
What's going on with the ferries? Marine engineer questions safety of Canada's ships
CBC
An onboard fire, a lost propeller, and a collision with a wharf have a marine engineer at Dalhousie University wondering what the federal government is doing to ensure that Canada's ferries are safe.
Two of these acccidents happened this month.
The Queen of New Westminster, which connects Vancouver Island to B.C.'s mainland, was pulled from service in the first week of September after a propeller sheared off during a crossing. On Sunday, the MV Confederation ferry, running between Nova Scotia and P.E.I., suffered a mechanical failure that caused it to slam into the wharf, punching a small hole in the bow.
In 2022, the Holiday Island caught fire while crossing between P.E.I. and Nova Scotia. The ferry was evacuated and later scrapped.
"It does bring into question what's going on on these ships," said John Dalziel, an adjunct professor in industrial engineering at Dalhousie University in Halifax.
"There seems to be a problem in Canada, across the country, particularly with ferries."
There were no serious injuries associated with any of these accidents, but Dalziel said the Holiday Island fire in particular had the potential to be a serious disaster. As it turned out, the fire started in calm weather and just as the ferry was pulling into the dock.
Had it happened in rough weather in the middle of the Northumberland Strait, the outcome might have been different, said Dalziel.
The Holiday Island fire came just weeks after a CBC News report detailed maintenance problems with the ferry.
Those problems, which led to the ferry being out of service for much of 2016, should have been noticed earlier, said Dalziel.
"That ship was in very bad condition and it should have been known that it was in very bad condition," he said.
A further concern, he said, is that two years after the Holiday Island fire there is still no report on the cause. Such reports are important to preventing similar future accidents, he said.
"I'd go to [Confederation] Bridge now," said Dalziel about how to get on and off P.E.I.
"I'd rather go on the ferry myself. I like boat rides, but they don't seem to have reliability."

Mark Carney and Pierre Poilievre faced the critical glare of the mega-popular Radio-Canada talk show Tout le monde en parle on Sunday in an attempt to woo francophone viewers, with the Liberal leader being pressed on his cultural awareness of the province and his Conservative rival differentiating himself against perceptions in Quebec he is a "mini-Trump."