? And remember, we all
volunteered in a declared war.
I also sent copies of the
report to the national and state
VFW headquarters to educate
them on World War II history.
In the year 2000, I will have
two chapters in a book on
untold stories of World War II
that should shock most
Americans out of their draw
ers.
Peter Salvo
McKeesport, Pa.
Happy With
New Contract
To all involved in negotiat
ing the new ASM agreement:
On behalf of my SIU broth
ers on board the APL
Philippines and myself, I
extend a vote of thanks to the
SIU negotiating team and
ASM management for the
wage increase. The whole eco
nomic package increase for the
life of the agreement was a big
boost to crew morale.
Special thanks to SIU
President Mike Sacco, Vice
President West Coast Nick
Marrone and the rest of the
SIU Executive Board. We sup
port your hard work and your
fighting dedication for
improving the lives of SIU
merchant mariners and their
families by continuing to add
more jobs and the opportunity
to upgrade skills to ensure suc
cess of its members, like pro
viding STCW training to help
protect the U.S. merchant fleet
from foreign encroachment.
This is truly an exciting
time as our membership con
tinues to grow and with more
jobs on the way!
Also, the maritime industry
needs more innovative compa
nies like ASM.
Keep getting those con
tracts! We as U.S. merchant
mariners will support the
politicians who help preserve
and add more stars-and-stripes
flags atop the growing number
of merchant vessels around the
world.
Jim Wilson, Chief Steward
APL Philippines
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT FOR SEAFARERS
WELFARE FUND AND SUBSIDIARY
This is a summary of the annual report of the Seafarers
Welfare Fund and Subsidiary, EIN 13-5557534, Plan No.
501, for the period January 1, 1998 through December 31 ,
1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required under the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of the
plan , was $27,483,633 as of December 31 , 1998, compared
to $23,785,749 as of January 1, 1998. During the plan year,
the plan experienced an increase in its net assets of
$3,697,884. This increase includes unrealized appreciation
and depreciation in the value of plan assets; that is. the dif
ference between the value of the plan's assets at the end of
the year and the value of the assets at the beginning of the
year or the cost of assets acquired during the year. During
the plan year, the plan had a total income of $46,730,099
including employer contributions of $44,645,526, realized
gains of $272,933 from the sale of assets, and earnings from
investments of $1,755,158.
Plan expenses were $43,032,215. These expenses includ
ed $5,193,485 in administrative expenses and $37,838,730
in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries.
Your Rights to Additional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual
report, or any part thereof, on request. The items listed
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT FOR SEAFARERS
MONEY PURCHASE PENSION PLAN
This is a summary of the annual report for the Seafarers
Money Purchase Pension Plan, EIN 52-1994914, Plan No.
001 ,. for the period January 1, 1998 through December 31 ,
1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required under the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
Benefits under the plan are provided through a trust fund .
Plan expenses were $124,872. These expenses included
$100,964 in administrative expenses and $23,908 in bene
fits paid to participants and beneficiaries. A total of 5, 140
persons were participants in or beneficiaries of the plan at
the end of the plan year.
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of the
plan , was $3,961,403 as of December 31, 1998, compared
to $2,018 ,318 as of January 1, 1998. During the plan year,
the plan experienced an increase in its net assets of
$1 ,943,085. This increase includes unrealized appreciation
and depreciation in the value of plan assets; that is , the dif
ference between the value of the plan's assets at the end of
the year and the value of the assets at the beginning of the
year or the cost of assets acquired during the year. The plan
had a total income of $2,067,957 including employer contri
butions of $1 ,724,794, employee contributions of $13,442,
realized gains of $75,638 from the sale of assets, and earn
ings from investments of $254,083.
Your Rights to Additional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual
·Know Your Rights - ·
below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. service provider and trustee information;
3. assets held for investment; and
4. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part there
of, write or call Board of Trustees Seafarers Welfare Fund,
5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746-4211 , (301) 899-
0675. The charge to cover copying costs will be $1.40 for the
full annual report, or 10 cents per page for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan adminis
trator, on request and at no charge, a statement of the
assets and liabilities of the plan and accompanying notes, or
a statement of income and expenses of the plan and accom
panying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annu
al report from the plan administrator, these two statements
and accompanying notes will be included as part of that
report. The charge to cover copying costs given above does
not include a charge for the copying of these portions of the
report because these portions are furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the
annual report at the main office of the plan (Board of
Trustees Seafarers Welfare Fund, 5201 Auth Way, Camp
Springs, MD 20746-4211) and at the U.S. Department of
Labor in Washington, D.C., or to obtain a copy from the U.S.
Department of Labor upon payment of copying costs.
Requests to the Department should be addressed to: Public
Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension and Welfare Benefits
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue, N.W. , Washington, DC 20210.
report, or any part thereof, on request. The items listed
below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets; and
4. service provider and trustee information.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part there
of, write or call Board of Trustees Seafarers Money
Purchase Pension Plan, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD
20746, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying costs
will be $1.40 for the full annual report, or 10 cents per page
for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan adminis
trator, on request and at no charge, a statement of the
assets and liabilities of the plan and accompanying notes, or
a statement of income and expenses of the plan and accom
panying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annu
al report from the plan administrator, these two statements
and accompanying notes will be included as part f hat
report. The charge to cover copying costs given above does
not include a charge for the copying of these portions of the
report because these portions are furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the
annual report at the main office of the p d of
Trustees Seafarers Money Purchase Pension Plan,
Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746) and at the U.S.
Department of Labor in Washington, D.C. , or to obtain a
copy from the U.S. Department of Labor upon payment of
copying costs. Requests to the Department should be
addressed to: Public Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension
and Welfare Benefits Administration , U.S. Department of
Labor. 200 Constitution Avenue. N.W .. Washington, DC
20210.
FINANCIAL REPORTS. The constitution of the SIU
Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes and Inland Waters District makes specif
ic 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 submit
ted 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 recom
mendations and separate findings.
tions 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 offi
cial fails to protect their contractual rights properly, he or she
should contact the nearest SIU port agent.
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. Conse
quently, no member may be discriminated against because of
race, creed, color, sex, national or geographic origin.
TRUST FUNDS. All trust funds of the SIU Atlantic, Gulf,
Lakes and Inland Waters District are administered in accor
dance 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 dis
bursements 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 con
tained in the contracts between the union and the employers,
they should notify the Seafarers Appeals Board 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 mem
bers 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 condi-
20 Seafarers LOG
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 pub
lishing 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 dele
gate, 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 offi
cial 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 meth
ods, 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
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 lim
ited 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 contribu
tion may be solicited or received because of force, job dis
crimination, 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 con
duct, the member should notify the Seafarers International
Union or SPAD by certified mail within 30 days of the con
tribution 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 immediate
ly notify SIU President Michael Sacco at headquarters by cer
tified mail, return receipt requested. The address is:
Michael Sacco, President
Seafarers International Union
5201 Auth Way
Camp Springs, MD 20746.
December 1999
SEAFARERS PAUL HALL CENTER
2000 UPGRADING COURSE SCHEDULE
The following is the schedule for classes for the first few months of 2000 at
the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education in Piney Point, Md.
All programs are geared to improve the job skills of Seafarers and to promote
the American maritime industry.
Please note that this schedule may change to reflect the needs of the mem
bership, the maritime industry and-in times of conflict-the nation's 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 reserva
tions 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.
Deck Upgrading Courses
Course
Able Seaman
Able Seaman - Inland
Lifeboatman
Radar
Automatic Radar Plotting Aids*
(ARPA) (*must have radar unlimited)
Start Date
January 24
February 21
January 24
January 10
February 1
January 17
March 6
January 10
January 31
Engine Upgrading Courses
Course
Fireman/Watertender & Oiler
QMED
Basic Electronics
Mari e Electronics Technician I
Welding
Start Date
January 10
January 24
January 10
January 31
January 10
February 14
Steward Upgrading Courses
Course Start Date
Date of Completion
February 18
March 17
February 11
January 21 (pre-AB)
Feb. 19 (pre-AB)
January 28
March 17
January 14
February 4
Date of Completion
February 18
April 14
January 28
February 18
January 28
March3
Galley Operations/ January 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
Advanced Galley Operations February 7, 14, 21, 28
(Every week) March 6, 13, 20, 27
Certified Chief Cook/ January 10, 24
Chief Steward February 7, 21
(Every other week) March 6, 20
Safety Specialty Courses
Course
Tanker Familiarization/
Assistant Cargo (DL)*
(*must have basicfirefighting)
Basic Firefighting
Advanced Firefighting
Government Vessels
STCW Basic Safety (refresher)
Tankerman (PIC) Barge*
(*must have basic fire fighting)
LNG Familiarization*
(*must have advanced fire fighting)
Oil Spill Containment
Start Date
January 10
February 7
March 6
January 17
February 28
January IO
February 14
March 6
January 31
February 28
February 7
March 6
January 24
March 13
February 28
February 28
Academic Department Courses
Date of Completion
January 28
February 25
March 24
January 21
March 3
January 21
February 25
March 17
February 18
March 17
February 11
March 10
January 28
March 17
March 3
March 3
General education and college courses are available as needed. In addition,
basic vocational support program courses are offered throughout the year,
one week prior to the AB, QMED, FOWT, Third Mate, Tanker Assistant
and Water Survival courses. An introduction to computers course will be
self-study.
The January edition of the
Seafarers LOG will contain
a complete .guide of all the
upgrading courses avail
able to Seafarers in the
~ __ :'.\_ _____________________________________ _
UPGRADING APPLICATION
Date of Birth Telephone __________ _
- --------
Deep Sea Member D Lakes Member D Inland Waters Member D
If the following information is not filled out completely, your application will not be
processed.
Social Security# ________ _
Seniority ____________ Department _ _ ______ _
U.S. Citizen: Yes D No D Home Port
Endorsement(s) or License(s) now held ______________ _ _
Are you a graduate of the SHLSS/PHC trainee program? D Yes DNo
If yes, class#-------------------------
Have you attended any SHLSS/PHC upgrading courses? D Yes DNo
If yes, course(s) taken _____________________ _
Do you hold the U.S. Coast Guard Lifeboatman Endorsement?
D Yes D No Firefighting: D Yes D No CPR: D Yes D No
Primary language spoken --------------------
December 1999
With this application, COPIES of the following must be sent: One hundred and twenty
(120) days sea time for the previous year, one day in the last six months prior to the date
your class starts, USM MD (z-card) front and back, front page of your union book indi
cating your department and seniority, and qualifying seatime for the course if it is
Coast Guard tested. All FOWT. AB and QMED applicants must submit a U.S. Coast Guard
fee of $280 with their apvlication. The pavment should be made with a money order onlv.
payable to LMSS.
COURSE
BEGIN
DATE
END
DATE
LAST VESSEL: ______________ Rating: ___ _
Date On: ___________ _ Date Off:
SIGNATURE _____________ DATE
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 ques
tions, contact your port agent before departing for Piney Point.
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.
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 quali
fied, 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. 12199
Seafarers LOG 21
Paul Hall Center Graduating Classes
Power Plant Maintenance - Graduating from power plant maintenance course on
October 22 are (from left, first row) William Kelley, Timothy Horger, Thomas Keseru, Gonzie
Knott, (second row) Joseph Grandinetti, Steve Stepanski, Ursel Barber, Lawrence Rose
and Eric Malzkuhn (instructor).
Tankerman (PIC) Barge - Marking completion of the tankerman (PIC) barge class
on October 22 are (from left, seated) Mohamed Hossain, Daniel Gishy, Mark Wain, Walter
Loveless, (second row) Michael Mayo, Patrick David, Mitch Oakley (instructor) and Bill
Pratley.
Marine Electrical Maintenance - SIU mem
bers completing the marine electrical maintenace course
on October 29 are (from left) Carl Montoya, Sjarifudin
Noor, Nathan Hollander, Abdulrub Atiah, Angel
Hernandez, Gregory Johns, Steven Hoskins, Pompey
Alegado, Jeffrey Levie and Mark Jones (instructor).
Government Vessels - With
instructor Stan Beck (far left, standing)
are students who completed the govern
ment vessels course on October 15.
From the left (kneeling) are Artemio
Rivera, Waseem Dhalai, Benjamin
Mathews, Kenji Hoffman, Benign
Padaoan, Maximo Loto Jr., (standing)
Beck, Rodney Jimenez, Deion Nguyen,
Sean Ryan, Ali Naser, Abdulsalem
Mohamed, Stephen Hill, Sammy
Montana and Marcial Avila.
22 Seafarers LOG
Galley Operations - Finishing one of the required two-week modules in the gal
ley operations curriculum are (from left, kneeling) Robert Valentine, Saundra Leonard,
Ty Heller, Vicente Ordonez, Arsenio Gusilator Jr., (standing) Chef/Instructor Ed White,
John Stephen, Edgardo Ong, Jeffrey Badua, Abdellalif Benjouhra, Charles Carrol, Mark
Wertanen and Gregorio Bernardez.
December 1999
Paul Hall Center Graduating Classes
Able Seaman Receiving their certificates for completion of the AB class on
October 29 are (from left, seated at first table) Wincell Hightower Jr., Bobby Brown,
Michael Watkins Sr., Louis Creekmur, (second table) Russell Shaw Jr., Leroy Reed,
Julian Lacuesta Jr., Fadehl Saleh, (third table) Todd Conley, Virgilio Managbanag, Carlos
Arauz, (standing) Bernabe Pelingon (instructor), William Bruce, Velly Marquez, Simeon
Rivas, Khaled Munasser, Richard Pepper and Francisco Harry.
QMED - Completing their QMED training on December 3 are (in alphabetical order)
Pantala Allee, Servando Canales Jr., Stanley Castro, Jonathan Driggers, Paul Duquette,
Mike Kifle, John Leiter, Tran Luu, Keith Manzano, Thaddeus Pisarek, Jeffrey Roddy,
Mark Roman, Dwight Ward and Taylor Watson. (Note: not all the students are in the pho
tograph). The class, ta_µght by Barney Kane, was a challenging one for the upgraders,
with a large volume of material and a very technical subject matter.
Able Seaman - Instructor Tom Gilliland looks over students as they
work toward completion of the AB curriculum on October 29. Registered in
the class were David Roof, Jonathan Morgan, Pernell Fulford, Timothy
Barker, Matthew Bjerk, Bryon Baker, Jonathan Paul, Gregory Pratt, Peri
Drew, Ondongee Pegram, Joseph Weller, Timothy Fernandez, Terry Gilliland,
Gregory Hendryx, Shelby Rankin, Anthony Lowman, Russell Williams and
George Barbour.
The same students completed the basic fire fighting class (right) with instruc
tor Rick Redmond on October 15.
FOWT - Graduating from the FOWT course on
November 19 are (from left, first row) James Tyson,
Ahmed Sharif, Anthony Jordan, John Millward, Jean
Horne, Frank Patrick Jr., Phillip Johnson Sr., Adel Gabel,
Timothy Bixby, (second row) Kanin Bennett, Michael
Blue Jr., Michael Joel, Charles Sadler, Adriano Coutinho,
Erik Haik, John Petushin, Justin Seybert, Gregory
Cherry, Natalie Rivas, Eric Nelson, Charles Jones,
Sylvester Crawford, (third row) Keith Kowaleski, Charles
Jensen, John Conn, Eddie Pittman, Noel Encarnacion,
Scott Lucero, Timothy Graham, Daniel Tapley, (fourth
row) William Hayes and Vincent Hupp-Time.
December 1999
Government Vessels - With instructor Stan Beck (far lright) are some of the stu
dents who completed the government vessels course on September 3. Included on the
class roster are (in no particular order) Jose Clatter, Juan Ortiz, Arzu Secuindino, Charles
Mann, Ted Hale, Christine Short, Kathryn Rivera, Dan Eglund, A. Allen, Greg Gallagher,
Allan Bright, Pat Gibson, Eric Bridges, Michael Skinto, Liana McKinney, Tania
Simunovich, Syed Mehdi, Herbert Daniels, Jeffrey Badua, Abdellalif Banjouhra, Reuben
Brown, William Schuppman, John Eaton, Harold Lewis, Duane Reeder, Willard Bell, Rally
Espiritu and Hector Guity.
Tanker Assistant Cargo (DL)- Upgrading Seafarers complete the tanker assis
tant cargo (DL) course on October 15. Included in the photo are (in no particular order)
Spencer Moxley Sr., Alvin Martin, Willie Howard Ill, Linda Barber, Mohamed Bidar, William
Meyer, Jose Vazquez, Elmo Davis, Edward O'Reilly, Mohamed Hossain, Mott Arnold,
Gary Lamb and Nestor Agcaoili. Their instructor, Jim Shafer, is standing in the rear (cen
ter).
Seafarers LOG 23
F
I
I
I
m.snf .... •'I Volume 61 Number 12 December 1999
The U.S. Great Lakes fleet is on the move from mid
March until late January, when the locks at Sault
St. Marie, Mich. close for the frigid winter.
While iron ore, stone and coal
remain the chief cargoes, others
like cement, salt, grain, liquid bulk
products and sand-round out the
diversity of loads carried by the
efficient lakers.
The photos on this page show some
of the hard-working crew members and
their activites aboard three Great Lakes vessels
crewed by SIU members-American Steamship
Company's Buffalo and American Republic, and Southdown Cement's
Southdown Challenger.
The Southdown Challenger's hull
and deck recently got a fresh
coat of paint in Milwaukee,
and the pilot house was
recarpeted. At left, the ves
sel is on her way to the
Southdown cement plant in
Charlevoix for a new load.
Bosun (and master wood-worker) Levi Sanford,
Southdown Challenger
OS Eric Corwin, AB Eugene
Repko, QMED David
Cameron, OS Musid Musleh,
American Republic
Right: Wiper
Abdul Saeed,
Buffalo
Below: Bosun
Boyd Messer,
Buffalo
24 Seafarers LOG
Deckhand Michael Cushman,
Southdown Challenger
Summary Annual Reports
MCS Pension Plan • p. 8
Seafarers Pension Plan • p. 8
Great Lakes Tug Be Dredge Pension Plan - p. 8
Seafarers Vacation Plan - p. 8
Seafarers Welfare Plan • p. 20
Seafarers Money Purchase Pension Plan · p. 20
With a
strong de
mand for the
delivery of stone through
out the Lakes, the Buffalo shows no
signs of slowing down.
Second Cook
Darrell Bays,
Buffalo
Above: QMED Brian Gelaude,
Buffalo
Left: Watchman Paul Bird,
Southdown Challenger
June 1999
MDS02443
MDS02444
MDS02445
MDS02446
MDS02447
MDS02448
MDS02449
MDS02450
MDS02451
MDS02452
MDS02453
MDS02454
MDS02455
MDS02456
MDS02457
MDS02458
MDS02459
MDS02460
MDS02461
MDS02462
MDS02463
MDS02464
MDS02465
MDS02466
Congress Receives Bills
-To Strengthen U.S. Fleet
Sealifl Enhancement Act Aims to Make
Merchant Fleet More Globally Competitive
Page3
Even on the Lakes?/
lll'll!Nt SllAW J PIAIX DEAi.Eii PllOTOCRAPllEll
Captain Stavros Fotlnos or the Evangelos tells a crew member to e:xpll!in bow good the conditions on the ship are..
Ships of Shame
Cargo crew
to start
court battle
-fr, Sailors
go without
pay, food
From porr to porr 1he Slories are passed
alon . Starvin :;allors ea1rng raw, undi-
Cleveland Paper Reveals
Runaway-Flag Scandal
Citizens along the Great Lakes recently discovered their
waters are no different from any other international ship
ping lane when the Cleveland Plain Dealer exposed the
dangers of runaway-flag shipping taking place on
America's "North Coast." Page 5
Complaints
bring help
from union
for sailors
By MICHAELO'MALLEY
A diS()Ute about low pay, bad
food and filthy conditions on a
Sleet-hauling ship in Cleveland
harbor yesterday sparked a fax
and phone feud in four countries
on three continents.
Following claims by 13 Filipino llOADW.HICKllAH/l'IAlll DEAL£&PHOrooaAl'llEK
crewmen that they are not being . .
properly paid, members of the Don Thornton of the Seafarers International Union, left, talks
Seafarers International Union to Filipino sailors about conditions and pay on a foreign ship
b<>i!rded the ship Evangelos, docked in Cleveland yesterday. Local union officials
which IS ow~d by a Greek com- threatened to detain the ship and stop it from unloading until
~~~~tt~t~~ :::i ~~ti;n':J certain demands by the sailors were met.
labor agreement to make such
visits, confronted the captain, stop unloading the ship's cargo Piraeus, Greece, faxed paper
sa ·o the would detain tile shi and refuse to untie dock lines it work to the London-based Inter-
Voting Begins on
SIU-NMU Merger
Agreement Reach ..... --
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Page2
.
On ASAf Contract
Beck Notice
Page6
President's Report
Reflecting on the Decade
I have just reviewed the center spread for this month's issue of
the Seafarers LOG. It is hard to believe what we have accom
plished in the last 10 years.
While some of you started sailing this decade
and have helped us in our efforts to revitalize
the U.S.-flag merchant fleet, many others have
been very involved throughout their entire
seagoing careers.
Recall where we were in January 1990.
Outside of our membership and some others
Michael Sacco within the industry, very few thought there
would be a continued need for the commercial
fleet for economic and national security purposes when we started
the 21st century.
We knew better.
The Persian Gulf War demonstrated why America has depend
ed on its merchant mariners since this country's founding.
Seafarers and members of other maritime unions answered the
nation's call, making sure no ship loaded with materiel for our
troops in the Middle East sailed short.
Those who thought others could handle the job discovered for
eign-flag owners and crews who balked at delivering needed
goods into a war zone.
Reawakened by the war effort, military planners and politicians
alike realized action had to taken not just to preserve but strength
en the U.S.-flag fleet.
You did your part. Not only did you sail the ships, but you and
your families registered and voted, wrote letters, made phone calls
and talked with neighbors, friends and elected officials to let them
know America needs its merchant fleet.
That is why the Maritime Security Program became law.
That is why U.S.-flag tankers carry Alaska North Slope crude
oil overseas.
That is why more than half the members of the House of
Representatives signed a resolution stating the Jones Act should
be preserved.
That is why the U.S.-Flag Cruise Ship Pilot Project was enact
ed, paving the way for construction in an American yard of new
deep sea passenger ships.
That is why dredging is taking place in ports around the coun
try, especially New Y~)fk/New Jersey, to prepare for the ships of
the next century.
And that is why month after month for more than a year, we
have been able to report on the new vessels-tankers, RO/ROs,
prepositioning, tugs, car carriers-Seafarers are crewing or will
crew in the very near future, all proudly flying Old Glory.
Brothers and sisters, this isn't bragging. It's fact!
