Thank you very much.
My intention this morning—or I guess it's afternoon for you folks in Ottawa—is to concentrate on the aspect of safety management systems in the marine mode.
Just by way of a short introduction, I am a master mariner. I sailed in sea on deep-sea vessels for about 17 years, mainly on tankers, bulk carriers, tugs, and ferries. Following that, I was with Transport Canada for about 16 years, both here on the west coast and in Ontario as the regional director of marine safety. For the past 11 years I've been the president of the Council of Marine Carriers here in Vancouver.
The Council of Marine Carriers is a shipowners association representing the tugboat industry on the west coast. Our vessels sail up and down the west coast of North America and into the Arctic. We have about 40 members, 30 of whom are shipowners. The remainder are affiliated members consisting of lawyers, insurance companies, and marine underwriters. The Council of Marine Carriers, as I said, is a shipowners representative, and as such we generally look after the welfare of the vessels, the companies, and the people who are manning their vessels.
I'll go back to safety management systems. The Council of Marine Carriers firmly believes that an effective safety management system is probably one of the most truly effective safety measures that a company can institute, providing the safety management system is applicable to the size and the operation of the vessel.
There is an international safety management system in existence. I'm sure you've probably heard most of this from your other witnesses this morning. I'm afraid I didn't hear their testimony, so you'll have to bear with me if I do repeat some of their information. The international safety management system, or ISM, was developed for use on large ocean-going vessels and has proven to be effective. However, for smaller vessels, implementing the full ISM can be cumbersome and almost impossible to institute at times, mainly because of the level of information that's required to be carried on board the vessel.
In 2009 the Council of Marine Carriers entered into a pilot project with Transport Canada for what we called at that time DSM. We changed the “international” to “domestic”, so it's the domestic safety management system.
We prepared the DSM pilot project with Transport Canada throughout 2008. In 2009 five of my member companies entered two vessels each into the pilot project. Of those companies, two had already implemented ISM—they were large companies with fairly large vessels; two had no safety management system whatsoever; and one had a fledgling system. The companies ranged in size from the largest, Seaspan Marine, one of the largest towboat companies in North America, through to a mom-and-pop operation on the west coast of Vancouver Island.
For the pilot project we developed a safety management system for each individual company. We tailored it to that company, so for a large vessel, an ocean-going ship, we boiled down the paperwork from probably seven or eight binders two inches thick each for the towboats to about one binder one inch thick with about 80 pages in total. The project ran for two years. In our opinion it was extremely successful.
Upon the conclusion, Transport Canada decided not to proceed with implementing such a system in our industry. It was our hope that it would be applied across the board, across Canada, to the domestic fleet.
However, a testament to the success of that, which by the way cost about $1 million total for the five companies to implement, is that we found that safety culture within those companies showed evidence of vast improvement. For instance, I was speaking to an employee of one of the companies, on the tug. This individual advised that he had resigned from the company prior to DSM being put into place. He went to the company about one year afterwards and he said it was like night and day. The safety culture and the approach of the company to safety and the whole operation of the vessel was completely different. He was sorry he wasn't around—