COAST GUARD ASSISTS
MERCHANT MARINERS
AFFECTED BY HURRICANE KATRINA
WASHINGTON -- The
Coast Guard is moving quickly to restore vital services to
merchant mariners in the New Orleans area.
Regional Examination Center (REC)
Houston, previously reported as havening
incurred a loss of communications has been restored to full
operating capability.
Hurricane Katrina
caused the Coast Guard’s REC in
New Orleans to close its doors as employees evacuated the
city. This REC is the largest in the country and regularly
issues 20 percent of all mariners’ credentials issued
nationwide. Mariners serving on most commercial vessels are
required to hold credentials that provide identification and
attest to the mariners’ qualifications. Many mariners in the
hurricane devastated area lost their credentials in the
subsequent flooding. These mariners, as well as those
seeking routine renewal of expiring credentials, need Coast
Guard services before they can return to shipboard
employment.
Short-term plans
include the augmentation of staffs at RECs surrounding REC
New Orleans’ area, including Houston,
Memphis, Charleston, and
Miami, with personnel who formerly staffed the REC in New Orleans. Additional space has been identified in Memphis and inquiries for additional space are being made in
Houston. Miami and Charleston will absorb new staff within their
existing work areas. In addition, the Coast Guard will
establish REC representatives at the Marine Safety Office, Morgan City, Louisiana, to provide limited
services to mariners including fingerprinting and
identification. The Coast Guard is also looking to establish
similar services in a Gulf Coast location to the east of
New Orleans.
Mariners who lost
their credentials as a result of the hurricane may apply for
duplicate credentials at any REC. Even though the REC in New Orleans was heavily flooded and remains inaccessible,
centralized, electronic records will allow the Coast Guard
to quickly identify the qualifications currently held by the
mariner and to issue replacement credentials.
Many mariners have
already contacted an REC to inquire about the status of
their records or transactions that were in process in
New Orleans at the time of the evacuation. The remaining
RECs have already received information about processing
these applicants. In many cases, records that existed in REC
New Orleans may be recovered through copies, identified
through letters sent to applicants, or verified from
information in centralized mariners’ records. Mariners who
had an application pending in
New Orleans should contact another REC and
provide that REC with copies of the documents submitted to
the New Orleans REC along with any correspondence received
in response to the application.
Information on the
Coast Guard’s efforts to restore services to mariners may be
found on the World Wide Web at
http://www.uscg.mil/stcw/index.htm.
U.S. Coast Guard
Regional Examination Centers
Anchorage (907)
271-6736
Baltimore (410) 962-5132/5147
Boston (617)
223-3040/41/42
Charleston (843)
720-3250 or (800) 826-1511
Guam (671)
339-2001
Honolulu
(808) 522-8264
Houston (713) 948-3350/51
Juneau (907)
463-2458
San Pedro (310)
732-2080
Memphis (901) 544-3297 or (866) 777-2784
Miami (305)
536-6548/49/6874 or (800) 982-9374
New York (212)
668-7492/7864/4970/6395
Portland,
Ore.
(503) 240-9346
Oakland,
Calif.
(510) 637-1124
San Juan (787)
729-2376
Seattle (206) 220-7327
St. Louis (314)
539-3091
Toledo, Ohio
(419) 418-6010
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The
U.S. Coast Guard is a military, maritime, multi-mission
service within the
Department of Homeland Security dedicated to protecting the
safety and security of America.