The most important thing to remember is that none of this
could have been done without you. You have demonstrated your
faith in your union by doing the best job possible each day on
your vessels. You make it very easy for representatives of this
union to speak on your behalf on Capitol Hill and in other set
tings.
Without the day-in, day-out efforts you perform on the high
seas, the Great Lakes and the inland waterways, the U.S.-flag
fleet would have been nothing more than a ghost ship.
But we knew better, have done better and will continue to get
better!
As we enter this holiday season, we have so much for which to
be thankful, not the least of which is a vibrant, growing U.S.-flag
fleet.
If the last 10 years are any indication of what the future may
bring, I can't wait to get started.
To all Seafarers aboard their vessels, to all Seafarers at home
with their families and to all SIU retirees who have helped make
this the greatest maritime union, may you have a wonderful holi
day and Happy New Year!
Volume 61, Number 12 December 1999
The SIU on line: www.seafarers.org
The Seafarers LOG (ISSN 1086-4636) is published month
ly by the Seafarers International Union; Atlantic, Gulf,
Lakes and Inland Waters District; AFL-CIO; 5201 Auth
Way; Camp Springs, MD 20746. Telephone (301) 899-
0675. Periodicals postage paid at Southern Maryland
20790-9998 and at additional offices. POSTMASTER:
Send address changes to the Seafarers LOG, 5201 Au th Way
Camp Springs, MD 20746.
Communications Director, Daniel Duncan; Managing
Editor, Jordan Biscardo; Associate Editor/Production,
Deborah A. Hirtes; Art, Bill Brower; Administrative
Support, Jeanne Textor.
Copyright © 1999 Seafarers International Union, AGLIWD
All Rights Reserved.
2 Seafarers LOG
Voting Starts in Proposed
Merger of SIU and #MU
Voting begins this month on
whether the SIU will proceed
with full merger talks with the
National Maritime Union.
As reported in the October and
November issues of the Seafarers
LOG, balloting is scheduled for
December 1, 1999 to January 31,
2000. Voting takes place in all
SIU halls between 9 a.m. and
noon local time, Monday through
Saturday, excluding holidays.
Seafarers also may request an
absentee ballot by following the
instructions printed in the
October issue of the LOG. Addi
tionally, those instructions are
available via the union's web site
(www.seafarers.org, in the LOG
section, October issue).
The current vote will deter
mine whether the SIU member
ship wants this merger and, if
approved, gives the union's exec
utive board permission to contin
ue with the merger talks. (A sim
ilar election is taking place at the
same time in the NMU.)
If the two unions' member
ships vote to proceed, then specif
ic details of the merger will be
addressed by SIU and NMU offi
cials serving on the merger com
mittee.
Next, Seafarers would vote
during the November-December
2000 general election whether to
approve needed constitutional
changes such as adding vice pres
idents and the NMU in the
union's name. (NMU members
are not eligible to vote in the gen-
eral election because the merger
would not be completed by then.)
After the general election, a
third vote would take place for
SIU members to approve or reject
many of the specific terms of the
merger. Before that vote, SIU
members would be given detailed
information on what the merger
would mean and what changes
would occur. The date for that
voting has not been determined.
Therefore, the proposed
merger involves a three-step vot
ing process. That procedure is
explained in detail in a recent
letter mailed from the SIU exec
utive board to each member.
Copies of the letter also have
been distributed aboard ship by
patrolmen and are available in
union halls.
The letter mentions that some
Seafarers have asked whether a
merger will allow an NMU mem
ber to use his seniority to beat the
SIU member out of a job. "No!
The shipping rules will continue
to apply," the letter states.
"Seafarers will maintain priority
aboard ships currently sailing
under an SIU contract. The same
would apply to NMU members
aboard vessels presently under
contract to the NMU."
Similarly, the merger commit
tee has studied the 1978 merger
involving the SIU and the Marine
Cooks & Stewards, and will fol
low that precedent to keep the
SIU and NMU pension, welfare
and vacation funds separate.
Should the merger be approved,
however, the training and hiring
hall funds probably would be
combined.
OS/Gateman Rick Hedrick (above
photo, aboard the Presque Isle)
and Cook Kay Nelson (below, on
the /TB McKee Sons) are enthusi
astic about the proposed merger.
SIU Pensioners to Get $500 Year-End Bonus
Eligible SIU pensioners will receive a year-end
bonus check of $500 this month. The Seafarers
Pension Plan Board of Trustees recently approved
the payment after union representatives to the group
recommended the bonus.
tives from the SIU and its contracted companies,
decided to issue the bonus after reviewing the plan's
successful investment performance.
More information about the bonus or the pension
plan in general may be obtained by contacting any
union hall or by calling a plan representative at l-
800-CLAIMS4. Members and pensioners also may
write to the plan at 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
MD 20746.
This bonus check will be sent to all SIU pen
sioners who currently receive monthly benefit
checks for normal, early normal or disability pen
sions from the Seafarers Pension Plan.
The Board of Trustees, composed of representa-
Breakthrough at Avondale
Union, Company Agree to Resolve
Long Battle About Representation
On the heels of Litton
Industries' purchase of Avondale
(La.) Shipyard, the AFL-CIO
Metal Trades Department last
month announced a breakthrough
in the bitter six-year fight about
union representation at Avon
dale.
The company has agreed to
adopt neutrality regarding such
representation, and will recognize
the union based on a majority of
Avondale's 4,000 employees
signing petitions for membership.
A neutral arbitrator will certify
that a majority of the employees
have signed the petitions.
The union and the shipyard
signed an agreement on Novem
ber 2 aimed at reaching an amica
ble conclusion to what has been a
nasty fight. Workers at Avondale
voted in 1993 to join a union, but
the prior owners used every
stalling tactic imaginable to
evade that election's outcome.
Avondale was purchased for
$529 million by Litton Industries
in a transaction that closed last
August. Litton's Ship Systems
consists of Avondale Shipyard
and Ingalls Shipyard in Pasca
goula, Miss. where the Metal
Trades Department has held rep
resentation rights for more than
10,000 workers since 1940.
AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney commended all con
cerned with the new agreement
between Avondale and the union.
"I applaud Litton Industries'
and Avondale's high-road deci
sion to respect these workers'
right to a free choice to improve
their lives through a union,"
Sweeney stated.
The Metal Trades Department
said the agreement "puts the issue
back in the hands of Avondale's
workers" and "sets up ground
rules for assessing the level of
support for union representation.
The agreement sets out a process
under which the union can obtain
evidence that it represents a
majority of the employees, which
will be submitted to a neutral
third party for certification. The
pact outlines procedures for
avoiding the acrimony that char
acterized the campaign from the
time it started in June 1993."
Please be advised that SIU headquarters and all SIU
hiring halls will be closed on Monday, January 17,
2000 for the obseNance of Martin Luther King Jr. 's
birthday (unless an emergency arises). Normal busi
ness hours will resume the following workday.
December 1999 - . -
Sealif t Enhancement Act
Seeks Fair Competition
For American-Flag Fleet
that will stimulate growth in the
industry," observed Rep. Je:ffer
son.
Rep. McCrery stated, "U.S.
based liner companies are subject
to significantly higher taxes than
their foreign-based counter
parts .... Strengthening the eco
nomic viability and competitive
ness of United States-flag vessel
operations requires us to adapt
the tax regime governing our
merchant marine to the realities
of today's international shipping
environment." Maritime Tax Laws Would Change
To Help Provide Level Playing Field
Both McCrery and Breaux
recalled the words of General
Colin Powell following the
Persian Gulf War in 1991. At that
time, the chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff said, "Our
[nation's] strategy requires us to
be able to project power quickly
and effectively across the oceans
to deal with the crisis we couldn't
avoid or predict. Sealift will be
critical to fulfilling this strategic
requirement .... In war, merchant
seamen have long served with
valor and distinction by carrying
the critical supplies and equip
ment to our troops in faraway
lands. In peacetime, the merchant
marine has another vital role
contributing to our economic
security by linking us to our trad
ing partners around the world and
providing the foundation for our
ocean commerce."
Citing the U.S. merchant
marine's key role in America's
national and economic security
and the unfair competition from
unscrupulous runaway-flag ship
operators-Senator John Breaux
(D-La.) last month introduced the
National Security Sealift En
hancement Act of 1999 (S. 1858).
Reps. Jim McCrery (R-La.)
and William Jefferson (D-La.)
introduced similar legislation in
the House (H.R. 3225).
The SIU strongly supports the
bills, which may receive hearings
in the Senate Finance Committee
and the House Ways and Means
Committee, respectively, early
next year.
"The introduction of these
measures shows that members of
Congress are looking ahead and
trying to find ways to make the
U.S.-flag fleet stronger and more
competitive in the next century,"
said SIU President Michael
Sacco.
Other U.S. maritime unions,
ship operators and shipbuilding
associations also voiced their
backing, as did the widely
respected former Maritime Ad
ministrator, Vice Admiral Albert
J. Herberger.
As its name indicates, the leg
islation is intended to strengthen
the U.S. fleet, which in tum will
boost the economy and fortify
national security.
One provision of the Sealift
Enhancement Act would extend
to U.S. mariners the existing
income tax exclusion for
Americans working abroad.
Other elements of the bill also
focus on equitable changes in dif
ferent sections of U.S. tax policy.
"This legislation is designed to
provide a tax environment for
U.S.-flag carriers that more close
ly approaches the favorable treat
ment provided by other maritime
nations to their own merchant
fleets," Breaux stated. "I am not
proposing to exempt U.S.-flag
vessel owners from U.S. income
taxes, [but rather to] alleviate the
tax burden on the U.S.-flag fleet.
"The U.S.-flag merchant
marine is an invaluable asset to
the economic and national securi
ty of this country," he continued.
"The Congress must take aggres
sive action to preserve our fleet of
U.S.-flag vessels, while creating
incentives for new, modem ships
to be registered under the U.S.
flag."
The bill has five main provi
sions. One expands the Capital
Construction Fund with the aim
of increasing revenue available
SIU Crews MIV Fisher
SIU members recently crewed
the prepositioning ship MIV
Major Bernard F Fisher as the
vessel prepared to start a five
year assignment for the U.S.
Military Sealift Command
(MSC).
Seafarers and SIU officials
took part in the vessel's christen
ing October 15 in Sunny Point,
N.C. The former Sea Fox was
renamed in honor of retired U.S.
Air Force Col. Bernard F. Fisher,
a Medal of Honor recipient who
attended the ceremony.
The 652-foot Fisher is operat
ed by Sealift, Inc. for MSC,
whose fleet also includes a differ
ent vessel with a similar name,
the USNS Fisher. It will preposi-
tion materiel for the Air Force in
Diego Garcia.
The ship's namesake received
the medal for actions in Vietnam
in 1966. The then-major rescued
a downed airman from a Special
Forces camp under attack by
2,000 North Vietnamese soldiers.
MSC noted, "While directing
his own air cover, Maj. Fisher
landed his A-lE/H aircraft, taxied
almost the full length of a debris
littered runway, and despite with
ering ground fire, rescued the
downed pilot and gained enough
speed to lift off and fly to safety."
The Fisher has a beam of 105
feet and a top sailing speed of 19
knots. It is a combination con
tainer and roll-on/roll-off ship.
One year after MSC awarded a time charter contract for the vessel ,
SIU members crewed the renamed Major Bernard F. Fisher as the ship
readied for its first prepositioning assignment.
December 1999
for domestic shipbuilding.
Another allows "the owner of
any U.S.-flag vessel engaged in
the international trade of the U.S.
to fully deduct that vessel in the
year in which the vessel is
acquired and documented under
the U.S. flag." Breaux pointed
out that many foreign-flag
shipowners and operators already
"are totally exempt from income
taxation," and this provision
therefore will help the U.S.-flag
fleet "to be internationally com
petitive."
The provision known as the
"seamen's wage exclusion" is
"consistent with the current poli
cies and objectives of section 911
of the Internal Revenue Code. It
extends the foreign earned
income exclusion to American
merchant mariners by changing
the definition of 'foreign country'
to incJude a principal place of
employment aboard a commer
cial vessel operating outside the
United States, and amending the
foreign residence test to include
work aboard a vessel."
Other components of the legis
lation include "alternative mini
mum tax relief' on shipping
income-again consistent with
foreign regulations-and expand
ing the expense deductions stem
ming from conferences or other
meetings on American-flag cruise
ships.
In announcing his support for
the Sealift Enhancement Act,
Herberger said, "If the United
States is to maintain a strong mer
chant fleet-supporting our econ
omy and our armed forces--our
U.S.-flag companies and our
American merchant mariners
must have U.S. tax treatment that
reflects the realities of interna
tional competition."
"These provisions will help
level the playing field for U.S.
shipping and provide incentives
Speaking on behalf of a coali
tion of U.S.-flag ocean carriers,
Sea-Land Service Vice President
Peter Finnerty noted that the bill
"recognizes the unique nature of
the U.S.-flag fleet, operating in
the world cargo trades."
American mariners and compa
nies compete in a market littered
with tax-exempt foreign compa
nies, he said.
Pictured from the top: Senator
John Breaux (D-La.) and Reps.
William Jefferson (D-La.) and Jim
McCrery (R-La.) last month
launched legislation intended to
boost national security by
strengthening the U.S. merchant
marine.
SIU Maintains Jobs on 6 LNG Vessels
MarAd 'Reluctantly' Approves Rejlagging
The U.S. Maritime Administration (MarAd),
while emphasizing that its decision "should not be
taken as a precedent for any other situation," on
November 3 conditionally approved the transfer of
PRONAV's fleet of eight liquefied natural gas ves
sels to foreign registry.
Maritime Administrator Clyde Hart said he
"reluctantly" issued the ruling and also stressed that
a key condition to the approval "helps to ensure the
continued availability of American mariners for
commercial operations and military readiness." He
noted that all the unlicensed jobs for six of the ships
will be held by American seafarers for the next five
years, "providing stability and employment for hun
dreds of skilled mariners."
He also pointed out, "Any further changes in
ownership, registry or operation under foreign
authority may be made only with the Maritime
Administration's approval."
The schedule for reflagging the eight ships to the
Marshall Islands has not been announced.
Seafarers will continue sailing aboard six of the
vessels- the LNG Capricorn, LNG Taurus, LNG
Libra, LNG Gemini, LNG Leo and LNG Virgo. As
reported in the September issue of the Seafarers
LOG, the economic provisions (including benefits)
of the SIU's Standard Tanker Agreement will apply
to those ships once the reflagging takes place.
The other two vessels will carry foreign crews.
After the ruling, SIU President Michael Sacco
stated, "While we are extremely disappointed by the
decision announced by the Maritime Administration
to allow the reflagging of the PRONAV LNG-vessel
fleet, the Seafarers International Union is obligated
to honor its contractual coillil)itments to crew these
vessels. The Seafarers aboard these vessels will con
tinue to perform their duties in the same profession
al, dedicated and safe manner as they always have."
It was only after painstaking analysis that the
union decided to accept continued employment on
the reflagged ships. In a detailed memo sent in
August by the SIU contracts department to Seafarers
aboard the LNG ships, the union stated, "When
weighed against the alternatives, the final decision
was based on the ultimate benefit to our members
and their families. The application of the Standard
Tanker Agreement wages and benefits will, for the
first time, [apply] American labor standards on for
eign-flag ships. The Agreement is no less than that
which is accepted by U.S.-flag SIU-contracted
tanker companies. It maintains our benefits and will
provide jobs and job security for five more years
while preserving our severance agreement."
The union also noted that SIU's crewing of the
LNG ships will help provide a continued manpower
pool of trained American mariners for U.S. national
defense purposes.
Moreover, the memo points out that the LNG
crews recently faced the unexpected prospect of all
eight ships reflagging relatively quickly-which
would have left the SIU crews without any opportu
nity for continued employment on those vessels.
(The written communication quickly was fol
lowed by SIU Vice President Government Services
Kermett Mangram meeting with SIU crews aboard
the LNG vessels to answer any other questions.)
Seafarers LOG 3
i----------------------------------------------------------------~~~~~-~ -- ~~ -
SIU President Michael Sacco poses with crew members aboard the
Sea-Land Patriot. Kneeling is AB Robert Pesulima. Standing from the
left are BREC Bobby Garcia, Wilmington (Calif.) Port Agent John Cox,
Sacco, AB Alfonso Garcia, QMED Jesse Manard, Wilmington Safety
Director Frank Gill Jr., AB Maximo Lugtu and GUDE Jose Gamboa.
Working on dinner for the Sea
Land Patriot crew is Chief Cook
James Boss.
Crews
Welcome
SIU President Michael
Sacco has maintained a busy
schedule, meeting as many
SIU members as possible dur
ing his recent travels.
From Port Everglades, Fla.
to Long Beach, Calif., he has
climbed gangways to inform
Seafarers about what is hap
pening in the union and to
answer questions they may
have concerning benefits,
contract and the proposed
merger to bring the NMU into
the SIU.
SIU President Michael Sacco (left} welcomes AB Rudy Hernandez to a
union meeting aboard the Sea-Land Patriot. Also participating in the
meeting in which members asked questions about the proposed NMU
merger into the SIU are (from the left) BREC Bobby Garcia, QMED
Jesse Manard, SA Orlando Pizzaro, AB Robert Pesulima and SREC
Daniel Payne.
Sacco to
Their Ships On this page are some of
the many Seafarers who have
welcomed him aboard their
vessels.
The Sea-Land Long Beach (Calif.) crane maintenance unit greets SIU President
Michael Sacco. From the left are Seafarers Allen Pasik Jr .. Wilmington Port Agent
John Cox, Sacco, Van X. Phan, Daran Ragucci, Kimo Togiai, Jim Dryden and
Wilmington Safety Director Frank Gill Jr.
Right: Aboard the
El Yunque are
Jacksonville (Fla.)
Port Agent Tony c
McQuay, Wiper
Pedro Gago,
BREC Michael
Eaton, SIU
President Michael
Sacco, OMU
Ramon Collazo
and AB Blair
Baker.
QMED Ron Haines (standing) meets
SIU President Michael Sacco aboard the
Sea-Land Patriot.
Offering lunch to Wilmington Port Agent
John Cox (left) is Third Cook Neil Ball of
the Lihue.
4 Seafarers LOG
SIU President Michael Sacco (right) answers a question about
the SIU-NMU merger with Crowley boatmen (from left) AB
Dave Verschoor, AB Dragi K. Odak and Eng. Bob Bouton.
The galley gang of Matson's Lihue greets the SIU president.
From the left are BR Nunu Randle, President Michael Sacco,
Chief Steward Skip Polzine and Chief Cook Willie Madison.
SIU President Michael Sacco (left) updates crew members aboard the
El Yunque on the latest happenings in the union.
Left: Welcoming
SIU President
Michael Sacco
(second from left)
to the Sea-Land
Patriot are (from
left) AB Matt Bevac,
Wilmington (Calif.)
Port Agent John
Cox and QMED
Jesse Manard.
West Coast Unions Reach
6-Year Agreement with ASM
The SIU's Pacific District unions have reached an agreement with
American Ship Management (ASM) for a new six-year contract.
The pact is retroactive to July 1 and includes a pay raise in each
of the six years covered by the contract.
The SIU Pacific District is composed of SIU Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes
and Inland Waters District members in the galley, the Sailors' Union
of the Pacific for the unlicensed deck department and the Marine
Firemen's Union providing unlicensed crews in the engine room.
ASM was created after American President Lines was purchased
by Singapore-based NOL in 1997. ASM operates the former APL
U.S.-flag fleet.
Negotiations took place throughout the fall before the agreement
was reached in late October. The ratification process involving mem
bers from the three unions covered by the new pact still was taking
place as the Seafarers LOG went to press.
December 1999
Runaway-Flag Crew's Plight Captures Newspaper's Attention
Thanks to a series of articles
published by Ohio's largest daily
newspaper, Great Lakes residents
discovered runaway-flag shipping
with its inherent problems of little
to no pay, poor working condi
tions and lack of food could be
found in their ports.
Michael O'Malley, a reporter
for the Plain Dealer, alerted read
ers to the plight of the Filipino
crew aboard a Greek-owned,
Panamanian-flagged cargo ship
delivering foreign-produced steel
to Cleveland, known for its steel
mills.
O'Malley worked with SIU
member Don Thornton, a Great
Lakes inspector for the Inter
national Transport Workers'
Federation (ITF), and Jim Given,
an SIU of Canada representative
who performs the ITF task in his
country, as they attempted to gain
back pay, food, clean linens and
other items for 12 crew members
aboard the Evangelos this fall.
(The ITF is a London-based
global organization of transport
unions. The SIU is a member.)
The crew sought help from the
ITF when the ship arrived in
Cleveland in October. The ITF
inspectors took O'Malley with
them to document their discussion
with the ship's Greek captain. The
reporter heard crew members state
they had no bread or juice, just
water, yet "the captain eats grapes
and ice cream." Longshoremen,
who originally notified the news
paper of the conditions on the
ship, threatened to stop offloading
and keep the vessel tied up until
provisions arrived.
Thornton and Given verified
food and clean linens were
brought aboard, but had to accept
assurances from the ship's owners
and the manning company that the
crew's money-more than
$100,000 in back pay-had been
sent to their families. They also
were faxed paperwork claiming to
show the mariners' pay had been
sent to their families in the
Philippines, which later proved to
be false.
The ship set sail for Thunder
Bay, Ontario to load grain for
Morocco.
When the inspectors uncovered
that the promised pay still had not
been delivered to either the crew
or their families, they met the
loaded ship in the Welland Canal.
The captain refused to allow
the newspaper reporter aboard,
then forced a crew member to tell
him everything was fine as the
vessel passed through a lock. The
Plain Dealer published a front
page full-color photo of the
anguished mariner with the cap
tain right behind him in its
Sunday, October 24 edition.
Thornton and Given spoke
with the crew member and several
others when they boarded. They
were told the captain ordered the
mariners to say those things as
well as sign papers stating they
had been paid if they wanted to
continue sailing. The crew added
they still were not being fed prop
erly. Nine crew members signed
powers of attorney requesting the
ship be arrested for breech of its
ITF contract when the Evangelos
arrived in Montreal.
Unfortunately, by the time the
vessel reached the Canadian port,
the crew members rescinded their
call for the ship's arrest. Without
it, Canadian officials were help
less. Thornton and Given specu
lated that the crew and/or their
families had been intimidated
with a possible threat of blacklist
ing being used.
The ship left for Morocco with
a spokesperson for the ITF in
London vowing to monitor the
ship's actions.
Not only did the newspaper
publicize the Evangelos situation
with photographs and articles, it
also featured the plight of other
runaway-flag crews in the front
page story of October 24 under
the headline "Ships of Shame."
O'Malley told the Seafarers
LOG the articles generated many
telephone calls from readers
unaware these conditions existed
on vessels sailing the Great Lakes.
