Pubdate: Fri, 05 Jan 2001 Source: Staten Island Advance (NY) Copyright: 2001 Advance Publication Inc. Contact: http://www.silive.com/ Forum: http://www.silive.com/forums/ Author: Michael Wagner and Alysha Sideman FERRY SKIPPER AWOL ON DRUG-TEST DAY Assistant Captain Is Suspended And Thousands Are Delayed An assistant ferry captain allegedly ducked out of work Wednesday after learning random drug tests would be conducted that day, ferry sources said. His absence forced the city to cut back on the boat schedule, causing delays for thousands of commuters. Numerous sources said yesterday that the officer, who works on the Andrew J. Barberi ferryboat, left the St. George terminal after he arrived for his 1:30 to 9:30 p.m. shift and learned he was going to be tested that afternoon. "He jumped back in his car and took off," said a source, who requested anonymity. When the assistant captain returned to work around 4 p.m., he told his supervisors he was tending to a family emergency, sources said. But ferry officials reportedly didn't buy that and, according to one high-ranking source, the officer was suspended for an indefinite amount of time with pay. The assistant captain is the son of a long-time ferry employee, now retired, who garnered a great deal of respect among the crews, sources said. To some he was considered a "mentor," one source said. Tom Cocola, a spokesman for the city's Department of Transportation (DOT), which oversees ferry operations, would confirm only that a boat was pulled from service for personnel reasons. "We went to the reduced schedule because of absenteeism that shouldn't have happened," he said. "This matter is now under internal investigation." Although captains are ultimately responsible for the operation of the boats, most crews divide the five-mile cross-harbor trips, with the captain steering and docking the boat in one direction and the assistant steering and docking in the other. Under U.S. Coast Guard regulations, in order for any of the ferries to run there must be a complete crew on board. For the two 6,000-passenger Barberi-class boats, the crew must number 16 people. The ferry employs 16 assistant captains and 170 deckhands. Because another employee could not be summoned to work on such short notice, one of the understaffed car boats was forced to remain docked for the evening rush. A three-boat schedule, rather than the normal four-boat schedule, was instituted. Ferry service, which normally runs boats every 15 minutes during the rush, remained on a three-boat, 20-minute schedule until 7 p.m., at which time it resumed a regular half-hour schedule. "It caused pandemonium, as people waited for over an hour for [car] boats," said a source. Jim LaRiviera, president of the Marine Engineers Beneficial Association, the union representing captains and mates, said he knew about the incident but declined to comment on it. He did say all of his members are required to pass a drug test at least one year prior to when they are hired. Random drug testing for ferry employees is done regularly. Even DOT, which pays an independent medical contractor to perform the tests, doesn't know when an employee will be tapped, said Ken Concecion, chief of the deep-raft division of the U.S. Coast Guard, which oversees inspections for all vessels over 100 tons in New York Harbor. "They have a name, and they come down and say we want to see X, X and X," Concecion said. "They might say he's on a run, or this is his day off, so then they put it off to the next day. But the ferry management doesn't even know when it's going to happen. When we say random, we mean random." Employees can't outrun the tests. If an employee doesn't show up the day his or her name is drawn, the test will simply be administered the following day. "At some point in time, they're going to catch him," Concecion said. On average, employees are tested about once or twice a month. But tests can always be requested in the event that a supervisor suspects a problem with a particular employee. "That's why the testing is a 24-hour operation," Concecion said. "We'll have guys coming in on a weekend, even." Drug testing records are confidential. If employees come up positive, they are pulled from the job until a Coast Guard-authorized physician checks them out, he said. Typically, if they're caught a second time, their licenses are revoked. "It does depend, though, on the individual's record," Concecion added. "If it's a first offense, we're not going to take that person's livelihood away." The ferry is no stranger to allegations of employee misconduct or error. On Nov. 17 last year, a rush-hour ferry, manned by an eight-person crew including a captain, six deckhands and an oilman, crashed into a slip at Whitehall Terminal. Witnesses said the boat was moving too fast. Drug tests were conducted on the crew and one urine sample showed traces of nitrate, a substance sometimes used to throw off drug test results. The deckhand in question was suspended. Last Jan. 6, eight ferry workers were rounded up aboard the American Legion and suspended for allegedly running a floating, high-stakes card game in the vessel's locker room. On Dec. 17, 1999, Saul Jones, 50, of St. George, died after going into cardiac arrest on the Lehman as it left the dock at St. George. Deckhands could not find a CPR mask and the boat took far too long to return to the St. George slip, witnesses said. A similar incident in October 1997 saw Satya Vohra, a 47-year old Queens woman, left unattended on board the Lehman for 10 minutes after going into cardiac arrest. Deckhands reportedly couldn't find a CPR mask and some didn't know plastic resuscitation masks were available. The woman died. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe