What are cruise ship overboard detection systems and why doesn’t every ship have them?

Date:

  • Cruise ship overboard systems aim to cut down on response time and notify the crew when someone goes overboard.
  • Not all cruise ships have the systems yet, but some have installed them.
  • Passengers rarely go overboard by accident, one industry expert said.

“Safety in Travel” is a six-part series focusing on the travel safety tools available in different industries, how they can affect the overall experience, and how travelers can make use of them. If you’d like to contribute to our future reporting and share your experience as a source, you can click here to fill out this quick form.

Sherry Boleen got up early to watch the sunrise with her family during a cruise to Mexico over Thanksgiving. But when she arrived at her siblings’ cabin on Carnival Cruise Line’s Carnival Valor ship around 6 a.m., her stepsister said their brother, James Michael Grimes, never came back to the room.

The family was sailing with roughly 20 relatives, so Boleen thought maybe he’d slept in one of their rooms. “He’s notorious for just falling asleep anywhere, anytime,” Boleen, who is 31 and lives at Fort Benning in Georgia, told USA TODAY. “And so I was like, ‘Or he’s just asleep on a lawn chair somewhere or whatever.’ “

After looking for him around the ship to no avail, she said, she notified the cruise line, which began an hours-long search that ended with the U.S. Coast Guard rescuing 29-year-old Grimes from the water later that day around 8:30 p.m. after he had gone overboard.

James Michael Grimes spent approximately 20 hours stranded at sea.

Grimes, who was found about 20 miles south of Southwest Pass, Louisiana, told PEOPLE magazine in December that he remembered having some drinks and winning an air-guitar competition before waking up in the water. He did not respond to interview requests from USA TODAY.

While the incident ended with his safe return to shore, it raised questions about cruise ship overboard detection systems – a new technology that aims to cut down on response time and notify the crew as soon as someone goes overboard.

Carnival spokesperson Matt Lupoli told USA TODAY in an email that as soon as the line was notified, “Carnival Valor’s crew immediately searched the ship, retraced the ship’s route, and coordinated with U.S. Coast Guard officials.”

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Tampa Bay Rays Cancel New Stadium Plans After Local Government Stalls Funding

If funding were approved, St. Petersburg residents would have...

Journal of Free Speech Law: “The Press Clause: The Forgotten First Amendment,”

a Report from the Floyd Abrams Institute for Freedom...

Journal of Free Speech Law: “The Press Clause: The Forgotten First Amendment,”

a Report from the Floyd Abrams Institute for Freedom...

Andrew Tate online university’ suffers breach: 800,000 users data exposed

Andrew Tate fans have been affected by a data...