The stories dealt with situations
around the world to show the
Evangelos was not an isolated
incident.
Photo credit: Roadell Hickman/Plain Dealer
SIU member and ITF inspector Don Thornton (left) learns more about
the problems aboard the Evangelos from crew members shortly after
the vessel docked in Cleveland.
Bad News Keeps Oozing
From Runaway-Flag Ship
Passengers on Carnival Cruise's ill-fated Tropicale recently learned
the hard way that jiggling the handle sometimes isn't enough.
The runaway-flag vessel's first voyage since a shipboard fue left
passengers stranded at sea for four days ended early, because of a
clogged sewage system. As a result of the inoperable commodes, the
more than 1,000 passengers were flown from Mexico to Tampa.
The Liberian-flag Tropicale had undergone three weeks of repairs
and safety inspections before sailing in late October, approximately
one month after a shipboard fire had left passengers adrift in the Gulf
of Mexico. U.S. Coast Guard inspectors reportedly discovered prob
lems with the ship's plumbing and directed the company to fix them.
The Coast Guard is investigating the cause of the September ship
board fue as well as the crew's reaction to it.
December 1999
The Filipino-crewed, Panamanian-flagged, Greek-owned Evangelos offloads foreign-made steel in
Cleveland. Crew members told ITF inspectors they had received no pay for several months, had no food
aboard when they came to Ohio and suffered with poor working conditions.
AFL-CIO President: WTO Talks
Must Address Workers' Rights
As representatives of the 134
member countries of the World
Trade Organization (WTO) read
ied for meetings in Seattle from
November 30 through December
3, AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney said America's working
families are mobilizing to ensure
their voices are heard.
In a speech November 19 at
the National Press Club in
Washington, D.C., Sweeney
described plans for a massive
pro-worker rally November 30 in
Seattle, involving "tens of thou
sands of working men and
women and their families from
across America and countries
across the world. We will be
joined by 200 international union
leaders representing over 135
million workers from more than
100 countries.
"We will call upon the dele
gates to the World Trade Or
ganization to address workers'
rights and human rights as well as
environmental and consumer pro
tections in the rules that govern
the global economy-demands
that are supported by workers
from Argentina to South Korea,
from South Africa to the Czech
Republic, tens of millions of
workers from developing as well
as developed countries."
The WTO meeting will launch
global negotiations to further
open markets in goods, services
and agricultural trade as well as
review some current trade rules.
The head of America's federa
tion of trade unions, to which the
SIU is affiliated, stated the WTO
"must incorporate rules to
enforce workers' rights and envi
ronmental and consumer protec
tions, and compliance should be
required of any new member.
Every worker deserves protection
of basic human rights-prohibi
tions against child labor, slave
labor and discrimination, and the
freedom to join together with oth
ers in a union."
He noted that as the WTO con
siders admitting China-notori
ous for child labor and other
worker abuse-"editorials pose a
choice between free trade and
protectionism, between engaging
China and isolating it, between
embracing the global market and
turning our backs on it. Op
ponents are being dismissed as
part of the past, and as obstacles
to the prosperous future of the
new economy.
"This is nonsense. The debate
isn't about free trade or protec
tion, engagement or isolation. We
all know we 're part of a global
AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney tells a National Press
Club audience that the WTO must
incorporate rules to enforce work
ers' rights and environmental and
consumer protections.
economy. And we're so engaged
that we're already running a $60
billion trade deficit with China.
"The real debate is not over
whether to be part of the global
economy, but over what are the
rules for that economy and who
makes them-not whether to
engage China, but what are the
terms of that engagement, and
whose values are to be represent
ed."
ITF Goes to Bat
For Scared Crew
air ambulance to Stoke Mandeville hospital in
England where still was undergoing treatment as
this issue of the Seafarers LOG went to press.
Meanwhile, the vessel proceeded from the
Azores to its intended discharge port, Antwerp.
"The crew are increasingly concerned for their
own safety," noted the ITF in a news release.
"Having suffered the trauma of the explosion and
witnessing the loss of and serious injury to three
colleagues, they are stranded on board a vessel con
taining an unstable cargo, which . . . continues to
emit explosive quantities of hydrogen gas. In addi
tion, conditions on board are becoming increasingly
difficult. There is no hot water and no laundry facil
ities for the crew."
The International Transport Workers' Federation
(ITF) has stepped in to assist crew members aboard
the foreign-flag bulk carrier Karteria some two
months after a horrific explosion on the vessel left
two dead and another mariner paralyzed with severe
bums.
The ITF (to which the SIU is affiliated) recently
reported that the Maltese-flagged ship was carrying
cargo-possibly iron oxide fines- across the
Atlantic Ocean in late August when explosions
occurred inside two of the holds. One Filipino crew
member instantly died, while another passed away a
few hours later due to burns. A third crew member,
Jing Caringal, survived but sustained a broken back
and major bums.
According to the ITF, the Karteria diverted to the
Azores and underwent temporary repairs. ITF repre
sentatives discovered Caringal awaiting repatriation
to the Philippines in a hospital in the Azores where
he could not be diagnosed or treated due to the
severity of his injuries and the lack of facilities at
the hospital.
After the ITF intervention, Caringal was taken by
David Cockroft, ITF general secretary, said it is
"unacceptable to leave (the crew) on board in these
conditions for this length of time. It seems to us that,
yet again, the safety of the crew is secondary to the
financial concerns of the owners and its P & I club."
Cockroft pointed out another concern. Both the
shipowner-Karteria Shipping Limited-and the
vessel recently were issued ISM documents of com
pliance and safety management certificates, yet
"were apparently unprepared for this emergency."
As part of the federation's ongoing campaign
against substandard shipping, the ITF is represent
ing Caringal in seeking compensation for his
injuries.
Seafarers LOG 5
Post-Hurricane Cleanup on Humacao
Among the SIU-crewed vessels
impacted by Hurricane Floyd earlier
this year was the Humacao, operat
ed by Navieras NPR. As reported in
last month's issue of the Seafarers
LOG, the ship survived Floyd's full
force on September 15 and 16,
approximately 150 miles from
Jacksonville, Fla. Despite the 60-
foot seas, 100-mph winds, 45-degree rolls and a
shipboard fire, there somehow were no serious
injuries. The vessel sustained significant dam
age, however, leading to cleanup efforts (pictured
here) when it finally arrived in San Juan, P.R.
Pictured above (from left) are AB Terry McKee,
Recertified Bosun David Murray, SIU Port Agent
Victor Nunez and Engine Utility Anthony Rosa. In
photo at right are AB Julio Matos and AB Roberto
Feliciano. At left, a damaged container is
removed from deck. "We're pretty lucky we sur
vived," Murray said.
SIL Independence Sives Independence
To Boaters Out of Sas in the Bahamas
New Carissa Beached for Winter
For residents of Coos Bay, Ore., the runaway-flag freighter New
Carissa simply won't go away.
At least not all of it.
Running out of gas, while unpleasant, usually is
just inconvenient.
miles off the starboard bow. One passenger was
waving a white cloth.
According to press reports, the beached stem section of the ves
sel-which ran aground in February-will remain on the sand until
spring. Rough seas postponed the most recent attempts to remove
the rusting, 120-foot section.
In a car, anyway.
For eight people in a small pleasure boat in the
Bahamas, it might have proven fatal.
But the SIU-crewed Sea-Land Independence
aided the stranded group, which had been adrift for
two days without food or water after their 18-foot
boat exhausted its fuel.
The Sea-Land Independence maneuvered along
side the boat and secured lines. At the same time,
the ship contacted a U.S. Coast Guard cutter in the
area.
The letter notes that although the pleasure boaters
were famished, they did not require medical attention.
Since the Coast Guard vessel would arrive shortly, the
Sea-Land ship lowered plenty of food and water to the
grateful survivors, but didn't bring them aboard.
In late October, salvage crews abandoned a three-week operation
to tow the wreckage out to sea, according to the Associated Press.
According to a letter from the Sea-Land
Independence recently received by the Seafarers
LOG, the rescue took place in May. With the vessel
sailing off the south coast of Grand Bahama island,
AB John Habib and Third Officer John Marcin
sighted the small white boat approximately two
Soon, the cutter Manitou relieved the
Independence, and the SIU-crewed ship proceeded
toward Panama. A half-hour later, the Coast Guard
confirmed that all survivors safely came aboard.
The Panamanian-flag, Japanese-owned New Carissa went
aground February 4, spilling 70,000 gallons of heavy bunker fuel.
Extraordinary measures were taken to ignite the remaining oil (and
thereby prevent it from spilling), and the 639-foot vessel resultant
ly split.
Shortly thereafter, the bow section broke loose from its tow and
drifted ashore 80 miles north. It later was towed again and sunk by
a U.S. Navy torpedo.
6
Notice to Employees Covered by Union Agreements
Regulated Under the National Labor Relations Act
The Seafarers International Union, AGLIWD assists employ
ees by representing them in all aspects of their employment and
work aboard vessels which sail deep sea, on the Great Lakes
and inland waters throughout the country. For the most part, the
union spends a majority of its financial resources on collective
bargaining activities and employee representation services. In
addition to these expenditures, the union also spends resources
on a variety of other efforts such as organizing, publications, polit
ical activities, international affairs and community services. All of
these services advance the interests of the union and its mem
bership.
This annual notice is required by law and is sent to advise
employees represented by the Seafarers International Union,
AGLIWD about their rights and obligations concerning payment
of union dues. This notice contains information which will allow
you to understand the advantages and benefits of being a union
member in good standing. It also will provide you with detailed
information as to how to become an agency fee payor. An agency
fee payor is an employee who is not a member of the union but
who meets his or her financial obligation by making agency fee
payments. With this information, you will be able to make an
informed decision about your status with the Seafarers
International Union, AGLIWD.
1. Benefits of union membership - While non-members
do receive material benefits from a union presence in their work
place, there are significant benefits to retaining full membership in
the union. Among the many benefits and opportunities available to
a member of the Seafarers International Union, AGLIWD is the
right to attend union meetings, the right to vote for candidates for
union office and the right to run for union office. Members also
have the right to participate in the development of contract pro
posals and participate in contract ratification and strike votes.
Members also may play a role in the development and formulation
of union policies.
2. Cost of union membership - In addition to working
dues, to belong to the union as a full book member the cost is
$300.00 (three hundred dollars) per year or $75.00 (seventy-five
dollars) per quarter. Working dues amount to 5 percent of the
gross amount an employee receives for vacation benefits and are
paid when the member files a vacation application.
3. Agency fee payors - Employees who choose not to
become union members may become agency fee payors. As a
condition of employment, in states which permit such arrange-
Seafarers LOG
ments, individuals are obligated to make payments to the union
in the form of an agency fee. The fee these employees pay is to
support the core representational services that the union pro
vides. These services are those related to the collective bargain
ing process, contract administration and grievance adjustments.
Examples of these activities include but are not limited to, the
negotiation of collective bargaining agreements, the enforcement
and administration of collective bargaining agreements and
meetings with employers and employees. Union services also
include representation of employees during disciplinary meet
ings, grievance and arbitration proceedings, National Labor
Relations Board hearings and court litigation.
Employees who pay agency fees are not required to pay for
expenses not germane to the collective bargaining process.
Examples of these expenses would be expenses required as a
result of community service, legislative activities and political
affairs.
4. Amount of agency fee - As noted above, dues objectors
may pay a fee which represents the costs of expenses related to
those supporting costs germane to the collective bargaining
process. After review of all expenses during the 1998 calendar
year, the fee cost associated with this representation amounts to
65.43 percent of the dues amount. This means that the agency
fee based upon the dues would be $196.29 (one hundred ninety
six dollars and twenty-nine cents) for the applicable year. An
appropriate reduction also will be calculated for working dues.
This amount applies to the 2000 calendar year. This means
that any individual who wishes to elect to pay agency fees and
submits a letter between December 1, 1999 and November 30,
2000 will have this calculation applied to their 2000 dues pay
ments which may still be owed to the union. As noted below, how
ever, to continue to receive the agency fee reduction effective
January 2001, your objection must be received by December 1,
2000.
A report which delineates chargeable and non-chargeable
expenses is available to you free of charge. You may receive a
copy of this report by writing to: Secretary-Treasurer, Seafarers
International Union, AGLIWD, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
Maryland 207 46. This report is based upon an audited financial
report of the union's expenses during 1998.
Please note that as the chargeable and non-chargeable
expenses may change each year, the agency fee amount may
also fluctuate each year. Individuals who are entitled to pay
agency fees and wish to pay fees rather than dues, must elect
this option each year by filing an objection in accordance with the
procedure noted below.
5. Filing of objections - If you choose to object to paying
dues, an objection must be filed annually. To receive the deduc
tion beginning in January of each year, you must file by the begin
ning of December in the prior year. An employee may file an
objection at any time during the year, however, the reduction will
apply only prospectively and only until December 31 of that cal
endar year. Reductions in dues will not be applied retroactively.
As noted above, each year the amount of the dues reduction may
change based upon an auditor's report from a previous year.
The objection must be sent in writing to: Agency Fee Payor
Objection Administration, Secretary-Treasurer's Office, Seafarers
International Union, AGLIWD, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
Maryland 207 46.
6. Filing a challenge - Upon receiving the notice of calcu
lation of the chargeable expenditures related to core representa
tion activities, an objector shall have 45 days to submit a chal
lenge with the Secretary-Treasurer's office if he or she believes
that the calculation of chargeable activities is incorrect. Every
person who wishes to object to the calculation of chargeable
expenses has a legal right to file such an objection.
7. Appeal procedure- Upon receiving the challenge(s) at the
end of the 45-day period, the union will consolidate all appeals and
submit them to an independent arbitrator. The presentation to the
arbitrator will be either in writing or at a hearing. The method of the
arbitration will be determined by the arbitrator. If a hearing is held,
any objector who does not wish to attend may submit his/her views
in writing by the date of the hearing. If a hearing is not held, the arbi
trator will set the dates by which all written submissions will be
received.
The costs of the arbitration shall be borne by the union.
Individuals submitting challenges will be responsible for all the
costs associated with presenting their appeal. The union will have
the burden of justifying its calculations.
The SIU works very hard to ensure that all of its members
receive the best representation possible. On behalf of all the SIU
officers and employees, I would like to thank you for your contin
uing support.
Sincerely,
David Heindel, Secretary-Treasurer
December 1999
On-Site Course Helps Seafarers Meet STCW Chapter VI Regs
The Paul Hall Center has often
taken its safety courses "on the
road." Instructors from the school
have taught water survival and
fire fighting classes to Seafarers
in different ports across the coun
try, including aboard the Delta
Queen Steamboat Company ves
sels in New Orleans, and
American Hawaii Cruises' SS
Independence in Honolulu.
A recent training opportunity
in Maui was a first, however, in
that the entire curriculum needed
for meeting the requirements of
STCW Chapter VI (Basic Safety
Training) was taught at one time.
Paul Hall Center instructors Rick
Redmond and Ben Cusic con
ducted the course components,
consisting of personal survival
techniques, fire fighting and fire
prevention, elementary first aid
and personal safety/social
responsibility.
The SS Independence sails into
the port of Honolulu for one day
each week, but it spends two days
in Maui, which allowed 20
upgrading Seafarers plenty of
time to receive practical instruc
tion in water safety and survival
techniques in that ship's luxury
pool. Classroom instruction was
held at Maui Community College,
part of the University of Hawaii.
Having successfully completed the STCW basic safety course, students pose for a group shot at Maui
Community College. Rick Redmond (far left) and Ben Cusic (far right, kneeling), instructors at the Paul Hall
Center in Piney Point, Md., conducted the on-site training.
One of the course participants
leaves the emergency locker en
route to the "fire."
Redmond, who taught the fire
fighting segment, obtained the
necessary permits for setting a
fire that produced smoke, so stu
dents had the added benefit of
dealing with a true fire and not
merely a simulation.
Certificates of course comple
tion were earned by Amy
Mazurek, Shannon Rabago,
Ricardo Sebastian, Stephen
Warren II, Ronald Whitfield,
Alejo Fabia Jr., Soriano
Grande, Angelito Pertubal,
AOTOS Awards to duMoulin, TRANSCOM
Richard duMoulin, chairman and CEO
of Marine Transport Lines (MTL), and
U.S. Air Force General Charles T.
Robertson, Jr., commander of the U.S.
Transportation Command, received the
annual Admiral of the Ocean Sea
(AOTOS) award on November 5 in New
York. The prestigious award is spon
sored by the United Seamen's Service.
MTL is the parent company of SIU-con
tracted Intrepid Ship Management,
while TRANSCOM is the largest single
user of U.S.-flag vessels (with many
SIU-crewed ships among them). Above
(from left): SIU President Michael
Sacco, U.S. Maritime Administrator
Clyde Hart and (far right) U.S. Rep.
Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) congratulate
duMoulin. At right (from left): Gen.
Robertson celebrates with Sacco and
Sea-Land Service President and CEO
John Clancey.
Maersk-Sealand
Taps Los Angeles
For New Terminal
Maers~-SeaLand will be the sole user of a mas
sive new container terminal being built at the Port
of Los Angeles, the company announced on
October 28.
The Pier 400 terminal will occupy 484 acres
December 1999
upon expected completion in 2003, although some
of its sections will open as early as late 2001. The
cost of the Pier 400 project is $794 million, which
includes $466 for the container terminal facilities
and infrastructure and $328 million for two stages
of a major dredging and landfill program.
The facility reportedly will include at least 16
shore-side cranes and will work as many as six ves
sels at once.
City officials said that the 25-year lease between
the port and the company will bolster the local
economy, bringing thousands of good jobs and bil
lions of dollars in new investment.
Emo Aulelava, Adele Williams,
Laverne Berasis, Maile
McWilliams, Joseph Brooks,
Cynthia Robello, Leonicio
Casamina Jr., Jerwin Ablao,
Allan Acasio, Joachim Buetzer,
Byron Hall and Ronald Wade.
All Seafarers who sailed prior
to August 1, 1998 must have docu
mented evidence of Chapter VI
compliance by February 1, 2002.
Those who began sailing after
August 1, 1998 should already
have fulfilled the requirements.
Members of the emergency squad on board the SS Independence don
the proper equipment for a fire drill conducted while the vessel was at
anchor in Kana, Hawaii.
Gopher State Receives Bravo Zulu
SIU members as well as offi
cers and military personnel
aboard the Gopher State recently
were congratulated by U.S. Navy
Admiral Harry M. Highfill for
their accomplishments during
Operation Crocodile 99 in Glad
stone, Australia.
During the exercise, Seafarers
worked with more than 5,000
active duty and reserve U.S. ser
vice members as well as Navy,
Marine and Coast Guard person
nel. Altogether, they moved more
than 600 pieces of critical cargo
ashore and safely conducted com
plex operations at sea and ashore.
"Each and every one of you
should be proud of your accom
plishments during this exercise,"
the admiral stated. "You complet
ed an operation that no other
country in the world could have
accomplished, and you did it
safely and with style."
He continued, "As a team, you
showed our allies our impressive
capabilities as a nation and our
great nature as individuals.
Again, congratulations to all for a
job extremely well done."
The Gopher State is a preposi
tioning ship owned by MarAd
and operated by Interocean
Ugland Management Corp. It has
been stationed in Guam for the
past several years, always at the
ready to sail in support and
defense of the United States and
her military forces.
Seafarers LOG 7
8
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT
FOR MCS SUPPLEMENTARY PENSION PLAN
This is a summary of the annual report of the MCS Supplementary
Pension Plan, El N 51-6097856 for the year ended January 1, 1998 through
December 31, 1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
Benefits under the plan are provided by the Trust. Plan expenses were
$877,410. These expenses included $198,880 in administrative expenses
and $678,530 in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries. A total of
1,553 persons were participants in or beneficiaries of the plan at the end of
the plan year, although not all of these persons had yet earned the right to
receive benefits.
The value of plan assets after subtracting liabilities of the plan, was
$11,512,065 as of December 31, 1998, compared to $11,589,292 as of
January 1, 1998. During the plan year, the plan experienced a decrease in its
net assets of $(77,227). This decrease includes unrealized appreciation in the
value of the plan assets; that is, the difference between the current value of
the plan's assets at the end of the year and the value of the assets at the
beginning of the year or the cost of any assets acquired during the year. The
plan had a total income of $800, 183 including realized gains of $239, 712 from
the sale of assets and earnings from investments of $560,471.
Minimum Funding Standards
An actuary's statements show that enough money was contributed to the
plan to keep it funded in accordance with the minimum funding standards of
ERISA.
Your Rights to AddHlonal Information
Your have the right to receive a copy of the full annual report, or any part
thereof, on request. The items listed below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. actuarial information regarding the funding of the plan;
4. service provider and trustee information; and
5. reportable transactions.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part thereof, write or call
the office of Mr. Lou Delma who is the plan administrator, 5201 Auth Way,
Camp Springs, MD 207 46, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying
costs will be $2.20 for the full annual report, or $.10 per page for any part
thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan administrator, on request
and at no charge, a statement of the assets and liabilities of the plan and
accompanying notes, or a statement of income and expenses of the plan and
accompanying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annual report
from the plan administrator, these two statements and accompanying notes
will be included as part of that report. The charge to cover copying costs given
above does not include a charge for the copying of these portions of the report
because these portions are furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the annual report at the
main office of the plan (Trustees of the MCS Supplementary Pension Plan, 5201
Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746) and at the U.S. Department of Labor in
Washington, D.C., or to obtain a copy from the U.S. Department of Labor upon
payment of copying costs. Requests to the Department should be addressed to:
Public Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension and Welfare Benefit Administration,
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20210.
SlllJMARY AllNUAL REPORT FOR SEAFARERS l'EllSION TRUST
This is a summary of the annual report for the Seafarers Pension Trust,
EIN 13-6100329, Plan No. 001, for the period January 1, 1998 through
December 31, 1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
Benefits under the plan are provided through a trust fund. Plan expenses
were $34,447,742. These expenses included $5,165,016 in administrative
expenses and $29,282,726 in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries.
A total of 24, 192 persons were participants in or beneficiaries of the plan at the
end of the plan year, although not all of these persons had yet earned the right
to receive benefits.
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of the plan, was
$578,646,134 as of December 31, 1998, compared to $562,498,325 as of
January 1, 1998. During the plan year, the plan experienced an increase in its
net assets of $16, 147,809. This increase includes unrealized appreciation and
depreciation in the value of plan assets; that is, the difference between the
value of the plan's assets at the end of the year and the value of the assets at
the beginning of the year or the cost of assets acquired during the year. The
plan had a total income of $50,595,551 including employer contributions of
$6,004,371, realized gains of $31,288,778 from the sale of assets, and earn
ings from investments of $13,301,966.
Minimum Funding Standards
An actuary's statement shows that enough money was contributed to the
plan to keep it funded in accordance with the minimum funding standards of
ERISA.
Your Rights To Additional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual report, or any part
thereof, on request. The items listed below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. service provider and trustee information;
4. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets; and
5. actuarial information regarding the funding of the plan.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part thereof, write or call
Board of Trustees Seafarers Pension Trust, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
MD 20746, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying costs will be $3.40
for the full annual report, or 10 cents per page for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan administrator, on request
and at no charge, a statement of the assets and liabilities of the plan and
accompanying notes, or a statement of income and expenses of the plan and
accompanying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annual report
from the plan administrator, these two statements and accompanying notes
will be included as part of that report. The charge to cover copying costs
given above does not include a charge for the copying of these portions of the
report because these portions are furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the annual report at
the main office of the plan and at the U.S. Department of Labor in
Washington, O.C., or to obtain a copy from the U.S. Department of Labor
upon payment of copying costs. Requests to the Department should be
addressed to: Public Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension and Welfare
Benefits Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue,
N.W., Washington, DC 20210.
Seafarers LOG
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT
FOR SEAFARERS VACARON PUii
This is a summary of the annual report of the Seafarers Vacation Plan, EIN 13-5602047, Plan No. 503, for the peri
od January 1, 1998 through December 31, 1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal Revenue Service,
as required under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of the plan, was $28,541,567 as of December 31, 1998, com
pared to $26, 146,074 as of January 1, 1998. During the plan year, the plan experienced an increase in its net assets
of $2,395,493. This increase includes unrealized appreciation and depreciation in the value of plan assets; that is, the
difference between the value of the plan's assets at the end of the year and the value of the assets at the beginning of
the year or the cost of assets acquired during the year. During the plan year, the plan had a total income of $39, 776,560
including employer contributions of $38, 157,696, realized gains of $162,334 from the sale of assets, and earnings from
investments of $1,456,530.
Plan expenses were $37,381,067. These expenses included $4,026,033 in administrative expenses and
$33,355,034 in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries.
Your Rights To AddHional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual report, or any part thereof, on request. The items listed below
are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets; and
4. service provider and trustee information.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part thereof, write or call Board of Trustees Seafarers Vacation
Fund, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying costs will be $1.70 for
the full annual report, or 10 cents per page for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan administrator, on request and at no charge, a statement of the assets
and liabilities of the plan and accompanying notes, or a statement of income and expenses of the plan and accompa
nying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annual report from the plan administrator, these two statements
and accompanying notes will be included as part of that report.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the annual report at the main office of the plan (Board of
Trustees Seafarers Vacation Fund, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746) and at the U.S. Department of Labor in
Washington, D.C., or to obtain a copy from the U.S. Department of Labor upon payment of copying costs. Requests to
the Department should be addressed to: Public Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension and Welfare Benefits
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20210.
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT
FOR GREAT LAKES TUG & DREDGE PENSION
PUii
This is a summary of the annual report for the Great
Lakes Tug & Dredge Pension Plan, EIN 13-1953878, Plan
No. 003, for the period January 1, 1998 through
December 31, 1998. The annual report has been filed with
the Internal Revenue Service, as required under the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
Benefits under the plan are provided through a trust
fund. Plan expenses were $1,397,982. These expenses
included $201,945 in administrative expenses and
$1, 196,037 in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries.
A total of 592 persons were participants in or beneficiaries of
the plan at the end of the plan year, although not all of these
persons had yet earned the right to receive benefits.
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of
the plan, was $25,004,-173 as of December 31, 1998,
compared to $24,527,804 as of January 1, 1998. During
the plan year, the plan experienced an increase in its net
assets of $476,669. This increase includes unrealized
appreciation and depreciation in the value of plan assets;
that is, the difference between the value of the plan's
assets at the end of the year and the value of the assets
at the beginning of the year or the cost of assets acquired
during the year. The plan had a total income of $1,874,651
including employer contributions of $232,063, realized
gains of $550,523 from the sale of assets, and earnings
from investments of $1,092,065.
Minimum Funding Standards
An actuary's statement shows that enough money was
contributed to the plan to keep it funded in accordance
with the minimum funding standards of ERISA.
Your Rights To AddHional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual
report, or any part thereof, on request. The items listed
below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. service provider and trustee information:
4. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets; and
5. actuarial information regarding the funding of the plan.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part
thereof, write or call Board of Trustees of Great Lakes Tug
& Dredge Pension Plan, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs,
MD 20746, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying
costs will be $1 .80 for the full annual report, or 10 cents
per page for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan admin
istrator, on request and at no charge, a statement of the
assets and liabilities of the plan and accompanying notes,
or a statement of income and expenses of the plan and
accompanying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the
full annual report from the plan administrator, these two
statements and accompanying notes will be included as
part of that report. The charge to cover copying costs
given above does not include a charge for the copying of
these portions of the report because these portions are
furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine
the annual report at the main office of the plan (Board of
Trustees of Great Lakes Tug & Dredge Pension Plan,
5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746) and at the
U.S. Department of Labor in Washington, D.C., or to
obtain a copy from the U.S. Department of Labor upon
payment of copying costs. Requests to the Department
should be addressed to: Public Disclosure Room, N-
5638, Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20210.
2000 - A Year of Personal Commitment
So much has and continues to
be written about the coming
year-2000. On the one hand,
it's just a new year; on the other
hand, it's the beginning of a new
decade . . . a new century . . . a
new millennium.
Seafarers, their spouses and
dependent children can truly
make 2000 a memorable begin
ning by applying for one of seven
scholarships being awarded by
the Seafarers Welfare Plan in
May of next year.
Three of the scholarships are
reserved for SIV members. One is
in the amount of $15,000 for
study at a four-year college or uni
versity. The other two are for
$6,000 each and are intended as
two-year awards for study at a
post-secondary vocational school
or community college.
Four scholarships are awarded
in the amount of $15,000 to the
spouses and dependent children of
Seafarers.
The first step is to send away
for the 2000 SIV Scholarship
Program booklet (see form at
right). Once the scholarship book
let has been received, applicants
should check the eligibility infor
mation to make sure that certain
conditions are met.
Since the completed applica
tion form (and other required
paperwork) is due no later than
April 15, 2000, applicants should
start collecting the necessary docu
ments as soon as possible. These
include transcripts and certificates
of graduation, letters of recom-
me-ndation, a photograph and cer
tified copy of birth certificate.
Also, arrangements should be
made to take the SAT or ACT
tests by February.
Filling out the coupon below is
the first step toward pursuing your
hopes, dreams and goals for a
higher level of education. Make
the year 2000 special-in more
ways than one.
r--------------------------------------------------,
Please send me the 2000 SIU Scholarship Program booklet
which contains eligibility information, procedures for apply
ing and a copy of the application form.
Name
Mariner's Social Security Number
Street Address
------------------~
City, State, Zip Code
Telephone Number
This application is for: D Self D Dependent
Mail this completed form to Scholarship Program,
Seafarers Welfare Plan,
5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746 12199
L--------------------------------------------------~
December 1999
He Sb.oats, He Scores!
Retired Bosun Revives Hockey Passion
Retired Bosun Peter Loik has spent
much of his life on water, in one form or
another.
He enjoyed a prosperous, 44-year
career with the SIU before retiring in
1991. Sandwiched around his sea time is a
hockey calling that began when Loik was
a toddler and now sees him competing in
"over-70" tournaments throughout North
America.
That's a long time between shifts, eh?
"When I started walking, I started skat
ing," recalls the Saskatchewan, Canada
native, who now resides in Baltimore.
Left: Retired Bosun Peter Loik helped lead
his over-70 team to first place in a recent
ice hockey tournament in Vancouver.
Philly Teamsters Win Strike,
Thank Seal arers for Support
Members of Teamsters Local 463 in
Philadelphia recently won their strike
against Wawa Dairies, thanks in part to
widespread backing from fellow trade
unionists.
SIU members repeatedly joined Team
sters on the picket line, demonstrating their
support. Other union members from as far
as New York and Virginia also showed
their encouragement.
There are approximately 3,200 mem
bers of Local 463, some 280 of whom were
on strike against Wawa. After the 11-day
action, members in October ratified a new
contract that included wage and benefit
increases while eliminating all of the give
backs proposed by the company.
In a letter addressed to the SIU execu
tive board and the entire SIU membership,
Local 463 Secretary-Trea'surer Robert
Ryder stated, "Your support during our
strike made the difference for our members
and their families. When Wawa was con
fronted by the show of solidarity from
unions across the tri-state area, they came
back to the table and negotiated a fair
agreement for our members. This would
not have been possible without your help.
"I want you and your members to know
that you can always count on the support of
this Local."
Picketing in behalf of striking Teamsters in
Philadelphia are (from left) OS Lafe Fraley,
SIU Representative Joe Mieluchowski, AB
John Gallagher and AB Michael Maronski.
This demonstration took place in early
October.
Seafarers show their support for Teamsters Local 463 as a television cameraman covers
the demonstration outside a Wawa facility in Philadelphia.
ATTENTION ALL SEAFARERS
Check Your Z-Card; Your Job May Be at Stake
Merchant Marainer 's Document Must Be Renewed
According to a law that took effect in
1995, the U.S. Coast Guard requires all
merchant mariners to renew their merchant
mariner's documents (z-cards) in order to
continue sailing. All mariners MUST pos
sess a renewed z-card in order to sail
aboard U.S.-flag vessels by the end of
1999. That means as of January 1, 2000, all
active z-cards must have been issued no
earlier than January 1, 1995.
You may renew your z-card beginning
one year before its expiration date. No
merchant mariner is allowed to ship with
an expired document. (Mariners may
renew their z-cards up to one year after the
expiration date. However, mariners lose
December 1999
their endorsements if they renew beyond
that one-year extension.)
The expiration date is five years to the
day after the card was issued. Z-cards list
the expiration date in two different loca
tions: (1) near the mariner's photo on the
front and (2) near the mariner's fingerprint
on the back. For those z-cards without an
expiration date, the date of issuance is
located on the back of the document beside
the fingerprint. However, any z-cards that
do not have an expiration date printed on
them will be void as of January 1, 2000.
If you have any questions concerning
the status of your z-card, contact your port
agent or patrolman.
"But I went to sea when I was 19, and
didn't play hockey again for 50 years. I
just got back into it a couple years ago."
Gerard Quinn, winning a Seafarers
Welfare Plan scholarship two years ago.
(Quinn attends college in New York.)
Playing in nearby Laurel, Md., Loik
revived his hockey skills and then put
them to good use in a recent tournament
in Vancouver. His team (the Crawlers)
placed first out of 10 squads in the divi
sion for players ages 70 and older.
"The union has done a lot for the mem
bers," states Loik, who frequently upgrad
ed at the school. "I enjoyed sailing for the
SIU, and my family was well taken care
of."
Loik, 73, played center, scoring a goal
with two assists in the championship
game. But he seems more proud of losing
a tooth earlier in the tournament.
"That made me feel like I'd been chris
tened," he recalls.
From the rink to the sea and back, Loik
says he's always felt at home.
Even in retirement, Loik maintains an
active interest in the union. He usually
drops in at the Baltimore hall each week,
and occasionally attends membership
meetings there and in Piney Point. He also
attended the ceremonial opening of the
Joseph Sacco Fire Fighting and Safety
School last summer.
He played for successful junior league
and semi-pro hockey teams as a teenager
before trading his sweater and skates for
coveralls and work boots.
"I guess I was a little wild in those
days, and didn't really know what I want
ed to do," Loik says. "I was looking for
work, and I'm just glad I found the mer
chant marine. With the SIU, I had a rep
utable job with good money coming in. It
was hard work, but if you did your job,
there were no problems. It was a good fit.
"You just can't get that 'ship talk' with
neighbors," Loik chuckles. "With guys
who are Seafarers, you can always com
municate, catch up on the latest news and
people's whereabouts."
"Plus in those days, ships would stay
in port for days or a week. You really got
to see the world."
Likewise, he plans to keep honing his
reborn puck prowess-although the tour
naments largely are luck-of-the-draw.
There are very few over-70 squads in
North America, Loik explains, so individ
ual players from throughout the continent
are matched up on-site to form temporary
teams.
Loik's fortune worked well in the
Vancouver tournament in September. His
team included Toronto Maple Leafs 1946
rookie of the year Howie Meeker (perhaps
more commonly known among younger
hockey fans as the longtime voice of
Hockey Night in Canada broadcasts).
Asked about his fondest seafaring
memories, the recertified bosun describes
a 1985 voyage aboard the Long Lines.
"We laid the first fiber-optic cable in the
world, in the Canary Islands. That was
special."
He also mentions helping with con
struction of the Seafarers Harry
Lundeberg School in Piney Point, Md.,
which opened in 1967; and his grandson,
"After 50 years of not being on skates,
it was a big change from climbing ladders
and walking decks," Loik says. "But it's
been great, and now I'm looking forward
to more tournaments."
Steward Kamer Cooks Up
Better Life witb. tb.e Union
When Mohamed
Kamer immigrated to the
United States 14 years ago,
about the only thing he
brought with him from his
native Egypt was his abili
ty to cook.
Today, the 39-year-old
Seafarer is upgrading at
the Paul Hall Center for
Maritime Training and
Education to become a
chief steward.
In between has been a
tremendous ride from the
lowest ranks of the restau
rant world to where he is
today.
"I started at the bot
tom," he told a reporter for
the Seafarers LOG recent
ly. "I was a line cook."
Since then, he has
worked his way up as well
as graduated from New
York Chefs School in
Manhattan. Not only has
he learned the skills and
techniques needed to sur
vive in his field, he also
has owned several restau
rants in New York.
In fact, he discovered
the SIU through the clien
tele of his last business, a
seafood restaurant in
Brooklyn's Bay Ridge.
"My customers were
Seafarers. They told me all
about what they did and
talked me into it."
Kamer sold his
business and start
ed sailing as a sec
ond baker and
chief baker in 1997
aboard the SS
Independence.
While he enjoyed
the work, he did
notice quite a dif
ference between
operating a restau
rant for himself
and cooking aboard
ship for others.
"I have to fol
low the directions I
am given," the gal
Mohamed Kamer works in the Paul ley gang member
Hall Center's culinary institute to stated. "The menu
upgrade his ga lley skills. is already prepared
and we have to follow
what we have been given.
There is very little oppor
tunity to be creative,
unless there is a special
birthday or other event."
Despite the change in both
working and living situa
tions, Kamer admits, "I
love to sail."
Even when he is not
aboard ship, the Brooklyn
based member can be
found in the kitchen.
During the last four sum
mers, he has taken a month
off from sailing to work
with the same family in
the mountains of upstate
New York when they gath
er for their annual vaca
tion.
Kamer was selected by
the family because of his
high grades at the
Manhattan school. He pre
pares the menus, does the
shopping and cooks for as
many as 30 people. He
said he really enjoys doing
this because it allows him
to work on new dishes,
especially seafood.
Another benefit is he can
take his daughter with him
so they can spend time
together.
An American citizen for
10 years, Kamer plans to
continue his career with
the SIU. "This has been
very good for me."
Seafarers LOG 9
A
To all Seafarers and families
Holiday greetings and best
wishes to you and yours. God
bless.
Felix P Amara Sr.
To Becky Sleeper
Happiest of holidays and
peace and prosperity in the
coming year for you, your
family and your staff. Our
"Orgulf Angel" is still tops!!
Nancy Avery and your
Orgulf members
To Orgulf cooks
Happy holidays! May all
our crews be merry and the
rivers all run smooth. And ban
appetit!
Nancy Ave1y
To "Uncle Mel"
Merry Christmas! At this
time of new beginnings, I wish
you all smooth seas and peace.
Nancy Avery
To Bosun Jeremiah Harrington
and all SIU members
Merry Christmas and a
very happy, prosperous New
Year. Smooth sailing.
Pete M Amper
JB3
To Carmine Barbati
Your family loves you
always. We miss you tremen
dously. Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year! Lots of hugs
and kisses 2 U. Happy birthday
ol' man of mine!
RoseMary, Jim and Rachel
Barbati
To Tricia Gerlach and the Bull fam
ily
Have a happy holiday sea
son and Happy New Year in
2000. Merry Christmas.
Jeffery Bull
c
To William G. Rackley, Vilma and
Tommy Lee
Hope you all have a Merry
Christmas and a happy, healthy
New Year. Remember all the
Christmases we shared as a
family. Love you all. Your lov
ing family,
Mom (Charlotte E.
Canion), Beverly, Tommy,
Marylee, Bruce and Rob
To Jose F. Castillo
Wishing you a very Merry
Christmas and Happy New
Year. We wish you were home
with us. We love you very
much.
Your family (Maricela,
Maria, Jose, Glenn and
Mama Castillo)
To Augusto B. Cerame
Merry Christmas and a
Happy New Year. I love and
miss you so much. Also,
thanks for everything. Your
loving wife,
Sandra Cerame
To Augusto B. Cerame
Dad, Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year. We love and
miss you so much. Your loving
kids,
Anthony, Junior and
Audrey Cerame
To Roderick Coleman
Christmas is a special time
of the year. And we wish you
were here. We love you.
There's no Christmas without
you. (Happy birthday.)
Van, Nita and Rodd
Coleman
To Vanessa, Lovenita and
Rodderick Coleman
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year. I love you
all and miss you very much.
Xmas is just not Xmas without
the ones you love.
Roderick Coleman
JO)
To Judy Chester, Ruti DeMont,
Lanette· Lopez and Susan Taylor-Moe
Wishing all my sisters the
best during this holiday season
and always. Congratulations
10 Seafarers LOG
T b.e h.oliJ&y greetings ap;peari11g on th.is pa.ge were written bi ' Se11.f11,re1•s, pensioners, friends 11.nJ la.m.
ily members. Ti1ey a.re lislertl in 11.lphabetical order by the name of tlu~ inJiviJua sending tl1e ines
sage. T lie Seafarers LOG joins vitb those appearing below in extending se11.son's greeetings to all.
girls, finally we are getting
more female recertified stew
ards. Sometimes it takes a
woman to add the right touch
to make it all come together.
Good luck and happy sailing,
Donna DeCesare
To Lanette Lopez and Paul
Sending you this holiday
greeting with much happiness
for you. Congratulations on
your engagement and may
your first Christmas together
be one to always remember.
Mele Kalikimaka.
Donna DeCesare & Johnny
To my old shipmates
Wishing you all a very
Merry Christmas and a Happy
New Year.
Jimmie Dies
JF
To all current and retired SIU
members
I wish you the best this hol
iday season. Have a prosper
ous and healthy New Year.
Stand up for your union, and
use Piney Point to upgrade.
Capt. Louis F. Flade
To Jesse
Merry Christmas to you
and your family.
Les and Mike Freeburn
To the SIU membership
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year. Wishing
you safe voyages in 2000 and
forever.
Les and Mike Freeburn
To beloved brothers and sisters of
the SIU, SUP, MC&S and MFOW
Peace and greetings this
holiday season. May you sail
with bountiful joy and always
find safe harbors. Much love
always,
Richard J Fuller
G
To all members
"Remember When ... "
Ernest Gibbons
To Seafarers & their families
Bless you and all your fam
ilies always.
Domingo Gordian
To Monica Guffey
To the love of my life, that
I couldn't live without, sorry I
can't be home. You're always
with me! Happy holidays,
babe. Love ya'
T.J Guffey
To all SIU members
I would like to wish all the
members a Merry Christmas
and a Happy New Year. Happy
holidays to all!
T.J Guffey
JHl
To Lee Hardman
Merry Christmas, daddy. I
love you!
Kailan Hardman
To my brothers and sisters at sea
and on the beach
We pray that God will bless
you with goodness and happi
ness, great memories and the
gifts of His perfect love.
Hazel Jr. (Hayes) and
Doretha Johnson
To Seafarers around the world
Best wishes for the holiday
season. You are my favorite
people. May God bless you all.
Hubert "Red" House
To my shipmates and Capt.
Murphy
I wish you all a great holi
day.
Willard Huggins
To Lesa Arnold
Thanks for your endearing
"crazy nuts" love that makes
me feel as special as you are in
my life! Never far away, Love
Blair (Humes)
To friends and family
Alive and kick'n! With
continued growth, strength and
faith, may we all share these
holidays in spirit as we have
together over all the years.
Blair (Humes)
JK_
To Amir Kasim
I am so happy that you
will be home this Christmas
and for the new year 2000.
This holiday will be full of
To Donald S. Ling
Happy holidays to you and
your family. Enjoyed our trip
this summer. We will have to
do it again.
David Ling
To Phil Kleinebreil
Best wishes to you and
your family over the holidays
and into the new year.
David Ling
To Debra Loureiro
Best wishes and happiness
this holiday season. Always
thinking of you . . ..
J. Carlos Loureiro
To Joel Lechel and Anthony
Sabattini and their families
Best wishes and happiness
this holiday season. Have a
great 2000 ! ! !
J Carlos joy and happi- -----
ness. Let the
Clockwise
from the top:
Van, Ntta and Rodd
Coleman; Capt. Louis F.
Flade; Roderick
Coleman; Amir and trma
Kasim; Sandra.
Alexander and Alicia
Panko; Tom Tobias
and Lester
Moore.
year.
My best
wishes also
to all SIU mem
bers and their families. With
love from your wife,
Irma Kasim
JL
To all Seafarers
I wish you all a joyful
Xmas and a happy, healthy and
safe New Year.
Jean LaCorte
To dad, mom, grandma, Mark and
Leo
Although I'm spending
another holiday season out at
sea, I want you to know that I
think of you each and every
day! Have a Merry Christmas
and a Happy New Year. I look
forward to "seaing" you soon.
Love always,
Jeff Lagana
To Kasandra and Harper
Merry Christmas and we're
going to have a very merry
New Year. The Christmas hol
idays are a special time for us.
The lights are bright and the
tree will be up with presents
and then our special presents
in January and April. Love,
your husband and daddy,
Joel Lechel
To the crew and officers on the
Sea-Land Producer
I want to say: very happy
holidays to a great bunch of
guys and gals and an excellent
bunch of people to sail with.
Feliz Navidad, and Happy
New Year.
Bosun Joel Lechel
To Judy E. McBurney
Merry Christmas and a
Happy ew Year to Judy and
the kids and puppy Lewis and
Boo and Kitty and Moxie and
Tori and Cody Boy and Kelly
and Darrin and Stephanie and
David. Miss y'all. Love y'all.
See y'all soon.
Guy (Richard L. Lewis)
Ml
To Rod "Bronco" Matsuura
Honey, I just wanna tell
you that I honestly love you
with all my heart. Happy holi
days. Your wife,
Helen (Matsuura)
To the deck, navigation and
engine departments on the
Mississippi Queen
I would like to extend holi
day greetings to all of you and
your families. I hope you enjoy
your upcoming time off during
layup. Have a great 2000 sail
ing season.
