The ferry Martha's Vineyard gave a brief scare Saturday evening when a warning light cancelled the 5 p.m. trip from Woods Hole to Vineyard Haven, but technicians were able to fix the issue, said Marc Hanover, the Vineyard representative on the Steamship Authority board of governors.
With a holiday weekend underway, the Steamship Authority was limping back toward regular service following a spate of mechanical problems that have disabled the two main passenger ferries to the Vineyard and prompted widespread frustration from passengers weary of two weeks of travel disruptions.
The ferry Martha’s Vineyard had resumed making trips between Vineyard Haven and Woods Hole Thursday morning after nearly two weeks of being in and out of service because of mechanical issues, then gave a brief scare Saturday evening when a warning light cancelled the 5 p.m. trip from Woods Hole to Vineyard Haven, said Marc Hanover, the Vineyard representative on the Steamship Authority board of governors. Technicians were able to fix the issue and the ferry is expected to run as schedule, he said.
Meanwhile the ferry Woods Hole remained at the Steamship Authority’s Fairhaven maintenance facility because of ongoing problems with the ship’s operating system. The Island Home is also in Fairhaven, awaiting redeployment. Neither boat is expected back this weekend.
The Steamship Authority reports that they have been unable to carry the same number of vehicles as had reservations due to the switching around of available boats. "As a result we have had to change more than 50 vehicle reservations to other trips this weekend where space was still available," the website states. All customers are advised to check their status online, the alert states.
The SeaStreak fast ferry Whaling City Express, first brought into service when both ferries were sidelined for most of last weekend, was pulled back into service Thursday afternoon to provide high-speed passenger-only service throughout the Easter holiday weekend.
The Katama will be making an additional trip on Sunday night, leaving Woods Hole at 10:45 p.m., and standby lines will be open through the weekend. "But we do not expect that there will be enough open space for standby customers to travel off-Island from Vineyard Haven during Saturday morning or back to the Island from Woods Hole begining late Sunday afternoon," the alert states.
“This whole situation has been horrendous,” Mr, Hanover told the Gazette Thursday. He has called for an independent marine consultant to review the Steamship Authority, specifically operations and communication, so the situation does not happen again. He said the boat line is also working on scheduling a meeting on the Vineyard to meet with customers face to face.
“We’ve lost the confidence of our customers, and the only way to regain that is to run efficiently and consistently,” he said.
Problems have plagued Steamship Authority ferries for nearly two weeks, with the two main passenger ferries repeatedly returning to service after repairs only to be pulled again a short time later.
The Martha’s Vineyard, which lost power off East Chop nearly two weeks ago, returned to service Tuesday night after nearly a week at the Steamship Authority Fairhaven facility. It was back out of service from Wednesday morning to Thursday morning.
Steamship Authority general manager Robert A. Davis said Thursday that repairs were done overnight to a circuit breaker in a switchboard on the vessel. Earlier issues originated with generators, he said, and the circuit breaker issue does not appear to be related.
Mr. Davis said all of the issues on the Martha’s Vineyard appear to be tied to a recent $18.5-million midlife refurbishment. The ferry returned to service in early March after work was completed by Senesco Co. in Rhode Island. While there were still some punchlist items to complete at the time it returned to service, Mr. Davis said, the ferry had been cleared by the Coast Guard to return to service.
He said representatives from Senesco, vendors, and Steamship Authority engineering staff have been looking into the systems on board.
The ferry Woods Hole, a freight/passenger hybrid that is nearly two years old, has also been in and out of service for nearly two weeks, beginning with an incident in which the ferry grounded briefly in Vineyard Haven harbor. The Woods Hole was pulled out of service Tuesday afternoon after returning to service two days earlier. Mr. Davis said the problem is with a control panel and a technician arrived Wednesday and was working on the vessel all day Thursday. Sea trials were also conducted Thursday, he said.
Mr. Davis said an alarm with an error message relating to a propeller was similar to what happened last week on the ferry when there were valves broken.
Technicians are looking into it, he said, and trying to diagnose the system. He said the ferry will return to service once the staff is confident it will be safe.
“We owe it to our customers that the service we’re providing is reliable, and to make sure we don’t keep chasing the issue around,” he said.
Mr. Davis said the issues with the two regular passenger ferries are unrelated and have happened to occur on both ferries at the same time.
He said he has confidence in the steamship crews to identify any issues so the ferries only run when it is safe to do so. In light of the recent spate of mechanical concerns, he said, “I’m sure they were all in a heightened sense of awareness. We provide the captain and his or her crew the ability to be making that call...if they feel it’s not safe conditions we don’t want them operating.”
