Maritime Security Heightens
Along Mississippi From new bills passed by Congress to high-tech tracking equipment
and increased opportunities for training, ports along the Mississippi
are continuing to boost maritime security. In hopes of preventing terrorists from attacking
the nation’s
ports, both the House and Senate voted in November to tighten security
at all 361 of the United States’ maritime ports. Under the
new security plans, workers will undergo background checks, ports
must set up a security committee and ships need an automatic identification
system (AIS) so they can be tracked while in U.S. waters. AIS is an onboard transponder that gives continuous,
real-time updates. It can either be installed in the ships or carried
onboard by pilots to automatically identify ships, pilots and cargo.
This high-tech equipment is superior to using radars and contacts
from the vessel’s
bridge and was developed as part of the Vessel Traffic Service (VTS)
that Crescent and NOBRA pilots help the Coast Guard provide. The VTS system, which was spearheaded by Crescent River Port Pilot
Capt. Douglas Grubbs, will function to enhance safety, efficiency
and security along the Mississippi. In the future VTS will have the
capabilities of offering traffic management, navigation assistance
and navigation information, yet its function right now is to track
all high-interest vessels in an effort to maintain maritime domain
awareness. The importance of VTS and AIS is evident through their inclusion
in the recent Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002, part
of the Homeland Security Act. The Act outlines that AIS transponders
must be installed on vessels operating in navigable U.S. waters by
December 31, 2004. The Vessel Traffic Center operated by the Coast
Guard in Canal Place will be fully capable of receiving information
from the transponders by late summer 2003. Also included in the Maritime Transportation
Security Act is a “Limitation
of Liability for Coast Guard Vessel Traffic Service Pilots.” Under
this section, any pilot on duty at a United States Coast Guard Vessel
Traffic Service is exempt from liability while providing information
under the supervision of a Coast Guard officer.
To help pilots train for VTS, the University of New Orleans (UNO) offers a
Team Coordination Training/Situational Assessment class. Coast Guard Training
Coordinator George Petras teaches the two-day class. “We’re trying to help the pilots
be better prepared to fulfill their duties at the Vessel Traffic
Center. The class will cover the fundamentals of the Lockhead Martin
MTM100 integrated display system and other assessment tools needed
when making waterways management < Back |