Robert Mclemore
To Mary and Craig
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year!
Mac (Tom McNellis)
To Kathy Parent
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year!
Mac (Tom McNellis)
To my wife, Hattie
Merry Xmas, a prosperous
New Year. God bless you.
Your husband,
A. Minors
To SIU officials and members, espe
cially at the NY hall
Season's greetings to all.
God bless you all.
A. Minors
To PRMMI shoregang
Merry Christmas. God
bless you all.
A. Minors
To my friend and retired member
James Robinson
Merry Xmas and a prosper
ous ew Year.
A. Minors
To /TB Groton officers and crew
Merry Christmas to all of
you. I'm happy to be working
with you guys on Christmas
Day, and I'm looking fonvard
to working with you again.
You make me feel good.
Chief Cook Joel Molinas
To the Seafarers Welfare Plan
Merry Christmas and wel
come to the Year 2000. Thanks
for your help-and thanks to
Janice in the Houston hall.
Lester J Moore
To all active and retired members
of the best union in the world
A very Merry Christmas
and Happy New Year!
William Morris Jr.
To Elsa Moreira and my beloved
children Laurie, Marquita,
Vanessa, Zinzi and Al'Rashid
Best wishes on Christmas,
the New Year, the new century
and the new millennium.
Filiberto Moreira
To all former shipmates and their
families
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year.
Jimmy Moye
N
To Nancy Avery
T'was the LOG before
Christmas to Nancy's surprise/
A message from Steve greeted
her eyes ... /Merry Christmas,
Nancy, way down in Ole
Miss./Merry Christmas, Nan
cy, I blow you a kiss ...
Steve "The Kid" Nelson
To Mrs. Virginia L. Ollivierre
Season's greetings to my
wonderful wife, Virginia. The
most precious things in life are
found in a good wife. I love
you so much.
Roger S. Ollivierre
JP>
To all my shipmates in MSC
Oakland
I wish all of you best wish
es for a safe holiday season. I
am well and kicking. Fair
winds to all of you.
Edward Palmer
To Sandra, Alexander and Alicia
Panko
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year. You guys
are always on my mind. Have
a nice holiday. I will be home
soon.
Dasril Panko
To Neng, Eric and Ryan Peck
Happy holidays to my won
derful wife, Neng, and my
sons Eric and Ryan. The past
lives we've spent together
can't compare to this one.
Michael Peck
To all Seafarers and their families
Have a wonderful millenni-
um.
Michael Peck
To Dawn and Jared Pinkham
Merry Christmas to my
loving wife and wonderful son.
I miss you both very much and
I can't wait to see you again.
Love,
Mark Pinkham
JR~
To Vilma and Tommy Lee Rackley
I would like to wish my
wife and son a Merry
Christmas and a Happy New
Year in the year 2000.
Bill Rackley
To mom, Marylee, Bruce, Bob,
Beverly and Tom
From the Philippines, I
would like to wish my family a
great New Year and a Merry
Christmas.
William, Vilma and
Tommy Lee Rackley
To all my shipmates, retired and
active, in the Gov't. Services
Division (MSCPAC)
Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year!
James D. Rae
To Bill Romig
Happy holidays! Thank
you for all you do for us all
year! You are the greatest dad
and husband. We love you!
Kori, Curtis and
Jacob Romig
To G. Jane Hullsiek Sanchez
Merry Christmas, cat
woman. Hope you have a purr
fect Christmas holiday. Thanks
for the joy and happiness you
have given me. Your Juan and
only,
Juan D. Sanchez
To all Seafarers and shoreside
personnel
Yuletide greetings and a
salute to the best maritime
union worldwide.
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo
Siddons
To my son, Matthew Thomas
Sjaastad
I love you, son, and hope to
see you soon.
Dad (Arthur N. Sjaastad)
To John G. Katsos
Season's greetings to you,
the keeper of the light (aka
Lighthouse John). Thank you.
Arthur Sjaastad (aka Turtle)
To all Railroad Marine and deep
sea members
A very merry, healthy and
happy holiday to all. [P.S. W.
Hinko, call (516) 781-4385.]
Orrin "O.D. "Smith and
family
1~
To Mike, George, Jack, Carl and
Bill
Have a very Merry Xmas.
And to our future brothers and
sisters at Piney Point, welcome
aboard.
Thomas Tobias
To the Andrew Furuseth class of
'69, upgraders of '73 and '81, and
trainees in the basic engine class
of '73
Merry Xmas
Thomas Tobias
To all my SIU brothers and sisters
at sea, on shore and abroad
Merry Xmas and Happy
New Year.
Thomas Tobias
To Howard Yaekel
Happy holiday, my love.
It's so wonderful to have you
home for all three holidays.
Together forever i the best
holiday gift you can give me.
God bless. Love,
To all active seamen
God bless.
Lucy Yaekel
Lucy Yaekel
To all my brothers and sisters
I used to sail and loved
every day of life. Then I got
hurt. It has been eight years
since I last sailed, and I miss it
and all the good people very
much. Best wishes for a very
happy and healthy holiday sea
son. Have a good year.
Sy Yaras
MlJisc
To the Sea Monkeys Group
We wish you a joyous sea
son as we all continue on our
voyage to a happy destiny.
Bo G. and Bill W
To Mike Gramer
Merry Christmas sweet
heart. I hope you have a great
Christmas and New Year. The
kids and I will keep you in our
hearts and prayers. We miss
you!
Brenda
December 1999
HE LAST 1 O YEARS have seen tremendous change affecting all
Americans.
For instance, many people-not just major businesses-in 1990
were realizing how effective overnight delivery services were in
transmitting documents. Then came the fax machine, making
overnight too slow. Now, items are transmitted in seconds via e
mail.
Encyclopedias have given way to the internet. Friendly personal service from
your local bank teller-even your local bank-has been replaced by pay-for-ser
vice cash machines operated by major multi-state financial institutions. Cellular
phones are everywhere and young people do not understand where the term "dial
the telephone" came from.
Minivans and sport utility vehicles have replaced station wagons as the choice
for family transportation. The Saturn has become one of the major nameplates on
highways while the Plymouth is being eliminated. Even the United States curren
cy has been redesigned.
Yes, no one entering the 1990s could have foreseen the many, many transfor
mations that would occur in just a decade.
The same is true for the SIU and the U.S.-flag merchant fleet.
As new 1990 calendars were being hung, some truly believed Old Glory would
not be seen on the high seas when the year 2000 arrived. An American merchant
fleet was an anachronism. Let someone else move the goods.
But events in the Middle East changed that thinking. The vital role played by
Seafarers and the rest of the U.S. merchant marine in supplying troops during
Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm set in motion a sea of change.
New ships-especially prepositioning vessels-would be needed for future
crises. Well-trained American mariners would have to crew them because the
armed forces discovered some of their materiel was delayed when foreign crews
refused to sail into a war zone.
Militarily useful U.S.-flag commercial vessels and their crews so proved their
worth that Congress with the Bush and Clinton administrations worked for five
years on legislation to revitalize the fleet.
The U.S.-flag tanker fleet was rejuvenated when legislation allowed the export
of Alaska North Slope crude oil while new double-hulled tankers, built in a union
ized U.S. yard, began sailing in the Jones Act trade.
The deep sea fleet was not the only place where change occurred. New inland
tugs and barges provided additional jobs for Seafarers. The American Queen
joined the Delta Queen Steamboat Company fleet of paddlewheelers, while the
Columbia Queen sets sail next year.
The U.S.-flag cruise industry came back to life thanks to American Classic
Voyages. Two new deep sea passenger ships are being built by union workers and
will begin sailing early in the next decade. Joining them will be five 225-passenger
coastal cruise ships, the first of which will cast off in 2000.
And the decade ended with members of the SIU and National Maritime Union
voting whether the NMU should be merged into the Seafarers.
Obviously, those cries about the demise of the U.S.-flag merchant fleet are only
a bad memory.
With all this change, there has been one constant. The main priority of the SIU
has been job security for its members.
"We dedicated ourselves to one thing," noted SIU President Michael Sacco.
"That was making sure Seafarers had safe, good-paying jobs. That was our prior
ity in 1990 and it remains our priority going into the 21st century."
Many other events have taken place during these 10 years that have changed
the lives of Seafarers and their families. On the next four pages, the Seafarers
LOG recalls some of the issues, actions and people that have guided this voyage
during the decade of the 1990s.
HE DECADE OPENS with the SIU expressing its concern over an annual report issued by the U.S.
Department of Transportation that all but dismissed the presence of a U.S.-flag merchant fleet.
In a column published in the April 1990 edition of the Seafarers LOG, SIU President Michael Sacco states,
"There can be no mistaking now that the Department of Transportation hasn't the slightest intention of making
any serious creative effort to reverse the decline of the American-flag shipping industry .... Aside from some
----• acknowledgement that maritime is vital to the national security and some vague references to the need for
shipping reform so that it can improve its competitive position, the statement of policy gave not the slightest sign of encour
agement."
At the same time, multi-national agribusinesses with their runaway-flag fleets lobby Congress to eliminate cargo prefer
ence laws.
Then, a Middle Eastern event changes everything. Iraq invades Kuwait. American forces are ordered to Saudi Arabia to
serve in a multinational force designed to remove the aggressors.
The Ready Reserve Force fleet joins with MSC prepositioning ships and U.S.-flag commercial vessels to supply troops
with tanks, ammunition, food and other materiel. Seafarers come out of retirement and union halls stay open around the clock
to ensure no U.S.-flag vessel sails short.
During this period, SIU Secretary-Treasurer Joe DiGiorgio retires and John Fay is named by the executive board to take
his place. Byron Kelley becomes vice president for the lakes and inland waters and Dean Corgey moves up to Gulf Coast
vice president. Brother DiGiorgio passes away at year's end. The Seafarers Harry Lundeberg School upgrades its curricu
lum with an advanced fire fighting course.
While 1990 wraps up with the supply effort continuing, Seafarers also crew the
first of three new AT&T cable ships: the Global Sentinel .
.-----. AYS INTO THE NEW YEAR, Operation Desert Shield gives way to Operation Desert Storm. Allied bombs 1991 rain on Iraq for several weeks before the ground invasion overruns Iraqi forces. The Persian Gulf War lasts
43 days.
The U.S.-flag fleet is praised by military and government officials who review how each element of the
build-up and combat performed. The head of the armed forces' logistics deployment calls the industry "the
bedrock of America's defense transportation system. In the past six months, we have asked a great deal
from America's maritime unions and you have responded by giving us everything we have asked for and
more," adds General Hansford T. Johnson, who oversees the U.S. Transportation Command. Seafarers proudly march with
America's armed forces in Washington, D.C.'s national victory parade.
Further reviews during the year cite the need for a strong U.S.-flag fleet. After saluting the work done by the merchant
marine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Colin Powell, tells the Senate, "Our nation's sealift capability
needs improvement."
By the end of the year, the SIU and other maritime unions jointly call for action to revitalize the U.S.-flag fleet. (Earlier,
these unions start the push to keep maritime out of the world trade talks, known as GATT.)
The union opens a new hall in Honolulu and initiates a series of conferences around the country to educate members
about the union's benefit programs. The training center in Piney Point, Md. is named in memory of the late SIU president
who oversaw its creation: the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education.
The first vessel that will be covered by a Seafarers Entertainment and Allied Trades Union contract-the Alton
Be/le-begins sailing.
SIU President Michael Sacco is elected to the AFL-CIO executive council.
The U.S. Coast Guard announces it intends to charge mariners for their z-cards and to implement a renewal program
for the documents.
December 1999 SeafanNS LOG 11
Decade of Progress
CTION BEGINS ON WHAT will eventually become the Maritime Security Program.
A Pentagon study cites the need for more sealift capability based on its analysis of the Persian Gulf
War.
Then, Transportation Secretary Andrew Card presents during a Senate Merchant Marine
Subcommittee hearing the Bush administration's plan for a seven-year effort to help fund the U.S.-flag
fleet. The maritime unions praise the proposal: "American maritime labor, the industry and Congress
have demonstrated a willingness to work for a revival of a U.S.-flag shipping capability. With the addition of administra
tion support to the equation, we are hopeful that what once looked to be a formidable task now has become a reachable
goal."
Congress takes no further action on the measure before it adjourns.
Seafarers climb the gangway on the first new U.S.-flag containership built since 1987, Matson's R.J. Pfeiffer. The SIU
crewed Pride of Texas becomes the first U.S.-flag vessel to sail into Lithuania since 1939.
"Red" Campbell steps down as contracts vice president. Augie Tellez replaces him. Retired Atlantic Coast Vice
President Leon Hall passes away.
President Bush signs legislation allowing gaming aboard U.S.-flag deep sea vessels. Delta Queen Steamboat
Company announces plans to build a new paddlewheel vessel to ply the Mississippi and its tributaries.
In the wake of the Coast Guard's new regulation governing benzene exposure, the Paul Hall Center offers classes to
protect Seafarers.
The Persian Gulf sealift operation wraps up, but vessels start sailing with supplies to Somalia.
1992
1993
HE CLINTON ADMINISTRATION shows its interest in a maritime revitalization program within its first days in
office.
New Transportation Secretary Federico Pena calls representatives from maritime labor and industry togeth
er in Washington, D.C. to learn more about the needs of the U.S.-flag fleet. Former merchant mariner and
retired Navy Vice Admiral Albert Herberger, who had served as deputy chief of TRANSCOM, is nominated to
head the Maritime Administration. The White House sends legislation for a 10-year program to Capitol Hill. It
is well received by the bipartisan leadership of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee. The package makes
its way through the House and passes 34 7-65.
As the effort to enact revitalization grows, American President Lines and Sea-Land Service ask MarAd to allow the reflag
ging of 20 vessels. The SIU, with the other maritime unions, fights this request.
Workers at the Avondale (la.) Shipyard begin a six-year battle to gain a union contract by voting almost 2-1 for repre
sentation.
The UIW-contracted Queen Mary reopens after a year-long battle in Long Beach, Calif. Delta Queen Steamboat Company
purchases American Hawaii Cruises, which operates the SIU-crewed SS independence and SS Constitution. The two com
panies will comprise American Classic Voyages. SIU Government Services Division members crew the Navy's first SWATH
design T-AGOS vessel.
Under the new standard freightship and tanker agreements ratified by the membership, medical coverage is extended to
dependents and the pension cap is lifted.
Tom Fay replaces Ken Conklin, who retired as vice president for the Paul Hall Center. Retired Gulf Coast Vice President
Lindsey Williams passes away.
International trade representatives agree to exclude maritime from GATT.
HE YEAR STARTS WITH President Clinton becoming the first sitting chief executive to tour the Paul Hall
Center.
After Transportation Secretary Federico Pena tells the AFL-CIO Maritime Trades Department that the admin
istration has included funds for maritime revitalization in its Fiscal Year 1995 budget, the White House sends a
revised 10-year initiative to Congress. AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland, a former merchant officer, announces
the unions' support: "Labor as a whole embraces the administration's maritime security program as an impor
tant step toward the revitalization of the American merchant marine."
The House passes the measure 294-122. However, it is blocked in the Senate by farm-state legislators. The White House
vows to bring the measure back in the next Congress. Because of the lack of a program, APL flags out its six new C-11 con
tainerships and Sea-Land asks to reflag five of its vessels (which is granted in early 1995).
The SIU and other maritime unions call for the repeal of the 21-year export ban of Alaska North Slope crude oil as long
as the petroleum is carried by U.S.-flag tankers.
Boatmen aboard E.N. Bisso tugs in New Orleans vote 45 to 27 for SIU representation. The effort to gain a contract begins.
The Brooklyn union hall moves a block to its new location.
The Paul Hall Center launches a series of EPA-approved refrigeration certification classes around the ports. It revises its
steward department curriculum and purchases new vessels for hands-on training.
SIU-crewed vessels return from Somalia and receive praise for their work, while other ships assist U.S. forces deployed
to return democracy to Haiti.
In national elections, the GOP gains control of Congress for the first time in 40 years.
12 Seafarers LOG
1994
December 1999
1995
HE NEW CONGRESS disbands the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee while merging the
Senate Merchant Marine Subcommittee with one on surface transportation.
However, the effort to gain maritime revitalization continues to push forward. The administration reintro
duces its legislation. Senate Majority Whip Trent Lott (R-Miss.), the son of a union shipyard worker, tells the
AFL-CIO Maritime Trades Department: "I want a U.S.-flag fleet, manned by American crews, and U.S. ships
built by American labor."
The bill goes to the Senate after the House approves it in a bipartisan voice vote.
A measure to end the export ban of Alaska North Slope crude oil makes its way through Congress. SIU President
Michael Sacco tells a Senate subcommittee many U.S.-flag tankers are tied up or scheduled for scrapping, thus keeping
American mariners from sailing and keeping their skills sharp. He noted America's economic circumstances had changed
since the 1970s when the ban went into effect.
In May, the Senate approves lifting the ban 7 4-25. The House clears a dif
ferent version in July 324-77. A conference committee irons out the differ
ences. Congress again approves lifting the ban and President Clinton signs
the measure on November 28.
New jobs for Seafarers are gained. The American Queen is christened.
Maersk brings two foreign-flag RO/ROs into the U.S. registry and reconfig
ures them as prepositioning vessels. Penn Maritime adds an ITB to its fleet.
And five former Maersk foreign-flag vessels are earmarked to become Army
prepositioning ships.
The SIU-crewed Cape Race breaks out to assist U.N. efforts in Bosnia.
The Paul Hall Center dedicates part of its Harry Lundeberg School facility as the Thomas 8. Crowley Sr. Campus for
Higher Learning. The union opens a hall in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Center Vice President Tom Fay succumbs to cancer.
John Sweeney is elected president of the AFL-CIO.
ARAD ANNOUNCES A SERIES of double-hulled Double Eagle tankers will be built at unionized Newport News (Va.) Shipbuilding. Construction
funding comes from a Title XI shipbuilding loan guarantee. These are the first tankers to be built in an American yard since the Oil Pollution Act of
1990 became law.
Laid-up tankers begin sailing with SIU crews to move Alaska North Slope crude oil. Maritrans launches another ITB and the Paul Hall Center
develops inland tankermen courses.
Action moves to the Senate for a maritime revitalization program. The head of TRANSCOM, General Robert Rutherford, calls for its passage.
In July, Trent Lott (R-Miss.) becomes Senate Majority Leader when Bob Dole (R-Kansas) resigns to run for president. Two months later, the legislation is debated by
the full Senate where it passes 88-10.
1996
CLINTON
SIGNS
SHIP BILL I ~~, -
10-Year Program Salls Through
Senate with Bipartisan Support
December 1999
On October 8, President Clinton signs the measure enacting the Maritime Security Program, which will provide funds
for 1 O years for approximately 50 militarily useful U.S.-flag vessels. It is the first major piece of maritime legislation enact
ed since 1970. MarAd announces the first contract awards in December.
The celebration was tempered by the unexpected loss of SIU Executive Vice President Joseph Sacco to a heart
attack.
In other developments, SIU Secretary-Treasurer John Fay becomes chairman of the ITF Seafarers' Section. A new
hall in Tacoma opens. Members are urged to acquire STCW certificates. The new standard freightship and tanker agree
ments expand medical benefits and create a money purchase pension plan.
The Jones Act fight continues. More than 70 flag officers inform Congress of the need for the nation's freight cabo
tage law. Seafarers and their families travel from North Carolina to attend a congressional hearing on the subject and
meet with their representatives.
Finally, MSC Pacific Fleet vessels are deployed in the Persian Gulf because of Iraqi attacks on the Kurds.
Seafarers LOG 13
Decade of Progress
EEPING UP WITH THE ever-changing needs of the industry, the Paul Hall Center continues its
efforts to meet and exceed what is required of American mariners. The facility starts issuing train
ing record books which will allow Seafarers to show their compliance with international safety and
training regulations without having to carry all kinds of papers.
The facility revamps its syllabus for beginning mariners. The new nine-month unlicensed appren
----- tice program continues hands-on and classroom training at Piney Point but allows students to work
for three months aboard U.S.-flag ships to learn more about the trade.
The center also begins anti-terrorist training for members upgrading in government vessels courses.
Enemies of the Jones Act renew their assault on the freight cabotage law. However, a bipartisan resolution sup
porting the act is introduced in the House of Representatives early in the session. By fall, more than half the mem
bers of the House have signed on as co-sponsors, effectively killing any action against the Jones Act.
The executive board names John Fay executive vice president for the union, while Dave Heindel becomes sec
retary-treasurer. George McCartney retires as West Coast vice president. The board chooses Nick Marrone as his
successor. A new SIU hall opens in Anchorage, Alaska.
The SIU launches its web site.
Seafarers continue to gain additional jobs as new tugs and vessels-including four reflagged Maersk container
ships-come under contract.
Bisso boatmen ratify the company's first union contract in its 117-year history.
President Clinton signs legislation that includes the U.S.-Flag Cruise Ship Pilot Project, which provides funding
to assist in new passenger ship development.
NOL announces the purchase of APL which brings four C-11s to the U.S. registry. Tyco acquires the AT&T cable
ship fleet. Efforts are announced to convert the mothballed Philadelphia Naval Yard into a commercial shipbuilding
facility.
1997
ALKS AIMED AT A POSSIBLE AFFILIATION of the National Maritime Union into the SIUNA are announced
during the NMU's convention, held in March at the Paul Hall Center. The effort culminates on December 10
when SIUNA President Michael Sacco and NMU President Rene Lioeanjie sign the document, thus bringing
all the nation's major unlicensed maritime unions within the same organization.
._,,__"'
~'· ~.~ R~ht Things
Seafarers sail to the Persian Gulf again to supply American and allied forces as Iraq once more rattles its
sword. The delivery effort is praised by TRANSCOM while the president of the U.S. Navy League calls for
more support for the U.S.-flag merchant fleet.
Right Place
Right Time
Delta Queen Steamboat Co.mpany announces its intention to build five 225-passenger coastal cruise ships. They would
sail along the Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific Northwest coasts with the first coming on line by 2000. In testimony before
Congress, the SIU talks favorably about the prospects for expanding the U.S.-flag cruise fleet. Senator John Breaux (O
la.) introduces legislation to help rebuild that fleet.
The Clinton administration announces approval for dredging to begin in the port of New York/New Jersey so it can han
dle proposed deeper draft commercial vessels.
The first two Double Eagle tankers-the Cape Lookout Shoals and Nantucket Shoals-set sail, joining other new ships
in providing more job opportunities for Seafarers.
SIU pensioners benefit when a new prescription drug program is initiated.
Steel dumping by foreign nations adversely affects Seafarers working on the Great Lakes. The sailing season ends early
after an extended run of record-setting years.