The freight ferry Sankaty will continue to make runs for the Woods Hole this weekend, he said. The SeaStreak ferry Whaling City Express, which normally provides summer service between New Bedford and the Vineyard, has been pulled from its winter mooring in New Jersey and chartered by the Steamship Authority to provide service until Monday, April 2. With fast ferry trips taking about 20 minutes, the SeaStreak is scheduled to run daily from 6 a.m. through 10 p.m., with trips from Vineyard Haven leaving on the hour and trips from Woods Hole leaving on the half-hour.
“The decision was made to bring that in because we needed to provide a passage for our customers,” Mr. Davis said. He said the boat line will be putting together an estimate of how much the chartered service has cost, but “we erred on the side that we knew that we need to have something here.”
Mr. Davis praised the staff at SeaStreak for being easy to work with and acknowledged that the fast ferry service has been popular with passengers, some of whom have called on the Steamship Authority to provide that service regularly between the Vineyard and Woods Hole.
“Clearly we’re going to have to look at this,” he said. “I know I’ve been down in Woods Hole and in Vineyard Haven and talking with a number of customers. We’ve heard from them they’d like a service like that.”
Mr. Davis said the boat line has one fast ferry, which operates seasonally between Hyannis and Nantucket.
“We’d have to balance it in terms of what we are able to do in terms of designing and building a vessel, scheduling and berthing,” he said. He added that passenger tickets for the fast ferry to Nantucket are twice the amount of regular ferry tickets, and that price difference would likely be the same for a Vineyard high speed ferry because of higher operational costs.
Mr. Davis said he has talked to Mr. Hanover about a review of Steamship operations. “I understand that Islanders are relying on us to be able to provide this system, and for those things to be happening on top of one another, we don’t find it to be acceptable ourselves, and I’m sure our customers don’t. So we’ll be looking at how best to prepare a review of what’s been going on and what occurred, what we did right, what we did wrong, and how we can improve.”
A look at the Martha’s Vineyard ferry fleet.
On the Vineyard, patience was wearing thing this week, from passengers who had to cancel off-Island plans to businesses taking a hit from delayed deliveries.
“I’ve been coming to the Island since 1970 and I’ve never seen it like this,” John Clock said as he waited in line with his car at the Vineyard Haven terminal Tuesday night.
The next morning more customers were waiting in line, including Joe Smith of Signature Oyster. He said he had been at the terminal since 5:30 a.m. with a truck full of oysters. “I have refrigerated stuff on here. I can’t just walk away from it,” he said.
Grace Jackson said she would miss a health and wellness class she had paid $250 to take.
“Why do your boats keep breaking
when you charge more money,” she said. “They need to do something.”
Mr. Hanover said he’s been hearing from upset residents. “My cell phone is running out of power,” he said. “Hoteliers, all kinds of people, they’re scared and I totally understand it. They need to understand this is a very unusual circumstance. The Steamship handled it as best they possibly can...these guys deserve credit, Steamship Authority staff, management... none of them have had a day off since this whole thing started.”
But Mr. Hanover said he hoped that an independent review would also look at other issues, too. “Before all this started boats were leaving late and I was upset about that,” he said. “And why different captains cancel more than others, and I want to know why. And we need to figure out a main schedule so in the future, hopefully, we can always have three large boats. I don’t know if that’s possible.”
Mr. Hanover said he was trying to schedule a board of governors meeting on the Vineyard to address customers concerns directly. “The one thing I keep hearing is poor communication. We really need to address that,” he said.
He said he also saw a silver lining. “We need to thank God this didn’t happen in July and August,” he said. “The real key is to see that it does not. Far more safeguards in place. In the event a major boat should go down, we need to be ready.”
Meanwhile the large passenger ferry Island Home has been out of service since early January for scheduled dry-dock maintenance and repairs. An advance schedule had the ferry returning to service March 24. Mr. Davis said that return date was just an estimate and was always subject to change.
Maintenance work for the Island home was done at Senesco, the same place where the Martha’s Vineyard refurbishment was completed, and Mr. Davis said some staff were used for the Martha’s Vineyard that would have worked on the Island Home.
Mr. Davis said the new schedule for the Island Home’s return to service was originally set for this Friday, but during testing and a Coast Guard inspection Thursday the Steamship Authority determined that software for the valve thruster on the Vineyard Haven end of the vessel required an update that either wasn’t done or did not take. “We have to have a technician come back to update that software before the vessel can be cleared,” Mr. Davis said.
He said the boat line would plan to continue running freight ferries Sankaty and Katama in addition to the SeaStreak through the holiday weekend. He said it wasn’t clear when the Island Home would be cleared for service.

