Yesterday, the House of Representatives, in a provision of a U.S. Coast Guard reauthorization bill, voted to grant a waiver exempting the riverboat Delta Queen from certain fire safety regulations. The bill, which now only requires the president’s signature to take effect, may potentially allow the historic riverboat to return to service.
The Delta Queen is a passenger riverboat delivered in 1927. Its hull is steel, while its deck and deckhouse are of wood supported by steel framing. The wooden deckhouse does not meet the structural fire protection requirements of the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) regulations, as interpreted by the US Coast Guard in the Safety at Sea Act of 1966 (P.L. 89-777). From 1966 through 2007, the Delta Queen operated with a series of legislative waivers. The last waiver ran out in 2008 and the riverboat has been laid up ever since. Assuming that the new exemption is finalized, the riverboat may be able to reenter overnight passenger service.
Recently retired
On Sunday, two Ukrainian naval gunboats and a tug departed from the Black Sea port of Odessa, bound to Mariupol in the Sea of Azov. As they approached the Kerch Strait, connecting the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov,
This is a bizarre story which we have been following for, literally,
The U.S. Navy’s new supercarrier, the
Andrew Fitzgerald, the last of the four-man crew of the Coast Guard Motor Lifeboat 
Of the more than 2,700 Liberty ships built during World War II, only two are still operational in the United States. One, the John W. Brown, now docked in Baltimore, may become homeless when its five-year agreement for free berthing at Rukert Terminals’ Pier C in Canton, Maryland expires at the end of next September.
One year after the submarine
We recently
For several years, autumn and winter winds have carried a ghost fleet of derelict boats to the coast of northern Japan. Many of the boats were empty, although some carried corpses.