Veterans Day takes on new meaning for merchant mariners who sailed between August 16, 1945 and December 31,
1946 as President Clinton signs into law an extension of World War II veterans' status for these Americans. The dates now
coincide with all other veterans of that era.
XPANSION OF THE U.S. PASSENGER SHIP FLEET becomes more of a reality when the president of
American Classic Voyages and the president of Ingalls Shipbuilding sign a contract in the U.S. Capitol to build
two 1,900-passenger vessels for the Hawaiian trades. Construction was made possible through the passage
of the U.S.-Flag Cruise Ship Pilot Project of 1997.
Later in the year, American Classic Voyages announces the new ships will become part of a subsidiary
._ ___ • which will resurrect the United States Lines name. The company purchases the Nieuw Amsterdam, will reflag
and upgrade it, and rename the ship the MS Patriot when it starts sailing around Hawaii late next year.
Another subsidiary, Delta Queen Steamboat Company, releases its plans to offer paddlewheel service in the Pacific
Northwest aboard the Columbia Queen.
While all of these represent new job opportunities for Seafarers, SIU members climb the gangways to new car carriers,
the Green Dale and the Tanabata, as well as other new vessels.
SIU-crewed vessels continue to supply U.S. troops stationed in the Persian Gulf and the Balkans.
The Paul Hall Center opens the Joseph Sacco Fire Fighting and Safety School, providing a world-class facility for classroom
and hands-on instruction minutes from the main Piney Point campus.
Roy "Buck" Mercer retires as government services vice president. Kermett Mangram is named to replace him. Don Nolan
becomes vice president of the Paul Hall Center.
The union opens a new hall to serve the membership in New Orleans while the facility in Norfolk gets a facelift.
Following talks throughout the year, a proposed merger to bring the NMU within the ranks of the SIU Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes
and Inland Waters District is announced in September. The year ends with members of both unions voting to see if the talks
should proceed.
14 Seafarers LOS
1999
New Ships
For Seafarers!
To Come Al Sea
December 1999
Dispatchers' Report for Deep Sea
OCTOBER 16 - NOVEMBER 15, 1999
*TOTAL REGISTERED
All Groups
Class A Class B Class C
Port
New York
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk
Mobile
New Orleans
Jacksonville
San Francisco
Wilmington
Seattle
Puerto Rico
Honolulu
Houston
St. Louis
Piney Point
Algonac
Totals
Port
23
8
5
10
14
23
36
29
26
24
6
12
26
5
1
249
New York 15
Philadelphia 4
Baltimore 5
Norfolk 4
Mobile 5
New Orleans 8
Jacksonville 20
San Francisco 12
Wilmington 8
Seattle 10
Puerto Rico 5
Honolulu 4
Houston 24
St. Louis 3
Piney Point 2
Algonac 0
Totals 129
Port
New York 12
Philadelphia 7
Baltimore 0
Norfolk 7
Mobile 4
New Orleans 13
Jacksonville 14
San Francisco 22
Wilmington 14
Seattle 17
Puerto Rico 2
Honolulu 7
Houston 12
St. Louis 2
Piney Point 0
Algonac 0
Totals 133
Port
New York 7
Philadelphia 1
Baltimore 1
Norfolk 0
Mobile 4
New Orleans 3
Jacksonville I
San Francisco 6
Wilmington 7
Seattle 6
Puerto Rico 3
Honolulu 8
Houston 1
St. Louis 0
Piney Point 0
Algonac 0
Totals 48
Totals All
Departments 559
11
3
2
12
6
11
17
6
17
6
8
5
13
2
2
122
8
4
1
6
4
11
9
8
5
6
3
8
9
0
3
86
5
0
2
8
7
2
4
2
5
3
2
2
0
45
25
2
12
6
3
13
20
6
17
3
30
12
0
6
2
158
411
6
3
5
6
5
8
2
6
5
2
2
10
1
2
4
68
5
0
4
2
0
4
2
1
6
7
1
5
5
2
0
2
46
1
2
0
2
2
0
0
0
0
5
I
0
0
16
13
0
5
11
1
8
9
5
11
6
4
86
4
0
6
170
300
TOTAL SHIPPED
All Groups
Class A Class B Class C
1l
4
2
7
9
23
23
19
17
24
8
8
19
4
2
181
DECK DEPARTMENT
7 5
4
4 0
6 8
7
11 3
8 6
6 2
9
3 4
5 7
2 3
12 7
3 2
0 3
2 2
86 58
Trip
Reliefs
7
2
2
2
1
12
6
5
6
10
2
9
1
68
ENGINE DEPARTMENT
6
3
6
4
8
10
14
4
4
9
2
4
14
1
3
0
92
5
4
1
8
2
3
15
12
15
13
1
8
9
1
0
98
5
1
0
2
1
3
l
0
2
4
1
5
l
0
0
27
398
9
3
2
5
2
6
7
6
5
6
3
5
I
3
0
64
4
I
5
4
3
6
3
0
1
0
5
I
0
2
0
36
4
0
1
4
0
5
3
3
7
1
6
3
l
2
0
41
0
0
0
2
0
1
0
0
4
0
0
1
12
1
1
2
2
3
1
7
2
3
2
3
1
0
0
30
2
1
0
2
2
7
6
6
4
2
1
4
0
0
0
38
ENTRY DEPARTMENT
19
0
0
7
5
8
5
9
11
13
1
19
5
0
2
2
106
292
14
4
9
0
1
9
8
8
13
3
51
3
0
19
0
143
254
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
136
**REGISTERED ON BEACH
All Groups
Class A Class B Class C
44
9
8
25
22
23
61
41
45
43
13
15
37
3
2
2
393
22
2
5
6
8
10
32
21
16
18
8
9
25
2
2
0
186
21
6
2
10
8
15
29
40
24
27
2
14
16
3
4
0
221
11
0
4
4
6
11
13
11
7
13
4
0
0
87
887
20
8
2
21
6
15
31
9
20
11
4
12
20
3
3
1
186
12
5
1
9
7
13
19
9
11
12
4
8
IO
2
5
128
12
1
2
10
3
15
12
5
9
4
1
7
3
3
3
0
90
28
3
3
22
10
17
31
25
10
24
4
38
19
1
7
243
647
9
3
5
9
7
12
3
18
7
0
6
11
4
2
4
101
4
0
3
2
1
8
2
0
7
6
0
4
6
2
1
2
48
1
3
0
3
2
3
4
1
0
6
1
0
1
0
27
33
l
3
12
2
11
17
3
12
9
5
104
10
0
11
2
235
411
*"Total Registered" means the number of Seafarers who actually registered for shipping at the port.
**"Registered on Beach" means the total number of Seafarers registered at the port.
December 1999
January & February 2000
Membership Meetings
Deep Sea, Lakes, Inland Waters
Piney Point ............. Monday: January 3, February 7
Algonac .................. Friday: January 7, February J 1
Baltimore ................ Thursday: January 6, February 10
Duluth ..................... Wedne day: January 12, February 16
Honolulu .... ........ ..... Friday: January 14, February 18
Houston .................. Monday: January 10, February 14
Jacksonville ............ Thursday: January 6, February IO
Jersey City .............. Wednesday: January 19, February 23
Mobile .................... Wednesday: January 12, February 16
New Bedford .......... Tuesday: January 18, February 22
New Orleans ........ ... Tuesday: January 11, February 15
New York. .... ........... Tuesday: January 4, February 8
Norfolk ................... Thursday: January 6, February 10
Philadelphia ............ Wednesday: January 5, February 9
San Francisco ......... Thursday: January 13, February 17
San Juan .................. Thursday: January 6, February LO
St. Louis ................. Friday: January 14, February 18
Tacoma ................... Friday: January 21, February 25
Wilmington ............... Tuesday: January 18*, February 22*
(*changes created by Martin Lutherc King Jr. s
birthday and Presidents Day holidays)
Each port's meeting starts at 10:30 a.m.
Personals
TO MY FELLOW
BROTHERS OF THE SEA
Arthur N. Sjaastad, who sailed as an AB from the
port of Houston, is presently incarcerated and would
love to hear from some of his former shipmates. His
address is TDCJ-ID #681264, Estelle Unit, Foscil K-2-
205, Huntsville, Texas 77340.
THOMAS CHIN
Please contact Cyd Reagan, c/o Sylvia Westbrook,
P.O. Box 1150, Mt. View, Hawaii 96771; or telephone
(808) 968-6492.
Preventive Medicine in Tacoma
Seafarers in the Tacoma, Wash. area lined up at the SIU
hall for their annual flu shot on October 22. Among those
taking the inoculation were (above) Recertified Steward
Henry Jones and (below) SA Kaid Adam. Administering
the shots is RN JoAnn Kauffman.
Seafarers LOG 15
<
Seafarers lntemational Union
Directory
Mid1ael Sac® ·
President
John Fay .
Executive Vice President
Da\'id Heindel
Secretary-Treasurer
Augustin TeUez
Vice President Contracts
Jack Caffey
Vice President Atlantic Coast
Byron Kelley
Vice President Lakes and Inland Waters
Dean Corgey
Vice President Gulf Coast
Nicholas J. Marrone
Vice President West Coast
Kermett Mangram
Vice President Government Services . ..
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WILMINGTON
510 N. Broad Ave.
Wilmington, CA 90744
(310) 549-4000
16 Seafarers LOG
Dispatchers' Report for Great Lakes
OCTOBER 16 - NOVEMBER 15, 1999
CL - Company/Lakes
*TOTAL REGISTERED
L-Lakes NP - Non Priority
All Groups
Class CL Class L Class NP
Port
Algonac 0 29 21
Port
Algonac 0 18 17
Port
Algonac 0 7 12
Port
Algonac 0 24 19
Totals All Depts 0 78 69
TOTAL SHIPPED
All Groups
Class CL Class L Class NP
DECK DEPARTMENT
0 15 7
ENGINE DEPARTMENT
0 8 7
STEWARD DEPARTMENT
0 4 6
ENTRY DEPARTMENT
0 12 7
0 39 27
**REGISTERED ON BEACH
All Groups
Class CL Class L Class NP
0 11 9
0 2 2
0 2 6
0 12 13
0 27 30
*"Total Registered" means the number of Seafarers who actually registered for shipping at the port.
**"Registered on Beach" means the total number of Seafarers registered at the port.
Dispatchers' Report for Inland Waters
OCTOBER 16 - NOVEMBER 15, 1999
*TOTAL REGISTERED
All Groups
TOTAL SHIPPED
All Groups
**REGISTERED ON BEACH
All Groups
Class A Class B Class C Class A Class B Class C Class A Class B Class C
Region DECK DEPARTMENT
Atlantic Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Gulf Coast 1 0 3 2 0 3 0
Lakes, Inland Waters 40 0 0 20 0 0 20 0
West Coast 1 0 4 6 3 2 8 2
Totals 42 0 7 28 3 5 29 2
Region ENGINE DEPARTMENT
Atlantic Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Gulf Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Lakes, Inland Waters 25 0 0 10 0 0 15 0
West Coast 1 0 1 1 0 2 0
Totals 26 0 1 11 0 1 17 0
Region STEWARD DEPARTMENT
Atlantic Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Gulf Coast 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0
Lakes, Inland Waters 15 0 0 4 0 0 11 0
West Coast 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
Totals 16 0 1 4 0 1 12 0
Totals All Depts 84 0 9 43 3 7 58 2
*"Total Registered" means the number of Seafarers who actually registered for shipping at the port.
**"Registered on Beach" means the total number of Seafarers registered at the port.
PIC-FROM-THE-PAST
This photo was sent to
the Seafarers LOG by pen
sioner Ewing "Ed" Rihn of
Franklinton, La.
The picture was taken
aboard the Waterman ship
Mirabeau B. Yamar on a trip
to Trieste in 1947. The ves
sel crewed in New Orleans
and paid off in Baltimore.
Standing (from the left)
are Joe Huber, Chad Galt,
Red Smith, Bill Grega! and
Ed Rihn. Bosun Tom
Freeman is kneeling at left.
Rihn, 75, joined the SIU
in 1944 in the port of
Galveston and graduated
from the bosun recertifica
tion program in 1973. He
won the Seafarers Safety
Poster Contest of 1960-61 .
Before retiring in 1984, Rihn
worked with the Delta
Steamship Lines shore
gang in New Orleans.
0
15
0
23
38
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
2
2
41
December 1999
--------------.... _.-~....-ri __ .,.....,. ________ _ _ _ ___ -·--
Three recertified bosuns and
one recertified steward are
among the 19 Seafarers
announcing their retirements this
month.
Representing more than 130
years of active union membership,
Recertified Bosuns Kenneth W.
Craft, Ronald W. Dailey and
Neil D. Matthey and Recertified
Steward Harold Fielder are grad
uates of the highest level of train
ing available to members in the
deck and steward departments,
respectively, at the Sill's training
school in Piney Point, Md.
Including the four recertified
graduates, 14 of the retiring Sea
farers sailed in the deep sea divi
sion, four shipped on inland ves
sels, and one plied the Great
Lakes.
Nine of the retiring pensioners
sailed in the deck department,
eight worked in the steward
department and two shipped in the
engine department.
On this page, the Seafarers
LOG presents brief biographical
accounts of the retiring Seafarers.
DEEP SEA
ABDULR.
ABDO, 67,
began his
career with the
Seafarers in
1967 in the
port of San
Francisco. His
first ship was
the Halcyon Panther. Born in
Arabia, he worked in the steward
department. Brother Abdo last
sailed in 1996 aboard the
President Chester B. Arthur, an
American President Lines vessel.
He has retired to San Francisco.
RITA M. BALLARD, 60, joined
the Marine Cooks & Stewards
(MC&S) in 1965 in the port of
San Francisco, first sailing aboard
Matson Navigation Co. 's Lurline.
A member of the steward depart
ment, Sister Ballard last sailed
aboard the SS Independence, an
American Hawaii Cruises vessel.
Born in Switzerland, she makes
her home in Santa Rosa, Calif.
KENNETH
W.CRAFT,
59, started his
career with the
SIU in 1969 in
the port of
Seattle. His
first ship was
the Raleigh,
operated by Crest Overseas
Shipping Co. Born in North
Dakota, he sailed in the deck
department and upgraded his
skills at the Sill's school in Piney
Point, Md., where he graduated
from the bosun recertification pro
gram in 1984. Prior to retirement,
Brother Craft sailed aboard the
Sea-Land Innovator. From 1957
to 1963, he served in the U.S.
Navy. He has retired to Winter
haven, Calif.
RONALDW.
DAILEY, 66,
began his
career with the
Seafarers in
1977 from the
port of Tampa,
Fla., sailing in
the inland
division aboard the Dixie Prag-
December 1999
ress. The deck department mem
ber later transferred to deep sea
vessels. Brother Dailey frequently
upgraded his skills at the Paul
Hall Center for Maritime
Training and Education in Piney
Point, Md., where he graduated
from the bosun recertification
program in 1992. The Ohio
native served in the U.S. Navy
from 1950 to 1954 and served in
the U.S. Army from 1955 to
1964. Prior to retirement, he
sailed aboard the Newark Bay, a
Sea-Land Service vessel. Jack
sonville, Fla. is where he calls
home.
ARLIE A. DILLARD, 65, started
sailing with the SIU in 1962 in the
port of Houston. His first ship was
the Cathy, operated by Sea
Transport Co. A native of Texas,
he worked in the deck department
and upgraded his skills at the
Seafarers Harry Lundeberg School
of Seamanship in Piney Point,
Md. Brother Dillard last sailed in
1980 aboard the Overseas Anchor.
He has retired
to Houston.
HAROLDH.
FIELDER,
65, first sailed
with the Sea
farers in 1952
from the port
of Mobile,
Ala. A native of Alabama, he
graduated from the Andrew
Furuseth Training School in 1958
and upgraded at the Seafarers
Harry Lundeberg School in Piney
Point, Md., where he graduated
from the steward recertification
program in 1980. The steward
department member last sailed in
1989 aboard the Sea-Land
Crusader. Brother Fielder makes
his home in Mobile.
HERBERT
HOLLINGS,
65, started
sailing with
the Seafarers
in 1951 aboard
the Afoundria.
A native of
Mobile, Ala., he worked in the
steward department, last sailing as
a chief cook aboard the Sgt.
William R. Button, an American
Overseas Marine Corp. vessel.
Brother Hollings makes his home
in Mobile.
MARCOSC.
LEGASPI,
64, graduated
from the
MC&S train
ing school in
1963 and
joined the
union in the port of San
Francisco. His first ship was the
President Wilson, an American
President Lines vessel. Prior to
retiring, he worked on the
Mokihana, operated by Matson
Navigation Co. Brother Legaspi
calls San
.---........... =------,Francisco
home.
THOMAS
MARTINEZ,
79, began his
career with the
Seafarers in
~-~~-~ 1945 in the
port of Philadelphia. Born in
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.
Ecuador, he sailed in the engine
department and upgraded his
skills at the Paul Hall Center for
Maritime Training and Education.
He last sailed aboard the USNS
Able, operated by Maersk Line,
Ltd. He makes
his home in
Philadelphia.
NEILD.
MATTHEY,
70, first sailed
with the SIU
in 1947,
aboard the
Marine Phoenix. Born in
California, the U.S. Navy veteran
worked in the deck department
and upgraded his skills at the
union's school in Piney Point,
Md., where he graduated from the
bosun recertification program in
1976. Prior to retirement, he
worked aboard the Equality State,
an Interocean Ugland
Management Corp. vessel.
Brother Matthey has retired to La
Marque,
Texas.
NEWTON
RADER, 61,
graduated
from the
MC&S train
ing school in
Santa Rosa, Calif. in 1961. Born
in the Philippines, he became a
U.S. citizen. Brother Rader
worked in the steward depart
ment, last sailing aboard the
President Grant, an American
Ship Management vessel. He calls
San Pedro,
Calif. home.
ANASTACIO
SERENO, 68,
began his
career with the
MC&S in
1972 from the
port of San
Francisco, after graduating from
the MC&S training school in
Santa Rosa, Calif. His first ship
was the Achilles, operated by
Newport Tankers Corp. Brother
Sereno worked in the steward
department, last sailing aboard the
Manukai, a Matson Navigation
Co. vessel. A native of the
Philippines, he has retired to
Milpitas, Calif.
RAY F. SIMS, 65, first sailed
with the Seafarers in 1969 in the
port of New York aboard the
Seatrain Florida. Born in
Tennessee, he worked in the
engine department and upgraded
his skills at the union 's school in
Piney Point, Md. From 1952 to
1957, he served in the U.S. Navy.
Brother Sims last sailed in 1992
aboard the Overseas Juneau. He
calls San Francisco home.
ANTONIOB.
TREVINO,
65, joined the
SIU in 1968 in
the port of
New Orleans.
Brother
Trevino was a
member of the deck department.
Born in Honduras, he last sailed
in 1983 aboard the Cove Sailor,
operated by Cove Shipping. He
makes his home in Dallas.
INLAND
BETTYC.
ADAMS, 63,
started her
career with the
Seafarers in
1985. Born in
Illinois, she
worked in the
steward de
partment. Sister Adams sailed pri
marily aboard Orgulf Transport
Co. vessels. She has retired to
Effmgham, Ill.
ALBERTB.
CHURCIIlLL,
63, joined the
SIU in 1952.
The Texas
native sailed as
a captain, pri
marily aboard
vessels operat
ed by G&H Towing Co. Boatman
Churchill makes his home in
League City, Texas.
BILLYM.
MARE LL,
60, first sailed
with the Sea
farers in 1959
aboard deep
sea vessel
Chiwawa,
operated by
Interocean Management. He later
transferred to the inland division,
working in the deck department
and upgrading his skills at the
union's school in Piney Point,
Md. Prior to retiring, he sailed
aboard the Maritrans tug Colum
bia. Boatman Marell calls
Middleburg, Fla. home.
CARLK.
MOOR, 71,
joined the SIU
in 1976 in the
port of
Norfolk, Va.
Born in
Tennessee, he
sailed in the
deck department and graduated
from the towboat scholarship pro
gram in 1979 at the union's
school in Piney Point, Md. During
his career, he continued to
upgrade his skills at the school.
He last sailed aboard the Falcon,
an Allied Towing Co. vessel.
From 1948 to 1967, he served in
the U.S. Navy. Boatman Moor has
retired to Norfolk.
GREAT LAKES
AHMEDS.
SHAIBI, 65,
began his
career with the
Seafarers in
1970 in
Detroit. His
first ship was
the Harris N.
Snyder. A native of Yemen, he
became a U.S. citizen in 1974.
Brother Shaibi worked in the deck
department, last sailing aboard the
Medusa Challenger, operated by
Cement Transit. He makes his
home in Dearborn, Mich.
Reprinted from past issues of the Seafarers LOG strong belief in independence is also the long
term goal of America during this current ener
gy crisis .... 1950
The SIU Atlantic and Guff District became the
first seamen's union to negotiate a company
Vice President and former House Minority
Leader Gerald R. Ford (R-Mlch.) outlined for
financed Welfare Plan
for its members. This
was established in an
agreement signed with
m==============================~ the delegates of the
SIUNA convention
THI 0 T what he feels will be
his responsibility in
his new post as
America's 4oth vice
nine contracted
steamship companies on
December 28.
'N SIU HJ TO Y
Although the compa-
nies will make all the contributions to the wel
fare fund, the agreement provides for joint
administration by a committee representing
the union and the steamship companies.
Under the terms of the contract each compa
ny will contribute into a common fund, the
sum of 2 5 cents per day for each man
employed aboard its vessels.
1973
Addressing a standing-room only audience at
the SIUNA convention, President Richard M.
Nixon stressed that the Seafarers' traditionally
president.
1990
An additional breakout of Seafarers will crew
another 13 ships from the government's
Ready Reserve Force ( RRF) fleet which has
been activated by the military to support the
massive deployment of supplies and equipment
to the Persian Gulf ....
As part of the massive logistical effort supply
ing Operation Desert Shield, the most recently
deployed RRF ships will carry heavy vehicles
and other materiel for the soon-to-be
430,000 American military personnel
assigned to duty in the Persian Gulf.
Seafarers LOG 17
f ,
f
DEEP SEA
RONALD J. ADRIAN!
Ronald J.
Adriani, 59,
passed away
August 26. He
began sailing
with the Sea
farers in 1980.
Born in
Connecticut, he
.__ _____ ___J started out in
the steward department and later
transferred to the deck department.
Brother Adriani upgraded his skills
at the Seafarers Harry Lundeberg
School in Piney Point, Md. From
1958 to 1961, he served in the U.S.
Army. He was a resident of Friday
Harbor, Wash.
JOSE CIRO A. ALVARADO
Pensioner Jose
Ciro A. Alva
rado, 76, died
October 11.