Comments
Mr. Hanover says, “We need to
UnhappyCustomer West TisburyMr. Hanover says, “We need to thank God this didn’t happen in July or August.” Really? Easy for you to say, sir, given that you now close your Oak Bluffs restaurant every winter and spend those months yourself in a warmer place. Winter ferry disruptions don’t impact you or your business. Have you forgotten the stated mission in the SSA charter: to be the lifeline for island residents? Year round residents who lost work, missed medical care, didn’t receive important package delivery and had to abandon important family events like birthdays, weddings and funerals are most assuredly not relieved that seasonal business owners didn’t lose money. Please reconsider this “summer is the only time that really counts” attitude and pay attention to the people you represent - year round lifeline customers - not the tourists who keep seasonal business in money.
I live on the island year
Scruffy VHI live on the island year-round and was certainly affected by the boat fiasco the past two weeks. HOWEVER, I certainly agree with Mr. Davis on the matter of "thank god it didn't happen in July or August" Wouldn't we all lose a lot more business if something like that happened in the summer and we couldn't open due to running out of supplies and not being able to get deliveries? Unless of course you're a hotel owner. Not to mention, I sure as 'heck' would be grateful as an SSA employee to be dealing with us understanding off-season folk, rather than crazy, entitled, privileged, and impatient tourists in the summer time. Every day that a boat of August people does not get stranded on our island, is a good day in my book. Our community is so great for a reason. We don't act like this.
How about "...thank God the
WashAbhorred EdgartownHow about "...thank God the boat that lost power didn't end up smashed into the rocks with injuries or deaths?" Summer visitors, seasonals, and year-rounders can all live through some delayed and canceled ferries...the same can't be said for SSA boats going completely dead in the water. There have been a number of collisions, two boats have run aground (VH Harbor and the Nantucket boat) and another sat without power in open water in the last year. Something is wrong and needs to be corrected before we have a tragedy to deal with.
We also need to question why a boat coming out of extensive maintenance and another boat that is about a year old are suffering significant issues. Is maintenance not being performed? Are items not being thoroughly checked at regular intervals? The Woods Hole seems to have had problems since launch when it was having issues being bow heavy.
We need to determine if the problems that have been evident are design based, mechanical issues, or caused by human errors or negligence and let's hope it is done before we're looking at a real emergency.
Scruffy,
Chris OBScruffy,
I sure hope you don’t rely on seasonal resident or visitor business. I still am in awe how an island that relies on tourist and seasonal resident business can hate them so much. If seasonal residents didn’t pay their taxes all year round and virtually never use them (fire, schools, police, etc.) and if tourists didn’t spend all their money at our stores where would we be. Shame on you all.
Scruffy clearly pays no
Michael OBScruffy clearly pays no property taxes here.
If he was on vacation in Florida and the inconvenience was his he would think very differently.
Get your act together,
Paulie PeteGet your act together, Steamship. This is inexcusable. And while you're at it, lower the rate for islanders and make it one affordable year round rate.
There were no “management “
John C Verret ChilmarkThere were no “management “ people in evidence when the line of passengers waiting for the Sea Streak’s first run was waiting outside for more than an hour. They told us it would arrive at 1p, then 2p, then 2:30p. People were freezing in the wind and cold wondering if anyone actually knew when the boat woulf arrive.
No announcements were made to the line of passengers that included many elderly folks and many people not dressed for the weather.
Not one manager was outside at any time.
When the boat arrived well after 3p, the crew was wonderful. That first run took less than 20 minutes and the crew seemed happy to have us aboard. An attitude that is rarely in evidence with SSA personnel.
What happened to common sense when boat design decisions are made at SSA? The Island Home can’t run in normal winds. The Martha’s Vineyard depends on too much technological features that no one knows anything about, and the Woods Hole combines the worst of the first two.
Bring back the Islander design. It had one feature that we.all loved: it ran reliably.
And the Islander's simple
Albie Scott Santpoort Zuid, NL.And the Islander's simple design allowed for easy and efficient embarcation and disembarcation.
10 years of building huge
Allen R Woods Hole10 years of building huge ferries that are totally incompatible with each other is a recipe for disaster.
Come on guys....we all loved
Hugh Weisman Chilmark & New York CityCome on guys....we all loved the Islander. Those of us that are old enough probably loved our first car also...manual transmission, AM/FM radio, drum brakes, wind-up windows, a real key, easy to repair. But times have changes, engine controls and much more is electronic, labor replaced by mechanization (except for those ancient cranks on the gangways at the slips). We're not going back. The Martha's Vineyard has given us great service for many years. The Woods Hole is still finding it's way, but has the potential to be a great addition to the fleer. Whether or not, the recent spate of breakdown's is just bad luck, but perhaps not unexpected for new boats / technologies, the real problem is the SSA's lack of planning for potential problems. Why have so many boats out of service for routine maintenance at the same time, leaving nothing to fall back on except two freight boats? Are the crews properly trained to identify and correct issues with the new boat and new technologies before they result in a boat having to be pulled from service.....But worse than all this, is the SSA's dismal lack of providing information to their customers that's timely, kept up to date, honest, and disseminated widely. Case in point -----today's SSA website provides estimated wait times for standbys as they typically do, but no where provides any info on the current situation; which boats are out of service, which trips have substitute boats, no mention of the Seastreak passenger only boat. And no "We're sorry!"