Born in Mexico,
he started his
career with the
SIU in 1951 in
Galveston,
Texas. His first
ship was the Republic. During his
career, he worked in the engine
department, last sailing aboard the
Spirit of Texas, a Titan Navigation
vessel. Brother Alvarado made his
home in Dickinson, Texas and
retired in June 1986.
PAULL. BAKER
Pensioner Paul
L. Baker, 72,
passed away
October 10. A
native of Ohio,
he joined the
Marine Cooks
& Stewards
(MC&S) in
1952 in the port
of San Francisco. Brother Baker
sailed in the steward department and
began receiving his pension in
November 1984. From 1945 to
1946, he served in the U.S. Marine
Corps. He was a resident of San
Francisco.
SERVANDO J. CANALES
Pensioner
Servando J.
Canales, 66,
died October 16.
Brother Canales
began sailing
with the Sea
farers in 1948 in
the port of New
Orleans. A
native of Louisiana, he worked in the
deck department as a bosun. He last
sailed in 1976 aboard the Mayaguez,
operated by Puerto Rico Marine
Management. A resident of Metairie,
La., he retired in January 1998.
BIAGIO DiMENTO
Pensioner
Biagio
DiMento, 77,
passed away
August 26,
1998. Born in
Pennsylvania,
he started his
career with the
SIU in 1963 in
the port of Philadelphia. During his
career, he worked in all three depart
ments, last sailing in 197 5 in the
deck department aboard the Samuel
Chase, operated by Waterman
Steamship Corp. Brother DiMento
lived in the Philippines and started
receiving his pension in June 1989.
HARVEY E. FAIRBURN
Pensioner Harvey E. Fairburn, 81 ,
died October 6. He began his career
18 Seafarers LOG
with the
Seafarers in
1946. The
Louisiana
native sailed in
the engine
department and
started receiv
ing his pension
lot!!!:il:.........1~.-.'""--.-....L_-11 in October
1976. Brother Fairburn was a resi
dent of Fort Worth, Texas.
GEORGE E. FRIES
fR Pensioner · = George E. Fries,
i\ 55, passed away
:~~' October 10.
Born in New
York, be gradu
ated from the
entry level
training pro
~mi!~11...-_jPSi\'(/j gram at the
Seafarers Harry Lundeberg School
in 1965 and joined the SIU in the
port of Wilmington, Calif Brother
Fries worked in the deck depart
ment, last sailing as a bosun aboard
the Sea-Land Innovator. A resident
of Paramount, Calif., he retired in
November 1998.
JACK GOTTLIEB
Pensioner Jack Gottlieb, 92, died
August 17. Brother Gottlieb was a
member of the MC&S. He sailed in
the steward department and started
receiving his pension in October
1970. Brother Gottlieb was a resi
dent of Boston.
EUGENE R. HALL
Pensioner
Eugene R. Hall,
85, passed
away Septem
ber 11. A native
of Ohio, he
joined the Sea
farers in 1944
in the port of
'-''----"--:>..---L..J~ Norfolk, Va. He
sailed in the deck department and
upgraded his skills at the SIU's
training school in Piney Point, Md.
During his career, he was active in
union organizing drives. Prior to re
tiring in September 197 5, he worked
aboard the Sea-Land Anchorage.
Brother Hall made his home in Sea
Level, N.C.
CARY V. HAYWOOD
Pensioner Cary
V. Haywood,
68, died
September 21.
He first sailed
with the SIU in
1947 aboard the
Half Knot.
Brother Hay
wood worked in
the deck department, last sailing
aboard the Flickertail State, operated
by Interocean Management. From
1948 to 1952, the Virginia native
served in the U.S. Air Force. Brother
Haywood was a resident of Virginia
Beach, Va. and began receiving his
pension in December 1995.
CHARLES H. HURLBURT
Pensioner
Charles H.
Hurlburt, 69,
passed away
August 17.
Born in New
~ York, he joined
the Seafarers in
1952, sailing
~~"'-3flii.;Jl...;..iL....::...J1UiL.J aboard the
Sultana, operated by Nicholson
Steamship Co. Brother Hurlburt
worked in the steward department.
Prior to retiring in February 1991 ,
he sailed aboard the Newark Bay, a
Sea-Land Service vessel. From 1947
to 1951 , he served in the U.S. Navy.
Galveston, Texas was his home.
ARTHUR R. McCREE
-._~;;;;;;jjjj.---t Pensioner
Arthur R.
1 Mccree, 71,
died September
26. Brother
1 McCree began
· his career with
the SIU in 1952
"--......,.--...;;;;;;;;;....j from the port of
L-::===========~ San Francisco.
Born in South Africa, he worked in
the deck department, last sailing
aboard the Westward Venture, oper
ated by Interocean Management. He
was a resident of Federal Way,
Wash. and started receiving his pen
sion in September 1996.
COOPER H. McMILLIN
Pensioner
Cooper H.
McMillin, 86,
passed away
September 25.
A native of
Missouri, he
started his sail
ing career with
the Seafarers in
1966 aboard the Oberlin Victory.
Brother McMillin worked in the
steward department, last sailing as a
chief cook aboard the Sea-Land
Philadelphia. A resident of
Caldwell, Idaho, he retired in April
1984.
ERNEST E. MULIERI
Pensioner
Ernest E.
Mulieri, 80,
died September
3. Born in
Boston, he first
sailed with the
SIU in 1947 in
the port of
Baltimore.
Brother Mulieri worked in the
engine department and upgraded his
skills to a licensed officer in 1966. A
veteran of World War II, he served
in the U.S. Navy from 1943 to 1946.
He made his home in Salem, Mass.
and began receiving his pension in
September 1983.
ARON B. NEDDIO
Pensioner Aron B. Neddie, 84,
passed away October 1 7. Brother
Neddie was a member of the
MC&S. He sailed in the steward
department and retired in September
1973. He made his home in New
Orleans.
VIRGINIA M. PENA
Virginia M. Pena, 65, died
September 15. She joined the
MC&S in 1961. Sister Pena worked
in the steward department, last sail
ing in 1989 aboard the President
Harrison, an American President
Line vessel. Seattle was her home.
ALFREDO RIOS
_.....,.....__, Pensioner
Alfredo Rios,
77, passed
away
September 14.
A native of
Puerto Rico, he
began his career
with the Sea
'-'-----""-.n.u:-~ .......... farers in 1943
from the port of New York. He
worked as a member of the engine
department. Prior to retiring in June
1985, he sailed aboard a Sea-Land
Service vessel. Brother Rios made
his home in Brooklyn, N. Y.
CHARLESW.
ROSENBERGER
Charles W. Rosenberger, 73, died
September 6. Born in Iowa, he start
ed his career with the SIU in 1970,
sailing aboard the Rose City, a Sea-
,,
Land Service vessel. Brother
Rosenberger sailed in the engine
department and upgraded frequently
at the SIU's training school in Piney
Point, Md. From 1948 to 1969, he
served in the U.S. Navy. He last
sailed in 1989 aboard the Rover,
operated by Ocean Carriers. San
Francisco was his home.
MATTHEW X. RYAN
Matthew X. Ryan, 34, passed away
September 14. He graduated from
the entry-level training program at
the Seafarers Harry Lundeberg
School in 1988 and joined the SIU
in Piney, Point, Md. His first ship
was the Sea-Land Commitment. The
New Jersey native sailed in the
engine department and upgraded at
the school. Brother Ryan last sailed
aboard the Osprey. He made his
home in Washington, Maine.
DAVID R. SUMULONG
Pensioner
David R.
Sumulong, 85,
died August 29.
Brother
Sumulong
began sailing
with the SIU in
1949 from the
port of New
York. Born in the Philippines, he
sailed as a member of the steward
department. Prior to retiring in
October 1975, he worked aboard the
Transcolumbia, operated by Hudson
Waterways Corp. He was a resident
of the Philippines.
RALPH H. TAYLOR
Pensioner Ralph
H. Taylor, 94,
passed away
September 19.
A charter mem
ber of the Sea
farers , he joined
the union in
November 1938
in the port of
Mobile, Ala. The Alabama native
sailed in the steward department.
During his career, he was active in
union affairs and organizing drives.
A resident of Mobile, he began
receiving his pension in April 1973.
MANUEL A. TONGSON
Pensioner
Manuel A.
Tongson, 97,
died September
25. Born in the
Philippines, he
joined the
MC&S in 1943,
first sailing
aboard the
Aleutian. Brother Tongson worked
in the steward department. He
signed off the Great Falls Victory
prior to retiring in August 1968. He
was a resident of Seattle.
ERNEST A. TRADER
Pensioner
Ernest A.
Trader, 71 ,
passed away
September 27.
A native of
North Carolina,
~
he started his
career with the
........ .......1•111:1:•LI~ Seafarers in
1947 in the port of Norfolk, Va. His
first ship was the John Gibbon. He
sailed as a member of the deck
department. From 1955 to 1957, he
served in the U.S. Navy. Brother
Trader last worked in the inland
division aboard a Steuart
Transportation Co. vessel. A resident
of Havelock, N.C., he began receiv
ing his pension in January 1993.
INLAND
WILMER P. GASTON
Pensioner Wil
mer P. Gaston,
81, died Octo
ber 3. A native
of Texas, he
joined the SIU
in 1963 in Port
Arthur, Texas.
Starting out in
the deck depart
ment, he later transferred to the en
gine department. Prior to retiring in
June 1982, he worked aboard a
Sabine Towing & Transportation Co.
vessel. During World War II, he
served in the U.S. Army from 1941
to 1945. Boatman Gaston made his
home in Nederland, Texas.
JAMES T. MALONE
Pensioner
James T.
< Malone, 74,
, passed away
October 3. He
" began his career
,- with the Sea
farers in 1953
• in the port of
......... ...._--" Mobile, Ala.
The Alabama native worked in the
engine department, last sailing as a
chief engineer. Boatman Malone
sailed primarily aboard vessels oper
ated by Crescent Towing and
Salvage Co. A resident of Mobile,
he started receiving his pension in
December 1987. From 1943 to 1946,
he served in the U.S. Army.
ROBERT F. SCHWATKA
Pensioner
Robert F.
Scbwatka, 71,
died October 1.
Born in Mary
land, he began
sailing with the
SIU in 1956
from the port of
Baltimore.
Boatman Schwatka worked as a
chief engineer and started receiving
his pension in June 1984. He was a
resident of Monkton, Md.
RICHARD A. TANNER
Pensioner
Richard A.
Tanner, 76,
passed away
September 14.
Boatman Tan
ner first sailed
with the Sea
farers in 1973.
Born in Massa
chusetts, he worked in the deck
department, sailing primarily aboard
Sheridan Transportation Co. vessels.
In 1993, he was honored by the
United Seamen's Service for his role
in the rescue of a badly burned mari
ner in Tampa Bay. Prior to retiring
in January 1994, he signed off the
Ocean Star. He made his home in
Tampa, Fla.
GREAT LAKES
STEVEN KOCAK
Pensioner
Steven Kocak,
87, passed away
September 11.
He started his
career with the
Seafarers in
1960 in the port
of Detroit. His
.____..'--"---~---' first ship was
the Diamond Alkali. The Ohio native
worked in the engine department,
last sailing aboard the Saginaw Bay .
Both first and last ships were operat
ed by American Steamship Co.
Boatman Kocak was a resident of
Toledo, Ohio. He started receiving
his pension in April 1977.
December 1999
Jhe $11;1fartJ~J06 atte11]pls to print as many digests of union shipboard
inliluteg 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.
COURIER (Intrepid Ship Mgmt.),
June 2-Chairman Gabriel I.
Bonefont, Secretary Eva M.
Myers, Educational Director Rikk
Parker, Deck Delegate John
Gilliam. Butterworth wages
resolved from last meeting.
Chairman announced payoff in
Marcus Hook, Pa. June 4. All's
well aboard ship with no acci
dents, beefs or disputed OT. Crew
reminded that education means
higher wages and that upgrading
facilities at Paul Hall Center in
Piney Point, Md. available to all
members in good standing. Bosun
also encouraged everyone to con
tribute to SPAD: "In the long run,
you will gain." Educational direc
tor echoed bosun's urging of crew
members to attend upgrading
classes. Treasurer announced
$1,400 in ship's fund. Vote of
thanks given to steward depart
ment "for their endless effort to
please." Next ports: Marcus Hook;
Hog Island, Pa.; Paulsboro, N.J.
MAYAGUEZ (Navieras NPR),
June 24-Chairman Al Caulder,
Secretary Richard K. Ward,
Educational Director Michael C.
Martykan, Engine Delegate
Michael S. McClinton. Couch
from crew lounge removed in
l>hiladelphia last month. Crew
waiting for its repair or replace
ment. Secretary stressed impor
tance of upgrading skills at Piney
Point. Educational director asked
that unsafe conditions be reported:
"Safety first." He also reminded
crew to keep on top ofSTCW
requirements. No beefs or disputed
OT reported. Suggestion made for
receipt of vacation check after 60
days or completion of relief peri
od. Also requested change in pen
sion rules where if a Seafarer
acquires 20 years of sea service or
7,300 days, he or she can retire
with full pension (similar to mili
tary air traffic controllers and other
unions). Suggestions to be sent to
contracts department. Crew mem
bers expressed concern about
recent random drug test conducted
by San Juan customs agents.
Unlike traditional drug testing,
individually chemically treated
cloth was used for sampling on
hands. Samples placed in ordinary
mail envelopes containing each
person's name. Concern is with
possible contamination, tampering,
identity checks and verification.
Steward department doing fine
job, and ship camaraderie is excel
lent. Next port: Jacksonville, Fla.
HMINANTUCKETSHOALS
(illM), July 30-Chairman James
A. Jowera, Secretary Lonnie W.
Jones, Educational Director Han
able Smith Jr., Deck Delegate
Roderick Coleman, Engine Dele
gate Milton Israel, Steward Dele
gate Ron Davis. Chairman stressed
need to work together aboard ves
sel. Any problems should be taken
to department head first. No beefs
or disputed OT reported. Next port:
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
CLEVELAND (Sealift Inc.),
September 12-Chairman David
J. Garoutte, Secretary Miguel E.
Vinca, Educational Director
Guadalupe A. Campbell, Deck
Delegate Nick Jocce, Steward
Delegate Julio C. Arzu. Chairman
reported good trip. Everyone
working well together. Crew
December 1999
received new TV and VCR.
Discharge in port of Mombasa,
Kenya went smoothly. First port
back in U.S. scheduled to be Lake
Charles, La. Sanitary inspection
due after fire and boat drill.
Everyone getting off ship should
have room ready for next person.
Educational director urged crew
members to upgrade at Piney Point
and get endorsements necessary to
continue sailing. Treasurer
announced $160 in ship's fund
which will be used to purchase
new movies. No beefs or disputed
OT reported. Several items
requested, including new furniture
for TV lounge, place to exercise
(gym) and repair to starboard
gangway. Vote of thanks given to
steward department for good food.
HM/ BRETON REEF (IUM),
September 30-Chairman Victor
Beata, Secretary Josef Wouthuy
zen, Educational Director Charles
W. Thompson Jr., Deck Delegate
Kenneth G. Boone, Steward
Delegate Randy A. Stephens.
Chairman noted smooth voyage
with no beefs or disputed OT. He
stated captain will reimburse crew
members for movies purchased.
Educational director reminded
crew of necessity of applying for
TRBs. Clarification requested in
engine department on penalty time
for cleaning closed spaces.
Suggestion made to improve ship
board gym. Everyone asked to
help keep ship living areas clean.
Thanks given to steward depart
ment for job well done. Next
ports: New York and Philadelphia.
HUMACAO (Navieras NPR),
September 12-Chairman David
Murray, Secretary Janet Price,
Educational Director Angel
Hernandez, Deck Delegate
William G. Rackley, Engine
Delegate Anthony Rosa, Steward
Delegate Samuel A. Sotomayor.
Chairman told crew members of
letter of understanding which
states that as long as steward
department has four men, no one
will get paid extra for cleaning
own fo'c'sle. He also noted new
washing machine installed and bid
received for fixing tiles. Crew now
awaiting approval of bid by com
pany as well as transportation from
ship to gate in Jacksonville. Until
tile repairs are completed, crew
will be inconvenienced for about a
week-"but it will be well worth
it," according to bosun. Everyone
asked to save wooden boxes and
bread boxes for bosun. Secretary
asked crew to be aware of steve
dores in house and call captain if if
any are seen. Messhalls should be
kept locked while in port. Educa
tional director urged crew to up
grade skills at Piney Point as often
as possible and to get STCW
endorsements. Treasurer an
nounced $50 in ship's fund. No
beefs or disputed OT reported. Vote
of thanks given to steward depart
ment for cleanliness and great
menus. Suggestion made to ask
welfare plan for dependents' pre
scription coverage. Next ports:
Jacksonville, Fla. and San Juan, P.R.
LTC CALVIN P. TITUS
(Osprey), September 27-
Chairman Robert B. F. Lindsay
Jr., Secretary Steven Dickson,
Educational Director Richard D.
Hannon, Deck Delegate Thomas
Gagnon, Steward Delegate
Richard Garcea. Chairman noted
ship at berth in Apra Harbor,
Guam until next trip to Saipan in
October. New fumitw-e for lounge
requisitioned last month and cable
hook-up for TV in budget for next
year. Educational director urged
members to upgrade at Paul Hall
Center and take full advantage of
facilities there. No beefs or disput
ed OT reported. Parts of recent
LOG read, including proposed
merger of SIU and NMU and pass
ing of former AFL-CIO President
Lane Kirkland. Everyone remind
ed to have rooms clean upon
departure from ship. Request made
to improve transportation for crew
and officers since shuttle service
not dependable.
NEWARK SAY(Sea-Land
Service), September 12-Chairman
Calvain A. James, Secretary
Gwendolyn Shinholster,
Educational Director Michael Las
Dulce, Deck Delegate Keith D.
O'Bryan, Engine Delegate
Gerardo Moreno, Steward
Delegate Charles N. Ratcliff.
Chairman announced payoff in
Jacksonville upon arrival. He also
reminded crew to observe safety
practices on deck. Secretary noted
collection to be sent to Bosun Pete
Sanchez's family and thanked offi
cers and crew for contributions.
Brother Sanchez passed away
aboard ship. Educational director
reminded crew members of impor
tance of upgrading and need for
STCW endorsements required to
sail after February 1, 2002. No
beefs or disputed OT reported.
Clarification requested regarding
day's pay in lieu of day off. Vote
of thanks given to steward depart
ment for good meals and keeping
ship clean. Radio and VCR in
need of repair, and new dryer
requested for crew laundry room.
OOCL INNOVATION (Sea-Land
Service), September 19-Secretary
Edward Dunn, Deck Delegate
Oscar Lopez, Engine Delegate
Owen Duffy. Secretary thanked
crew for keeping ship clean. Edu
cational director urged members to
attend upgrading courses at Piney
Point. No beefs or disputed OT
reported. Suggestion made to
request contracts department to
look into getting vacation check
every 90 days and having pension
raises retroactive for members in
retirement. Prescription drug plan
also requested. New toasters need
ed in both messhalls. Next port:
Portsmouth, Va.
RICHARD G. MATTHIESEN
(Ocean Shipholding Inc.), Septem
ber 12-Chairman Donald C.
Coggins, Secretary Lovell Mc
Elroy Sr., Educational Director
Kelly Mayo, Deck Delegate
Robert Hayes, Engine Delegate
Gilbert Tedder, Steward Delegate
Evan Verveniotis. Educational
director stressed importance of
upgrading skills at Paul Hall Cen
ter and getting STCW endorse
ments. Treasurer announced $110
in ship's fund. No disputed OT
reported. Beef noted by steward
delegate. Everyone reminded to
help keep ship in tip-top condition
by cleaning dryer vents and having
rooms ready for replacements.
Vessel heading to Greece and Italy.
ROVER (Intrepid Ship Mgmt.),
September 12-Chairman Russell
F. Barrack Jr., Secretary Juan B.
Gonzalez, Educational Director
Clyde D. Smith, Deck Delegate
Terrence P. Kane, Steward
Delegate Leoncio Castro.
Chairman stated clarification
received from VP Contracts Augie
Tellez regarding OT rates for tank
cleaning. He said everything run
ning smoothly. Payoff expected
September 17 in Portland, Ore.
Educational director urged crew
members to upgrade at Piney Point
and keep up-to-date on TRBs, z-
card renewals and STCW endorse
ments. Treasurer announced cap
tain holds $1,700 belonging to
ship's fund. Whoever goes ashore
for movies or games should pro
vide captain with receipt for reim
bursement. Some disputed OT
reported in deck and steward
departments. Suggestion made for
contracts department to look into
lowering eligibility requirements
for vacation. Vote of thanks given
Oh, to Be in England
to steward department for great
food and clean ship.
SEA-LAND EXPEDITION (Sea
Land Service), September 12-
Chairman Frank Lyle, Secretary
Edgar Vazquez, Educational
Director Oswald Bermeo.
Everything running smoothly with
no beefs or disputed OT, according
to secretary. Educational director
advised crew members to take
opportunity to upgrade skills at
Paul Hall Center. Chairman read
president's report from LOG
regarding SIU and NMU members
upgrading side by side at Piney
Point. Crew sorry to hear about
death of former AFL-CIO Presi
dent Lane Kirkland. Next port:
Elizabeth, N.J.
SEA-LAND PRODUCER (Sea
Land Service), September 12-
Chairman Joel A. Lechel,
Secretary David A. Cunningham,
Educational Director Christopher
M. Devonish, Deck Delegate
William D. Brinson Jr., Engine
Delegate Victor Sapp, Steward
Delegate Clifford B. Elliot.
Chairman reported payoff and
loading of stores to take place
September 14 in Jacksonville. He
reminded everyone of hurricane
season and to secure room TVs
and stereos. Bungee cords avail
able for anyone needing them.
Educational director advised mem
bers to check STCW certificates
and z-cards to make sure they have
not expired. Treasurer announced
$100 remaining in ship's fund.
Crew voted to use assets to get
satellite system working. Disputed
OT reported in all three depart
ments. Discussion held regarding
articles in LOG including new
ships, jobs and proposed merger
between Sill and NMU. Suggestion
made and sent to contracts depart
ment regarding lowering amount of
sea time required to receive full
pension. Second ice machine
requested since vessel operates in
tropics and current machine cannot
keep up with demand. Bosun
thanked steward department for job
well done. Crew remembered late
Steward Beau James. Next ports:
Jacksonville and San Juan, P.R.
SGT MATEJ KOCAK
(Waterman Steamship), September
19-Chairman Angelo Urti,
Secretary Lonnie Gamble Jr.,
Educational Director Jerald
Graham, Deck Delegate Robert
A. Hudas, Engine Delegate
Robert C. Hines Jr., Steward
Delegate Clarence Robinson.