When you spend a total of
brian EdgartownWhen you spend a total of $120 million of our money on 3 boats and none of them are available you look like fools. Plain and simple. this is not about the workers.
Brian,
Jim F. EdgartownBrian,
$120 million is not a lot of money.
Personally I never you use the SSA I have the luxury of owning a plane. But when I do travel by boat the SSA do a wonderful job..
This is Island life and a small bump in the road.., please see the big picture.
i do see the big picture!
brian edgartowni do see the big picture! which is why for the money they spend they could move freight and cars on less expensive freight boats and passenger only fast ferries. Streamline the whole operation. Move people faster. they haven't changed the schedule in my 60 yrs of life!!!!
Ok so I'm assuming that jims
Maureen Fischer West TisburyOk so I'm assuming that jims comment is tongue in cheek. Otherwise, it smacks of HUBRIS.
I mange a neighborhood
Mike Melrose/ EdgartownI mange a neighborhood association on the island and we had to go through some upgrades- we had detractors but we prevailed - The Steamship runs a tight ship and we should be patient while they upgrade.
What is happening to the
David Jordan Oak Bluffs & WorcesterWhat is happening to the notion of a kinder more forgiving island attitude ? We have chosen to live on an island and with that comes its inconveniences balanced by a different quality of life. Would we prefer back to back traffic delays on Rt 90 heading into Boston each day ? I ‘ve been inconvenienced like many with the ferry service recently but lets put this into perspective- we live on one if the beautiful places in the planet and occasionally we can expect a glitch. I think the management of the SSA has done a good job of responding to an issue. Could a better , more timely communication system be developed - probably - but lets not disparage everything they do to maintain our lifestyle. In terms of a fast ferry (SeaStreak ) service - please lets consider not inly the pros but the many cons; like an overwhelming influx of people the island may not be able to accomodate during the summer. I grew up in Newport, RI when we still had a ferry service to get off island. Then we built a bridge and everything changed for the worse, in my opinion. If we want to maintaun our slower more mindful island lifestyle then a fast ferry bringing in thousands more people each day may in fact NOT be something we want. Lets not react without a thoughtful dialogue. I for one would not want to sacrifice our quality of life for 20 minutes less time on the ferry.
Time to Build the Tunnel!
Jim Oak BluffsTime to Build the Tunnel!
I agree - Nantucket already
Carl H TisburyI agree - Nantucket already has one, and it's great (although summer traffic backs up on Friday evenings): https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/-OIAAOSwTM5Yuwv5/s-l300.jpg
I have not visited the
Christine Powers WalthamI have not visited the Vineyard since 2007, the year I was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis (MS). I managed the steps on the ferry with some difficulty that year, but now that my disease has progressed, I wonder if the big ferries or the freight ferries could accommodate me, as I am more disabled now. Are elevators available? I would love to return to the Vineyard, where I lived from 1973 to 1987, but the ferry fiasco makes it problematic.
Yes. The Woods Hole, Martha's
Hugh Weisman Chilmark & New YorkYes. The Woods Hole, Martha's Vineyard, Island Home, all have elevators....With the freight ferries, you can stay in your car...On the Governor, the passenger area is flush with the car area.
Thank you Hugh for your
Douglas Korves AIA Always on IslandThank you Hugh for your accessibility advice - it takes an architect.
Still have my blue and green “diagonally and trianglely designed” first Chilmary Road Race T-shirt. A great graphic.
The new ferrys are much more
Wendy Lopez FalmouthThe new ferrys are much more accessible. Its also easier if you use the freight deck to access the elevators.
I like using the fast ferry
Bart Vineyard HavenI like using the fast ferry for passenger service to Woods Hole. Any chance this can continue when the big boats are back?
The Sea Streak is comfortable - seats for everyone and the trip takes 20 minutes.
Ferry Management needs to
Jim West TisburyFerry Management needs to change. Heads need to roll.
Why does the Bridgeport Ferry have a WW11 boat still in service and running well and we can never get well designed and efficient boats to run to the Vineyard ? Why does the Vineyard need a new overpriced ferry terminal in Woodshole when the Steamship is about finish their new building at the Palmer lot ? The Steamship is acting like they just won the lottery.
Build the bridge
Mel Shatcher FalmouthBuild the bridge
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