Captain and chief mated thanked
everyone for job well done. Ship
passed Coast Guard and ABS
inspections with no problems.
Chairman noted crew has not
received economic price adjust
ment for this year but other two
Waterman ships have. He also
reminded members about union's
new fire fighting school.
Educational director stressed need
to get STCW endorsements. Crew
The Gopher State and its crew
were in Southampton, England
this past spring. The preposi
tioning vessel then returned to
Guam, where it remains on
stand-by alert, ready to sail at a
moment's notice to provide
ammunition, stores, vehicles
and other material needed by
American ground forces in times
of rapid deployment. In this
photo, the captain and some of
the ship's crew take time out in
London to pose in front of that
city's famous tower.
members have until end of year to
take advantage of U.S. Coast
Guard relaxed assessment period.
No beefs or disputed OT reported.
President's report from LOG read
regarding SIU-NMU merger. Sug
gestion made and sent to head
quarters regarding payment of pre
scription drugs for dependents.
Steward department given vote of
thanks for outstanding job. Next
port: Rota, Spain.
COAST RANGE (Crowley Petro
leum Transport), October 4-
Chairman Gregory A. Agren,
Secretary Lanette A. Lopez,
Educational Director E. Olson,
Engine Delegate Giuseppe Ciciul
la, Steward Delegate Robert W.
Gilliam. Chairman read presi
dent's report from LOG regarding
SIU-NMU merger. Educational
director stressed importance of
upgrading skills at Paul Hall Cen
ter and reading monthly LOG
two ways to keep abreast of union
activities. No beefs or disputed OT
reported. Steward department
given vote of thanks for job well
done. Next port: Portland, Ore.
LNG TAURUS (Pronav Ship
Mgmt.), October 3-Chairman
Daniel Marcus, Secretary Judi L.
Chester, Educational Director
Curtis Jackson, Deck Delegate
John Ray, Engine Delegate John
Orr, Steward Delegate Ben
Opaon. Chairman thanked all de
partments for working well togeth
er, and steward thanked deck and
engine departments for keeping gal
ley equipment and storerooms orga
nized. Educational director remind
ed everyone to take opportunity to
attend classes at Paul Hall Center,
especially new fire fighting com
plex. Treasurer announced $561 in
ship's fund. Will look into purchase
and installation of satellite dish. No
beefs or disputed OT reported.
Report read concerning SIU-NMU
merger. Crew expressed mixed feel
ings. Main concerns have to do with
seniority issues and competition for
jobs. Secretary informed them that
thousands of jobs will become
available in next few years because
of new ships coming under SIU
contract. Thanks given to VP Gov't
Services Kermett Mangram for vis
iting vessel to inform crew of
reflagging changes that may occur.
Bosun thanked steward department
for excellent work: "Food has been
so good that we'll all have to buy a
new set of larger clothes when we
get home!" Next ports: Nagoya,
Japan; Bontang, Indonesia; Tobata,
Japan.
Seafarers LOG 19
Letters to the Editor
(Editors note: the Seafarers
LOG reserves the right to edit
letters for grammar as well as
space provisions without
changing the writer s intent.
The LOG welcomes letters from
members, pensioners, their
families and shipmates and will
publish them on a timely basis.)
Proud Veterans Keep
WWII Facts Straight
(The following letter was
first published in The Daily
News, McKeesport, Pa. ,
October 11, 1999.)
A recent fact sheet from the
national headquarters of the
American Merchant Marine
Veterans, which revealed the
newest casualty figures of
World War II, included the fol
lowing statistics: Merchant
Marine - 1 in 29, Marines - 1 in
34, Navy - 1 in 114.
Many people tried to make
us feel cheap and like second
rate citizens, but no more. We
are proud veterans and our
group had the highest casualty
rate of any of the armed ser
vices.
Do these sound like figures
we should be embarrassed
about? And remember, we all
volunteered in a declared war.
I also sent copies of the
report to the national and state
VFW headquarters to educate
them on World War II history.
In the year 2000, I will have
two chapters in a book on
untold stories of World War II
that should shock most
Americans out of their draw
ers.
Peter Salvo
McKeesport, Pa.
Happy With
New Contract
To all involved in negotiat
ing the new ASM agreement:
On behalf of my SIU broth
ers on board the APL
Philippines and myself, I
extend a vote of thanks to the
SIU negotiating team and
ASM management for the
wage increase. The whole eco
nomic package increase for the
life of the agreement was a big
boost to crew morale.
Special thanks to SIU
President Mike Sacco, Vice
President West Coast Nick
Marrone and the rest of the
SIU Executive Board. We sup
port your hard work and your
fighting dedication for
improving the lives of SIU
merchant mariners and their
families by continuing to add
more jobs and the opportunity
to upgrade skills to ensure suc
cess of its members, like pro
viding STCW training to help
protect the U.S. merchant fleet
from foreign encroachment.
This is truly an exciting
time as our membership con
tinues to grow and with more
jobs on the way!
Also, the maritime industry
needs more innovative compa
nies like ASM.
Keep getting those con
tracts! We as U.S. merchant
mariners will support the
politicians who help preserve
and add more stars-and-stripes
flags atop the growing number
of merchant vessels around the
world.
Jim Wilson, Chief Steward
APL Philippines
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT FOR SEAFARERS
WELFARE FUND AND SUBSIDIARY
This is a summary of the annual report of the Seafarers
Welfare Fund and Subsidiary, EIN 13-5557534, Plan No.
501, for the period January 1, 1998 through December 31 ,
1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required under the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of the
plan , was $27,483,633 as of December 31 , 1998, compared
to $23,785,749 as of January 1, 1998. During the plan year,
the plan experienced an increase in its net assets of
$3,697,884. This increase includes unrealized appreciation
and depreciation in the value of plan assets; that is. the dif
ference between the value of the plan's assets at the end of
the year and the value of the assets at the beginning of the
year or the cost of assets acquired during the year. During
the plan year, the plan had a total income of $46,730,099
including employer contributions of $44,645,526, realized
gains of $272,933 from the sale of assets, and earnings from
investments of $1,755,158.
Plan expenses were $43,032,215. These expenses includ
ed $5,193,485 in administrative expenses and $37,838,730
in benefits paid to participants and beneficiaries.
Your Rights to Additional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual
report, or any part thereof, on request. The items listed
SUMMARY ANNUAL REPORT FOR SEAFARERS
MONEY PURCHASE PENSION PLAN
This is a summary of the annual report for the Seafarers
Money Purchase Pension Plan, EIN 52-1994914, Plan No.
001 ,. for the period January 1, 1998 through December 31 ,
1998. The annual report has been filed with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required under the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
Basic Financial Statement
Benefits under the plan are provided through a trust fund .
Plan expenses were $124,872. These expenses included
$100,964 in administrative expenses and $23,908 in bene
fits paid to participants and beneficiaries. A total of 5, 140
persons were participants in or beneficiaries of the plan at
the end of the plan year.
The value of plan assets, after subtracting liabilities of the
plan , was $3,961,403 as of December 31, 1998, compared
to $2,018 ,318 as of January 1, 1998. During the plan year,
the plan experienced an increase in its net assets of
$1 ,943,085. This increase includes unrealized appreciation
and depreciation in the value of plan assets; that is , the dif
ference between the value of the plan's assets at the end of
the year and the value of the assets at the beginning of the
year or the cost of assets acquired during the year. The plan
had a total income of $2,067,957 including employer contri
butions of $1 ,724,794, employee contributions of $13,442,
realized gains of $75,638 from the sale of assets, and earn
ings from investments of $254,083.
Your Rights to Additional Information
You have the right to receive a copy of the full annual
·Know Your Rights - ·
below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. service provider and trustee information;
3. assets held for investment; and
4. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part there
of, write or call Board of Trustees Seafarers Welfare Fund,
5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746-4211 , (301) 899-
0675. The charge to cover copying costs will be $1.40 for the
full annual report, or 10 cents per page for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan adminis
trator, on request and at no charge, a statement of the
assets and liabilities of the plan and accompanying notes, or
a statement of income and expenses of the plan and accom
panying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annu
al report from the plan administrator, these two statements
and accompanying notes will be included as part of that
report. The charge to cover copying costs given above does
not include a charge for the copying of these portions of the
report because these portions are furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the
annual report at the main office of the plan (Board of
Trustees Seafarers Welfare Fund, 5201 Auth Way, Camp
Springs, MD 20746-4211) and at the U.S. Department of
Labor in Washington, D.C., or to obtain a copy from the U.S.
Department of Labor upon payment of copying costs.
Requests to the Department should be addressed to: Public
Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension and Welfare Benefits
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue, N.W. , Washington, DC 20210.
report, or any part thereof, on request. The items listed
below are included in that report:
1. an accountant's report;
2. assets held for investment;
3. transactions in excess of 5 percent of plan assets; and
4. service provider and trustee information.
To obtain a copy of the full annual report, or any part there
of, write or call Board of Trustees Seafarers Money
Purchase Pension Plan, 5201 Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD
20746, (301) 899-0675. The charge to cover copying costs
will be $1.40 for the full annual report, or 10 cents per page
for any part thereof.
You also have the right to receive from the plan adminis
trator, on request and at no charge, a statement of the
assets and liabilities of the plan and accompanying notes, or
a statement of income and expenses of the plan and accom
panying notes, or both. If you request a copy of the full annu
al report from the plan administrator, these two statements
and accompanying notes will be included as part f hat
report. The charge to cover copying costs given above does
not include a charge for the copying of these portions of the
report because these portions are furnished without charge.
You also have the legally protected right to examine the
annual report at the main office of the p d of
Trustees Seafarers Money Purchase Pension Plan,
Auth Way, Camp Springs, MD 20746) and at the U.S.
Department of Labor in Washington, D.C. , or to obtain a
copy from the U.S. Department of Labor upon payment of
copying costs. Requests to the Department should be
addressed to: Public Disclosure Room, N-5638, Pension
and Welfare Benefits Administration , U.S. Department of
Labor. 200 Constitution Avenue. N.W .. Washington, DC
20210.
FINANCIAL REPORTS. The constitution of the SIU
Atlantic, Gulf, Lakes and Inland Waters District makes specif
ic 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 submit
ted 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 recom
mendations and separate findings.
tions 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 offi
cial fails to protect their contractual rights properly, he or she
should contact the nearest SIU port agent.
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. Conse
quently, no member may be discriminated against because of
race, creed, color, sex, national or geographic origin.
TRUST FUNDS. All trust funds of the SIU Atlantic, Gulf,
Lakes and Inland Waters District are administered in accor
dance 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 dis
bursements 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 con
tained in the contracts between the union and the employers,
they should notify the Seafarers Appeals Board 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 mem
bers 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 condi-
20 Seafarers LOG
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 pub
lishing 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 dele
gate, 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 offi
cial 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 meth
ods, 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
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 lim
ited 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 contribu
tion may be solicited or received because of force, job dis
crimination, 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 con
duct, the member should notify the Seafarers International
Union or SPAD by certified mail within 30 days of the con
tribution 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 immediate
ly notify SIU President Michael Sacco at headquarters by cer
tified mail, return receipt requested. The address is:
Michael Sacco, President
Seafarers International Union
5201 Auth Way
Camp Springs, MD 20746.
December 1999
SEAFARERS PAUL HALL CENTER
2000 UPGRADING COURSE SCHEDULE
The following is the schedule for classes for the first few months of 2000 at
the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education in Piney Point, Md.
All programs are geared to improve the job skills of Seafarers and to promote
the American maritime industry.
Please note that this schedule may change to reflect the needs of the mem
bership, the maritime industry and-in times of conflict-the nation's 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 reserva
tions 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.
Deck Upgrading Courses
Course
Able Seaman
Able Seaman - Inland
Lifeboatman
Radar
Automatic Radar Plotting Aids*
(ARPA) (*must have radar unlimited)
Start Date
January 24
February 21
January 24
January 10
February 1
January 17
March 6
January 10
January 31
Engine Upgrading Courses
Course
Fireman/Watertender & Oiler
QMED
Basic Electronics
Mari e Electronics Technician I
Welding
Start Date
January 10
January 24
January 10
January 31
January 10
February 14
Steward Upgrading Courses
Course Start Date
Date of Completion
February 18
March 17
February 11
January 21 (pre-AB)
Feb. 19 (pre-AB)
January 28
March 17
January 14
February 4
Date of Completion
February 18
April 14
January 28
February 18
January 28
March3
Galley Operations/ January 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
Advanced Galley Operations February 7, 14, 21, 28
(Every week) March 6, 13, 20, 27
Certified Chief Cook/ January 10, 24
Chief Steward February 7, 21
(Every other week) March 6, 20
Safety Specialty Courses
Course
Tanker Familiarization/
Assistant Cargo (DL)*
(*must have basicfirefighting)
Basic Firefighting
Advanced Firefighting
Government Vessels
STCW Basic Safety (refresher)
Tankerman (PIC) Barge*
(*must have basic fire fighting)
LNG Familiarization*
(*must have advanced fire fighting)
Oil Spill Containment
Start Date
January 10
February 7
March 6
January 17
February 28
January IO
February 14
March 6
January 31
February 28
February 7
March 6
January 24
March 13
February 28
February 28
Academic Department Courses
Date of Completion
January 28
February 25
March 24
January 21
March 3
January 21
February 25
March 17
February 18
March 17
February 11
March 10
January 28
March 17
March 3
March 3
General education and college courses are available as needed. In addition,
basic vocational support program courses are offered throughout the year,
one week prior to the AB, QMED, FOWT, Third Mate, Tanker Assistant
and Water Survival courses. An introduction to computers course will be
self-study.
The January edition of the
Seafarers LOG will contain
a complete .guide of all the
upgrading courses avail
able to Seafarers in the
~ __ :'.\_ _____________________________________ _
UPGRADING APPLICATION
Date of Birth Telephone __________ _
- --------
Deep Sea Member D Lakes Member D Inland Waters Member D
If the following information is not filled out completely, your application will not be
processed.
Social Security# ________ _
Seniority ____________ Department _ _ ______ _
U.S. Citizen: Yes D No D Home Port
Endorsement(s) or License(s) now held ______________ _ _
Are you a graduate of the SHLSS/PHC trainee program? D Yes DNo
If yes, class#-------------------------
Have you attended any SHLSS/PHC upgrading courses? D Yes DNo
If yes, course(s) taken _____________________ _
Do you hold the U.S. Coast Guard Lifeboatman Endorsement?
D Yes D No Firefighting: D Yes D No CPR: D Yes D No
Primary language spoken --------------------
December 1999
With this application, COPIES of the following must be sent: One hundred and twenty
(120) days sea time for the previous year, one day in the last six months prior to the date
your class starts, USM MD (z-card) front and back, front page of your union book indi
cating your department and seniority, and qualifying seatime for the course if it is
Coast Guard tested. All FOWT. AB and QMED applicants must submit a U.S. Coast Guard
fee of $280 with their apvlication. The pavment should be made with a money order onlv.
payable to LMSS.
COURSE
BEGIN
DATE
END
DATE
LAST VESSEL: ______________ Rating: ___ _
Date On: ___________ _ Date Off:
SIGNATURE _____________ DATE
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 ques
tions, contact your port agent before departing for Piney Point.
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.
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 quali
fied, 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. 12199
Seafarers LOG 21
Paul Hall Center Graduating Classes
Power Plant Maintenance - Graduating from power plant maintenance course on
October 22 are (from left, first row) William Kelley, Timothy Horger, Thomas Keseru, Gonzie
Knott, (second row) Joseph Grandinetti, Steve Stepanski, Ursel Barber, Lawrence Rose
and Eric Malzkuhn (instructor).
Tankerman (PIC) Barge - Marking completion of the tankerman (PIC) barge class
on October 22 are (from left, seated) Mohamed Hossain, Daniel Gishy, Mark Wain, Walter
Loveless, (second row) Michael Mayo, Patrick David, Mitch Oakley (instructor) and Bill
Pratley.
Marine Electrical Maintenance - SIU mem
bers completing the marine electrical maintenace course
on October 29 are (from left) Carl Montoya, Sjarifudin
Noor, Nathan Hollander, Abdulrub Atiah, Angel
Hernandez, Gregory Johns, Steven Hoskins, Pompey
Alegado, Jeffrey Levie and Mark Jones (instructor).
Government Vessels - With
instructor Stan Beck (far left, standing)
are students who completed the govern
ment vessels course on October 15.
From the left (kneeling) are Artemio
Rivera, Waseem Dhalai, Benjamin
Mathews, Kenji Hoffman, Benign
Padaoan, Maximo Loto Jr., (standing)
Beck, Rodney Jimenez, Deion Nguyen,
Sean Ryan, Ali Naser, Abdulsalem
Mohamed, Stephen Hill, Sammy
Montana and Marcial Avila.
22 Seafarers LOG
Galley Operations - Finishing one of the required two-week modules in the gal
ley operations curriculum are (from left, kneeling) Robert Valentine, Saundra Leonard,
Ty Heller, Vicente Ordonez, Arsenio Gusilator Jr., (standing) Chef/Instructor Ed White,
John Stephen, Edgardo Ong, Jeffrey Badua, Abdellalif Benjouhra, Charles Carrol, Mark
Wertanen and Gregorio Bernardez.
December 1999
Paul Hall Center Graduating Classes
Able Seaman Receiving their certificates for completion of the AB class on
October 29 are (from left, seated at first table) Wincell Hightower Jr., Bobby Brown,
Michael Watkins Sr., Louis Creekmur, (second table) Russell Shaw Jr., Leroy Reed,
Julian Lacuesta Jr., Fadehl Saleh, (third table) Todd Conley, Virgilio Managbanag, Carlos
Arauz, (standing) Bernabe Pelingon (instructor), William Bruce, Velly Marquez, Simeon
Rivas, Khaled Munasser, Richard Pepper and Francisco Harry.
QMED - Completing their QMED training on December 3 are (in alphabetical order)
Pantala Allee, Servando Canales Jr., Stanley Castro, Jonathan Driggers, Paul Duquette,
Mike Kifle, John Leiter, Tran Luu, Keith Manzano, Thaddeus Pisarek, Jeffrey Roddy,
Mark Roman, Dwight Ward and Taylor Watson. (Note: not all the students are in the pho
tograph). The class, ta_µght by Barney Kane, was a challenging one for the upgraders,
with a large volume of material and a very technical subject matter.
Able Seaman - Instructor Tom Gilliland looks over students as they
work toward completion of the AB curriculum on October 29. Registered in
the class were David Roof, Jonathan Morgan, Pernell Fulford, Timothy
Barker, Matthew Bjerk, Bryon Baker, Jonathan Paul, Gregory Pratt, Peri
Drew, Ondongee Pegram, Joseph Weller, Timothy Fernandez, Terry Gilliland,
Gregory Hendryx, Shelby Rankin, Anthony Lowman, Russell Williams and
George Barbour.
The same students completed the basic fire fighting class (right) with instruc
tor Rick Redmond on October 15.
FOWT - Graduating from the FOWT course on
November 19 are (from left, first row) James Tyson,
Ahmed Sharif, Anthony Jordan, John Millward, Jean
Horne, Frank Patrick Jr., Phillip Johnson Sr., Adel Gabel,
Timothy Bixby, (second row) Kanin Bennett, Michael
Blue Jr., Michael Joel, Charles Sadler, Adriano Coutinho,
Erik Haik, John Petushin, Justin Seybert, Gregory
Cherry, Natalie Rivas, Eric Nelson, Charles Jones,
Sylvester Crawford, (third row) Keith Kowaleski, Charles
Jensen, John Conn, Eddie Pittman, Noel Encarnacion,
Scott Lucero, Timothy Graham, Daniel Tapley, (fourth
row) William Hayes and Vincent Hupp-Time.
December 1999
Government Vessels - With instructor Stan Beck (far lright) are some of the stu
dents who completed the government vessels course on September 3. Included on the
class roster are (in no particular order) Jose Clatter, Juan Ortiz, Arzu Secuindino, Charles
Mann, Ted Hale, Christine Short, Kathryn Rivera, Dan Eglund, A. Allen, Greg Gallagher,
Allan Bright, Pat Gibson, Eric Bridges, Michael Skinto, Liana McKinney, Tania
Simunovich, Syed Mehdi, Herbert Daniels, Jeffrey Badua, Abdellalif Banjouhra, Reuben
Brown, William Schuppman, John Eaton, Harold Lewis, Duane Reeder, Willard Bell, Rally
Espiritu and Hector Guity.
Tanker Assistant Cargo (DL)- Upgrading Seafarers complete the tanker assis
tant cargo (DL) course on October 15. Included in the photo are (in no particular order)
Spencer Moxley Sr., Alvin Martin, Willie Howard Ill, Linda Barber, Mohamed Bidar, William
Meyer, Jose Vazquez, Elmo Davis, Edward O'Reilly, Mohamed Hossain, Mott Arnold,
Gary Lamb and Nestor Agcaoili. Their instructor, Jim Shafer, is standing in the rear (cen
ter).
Seafarers LOG 23
F
I
I
I
m.snf .... •'I Volume 61 Number 12 December 1999
The U.S. Great Lakes fleet is on the move from mid
March until late January, when the locks at Sault
St. Marie, Mich. close for the frigid winter.
While iron ore, stone and coal
remain the chief cargoes, others
like cement, salt, grain, liquid bulk
products and sand-round out the
diversity of loads carried by the
efficient lakers.
The photos on this page show some
of the hard-working crew members and
their activites aboard three Great Lakes vessels
crewed by SIU members-American Steamship
Company's Buffalo and American Republic, and Southdown Cement's
Southdown Challenger.
The Southdown Challenger's hull
and deck recently got a fresh
coat of paint in Milwaukee,
and the pilot house was
recarpeted. At left, the ves
sel is on her way to the
Southdown cement plant in
Charlevoix for a new load.
Bosun (and master wood-worker) Levi Sanford,
Southdown Challenger
OS Eric Corwin, AB Eugene
Repko, QMED David
Cameron, OS Musid Musleh,
American Republic
Right: Wiper
Abdul Saeed,
Buffalo
Below: Bosun
Boyd Messer,
Buffalo
24 Seafarers LOG
Deckhand Michael Cushman,
Southdown Challenger
Summary Annual Reports
MCS Pension Plan • p. 8
Seafarers Pension Plan • p. 8
Great Lakes Tug Be Dredge Pension Plan - p. 8
Seafarers Vacation Plan - p. 8
Seafarers Welfare Plan • p. 20
Seafarers Money Purchase Pension Plan · p. 20
With a
strong de
mand for the
delivery of stone through
out the Lakes, the Buffalo shows no
signs of slowing down.
Second Cook
Darrell Bays,
Buffalo
Above: QMED Brian Gelaude,
Buffalo
Left: Watchman Paul Bird,
Southdown Challenger
June 1999
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