On June 30, 2005, at about 10:10 in the morning (17:10 UTC),
Queen of Oak Bay lost power four minutes before she was to dock at the Horseshoe Bay terminal. The vessel became adrift, unable to change speed, but able to steer with the
rudders. The horn was blown steadily and an announcement telling passengers to brace for impact was made minutes before the ship slowly ran into the nearby
Sewell's Marina, where she destroyed or damaged 28 pleasure craft and subsequently went
aground a short distance from the shore. No casualties or injuries were reported. On July 1, 2005, BC Ferries issued a statement that
Transport Canada, the
Transportation Safety Board, and
Lloyd's Register of Shipping were reviewing the control and mechanical systems on board to find a fault. An inspection revealed minimal damage to the ship, with only some minor damage to a metal fender, paint scrapes to the rudder, and some minor scrapes to one blade of a
propeller. On July 7, 2005, BC Ferries concluded that a missing
cotter pin was to blame. The pin normally retained a nut on a linkage between an engine
speed governor and the fuel control for one of the engines. Without the pin, the nut fell off and the linkage separated, causing the engine,
clutches, and propellers to increase in speed until overspeed safety devices tripped and shut down the entire
propulsion system. The faulty speed governor had been serviced 17 days before the incident during a $35-million upgrade and the cotter pin was not properly replaced at that time. The vessel was quickly repaired and tested at
sea trials. She returned to regular service on July 8, 2005. A complete investigation report consisting of a 14-page Divisional Inquiry and a 28-page Engineering Incident Investigation was finally released in September 2006. The Transportation Safety Board's Marine Investigation Report, released on September 6, 2007, indicated that "inadequacies in BC Ferries' procedures on safety-critical maintenance tasks and on ship handling during berthing operations" were major contributing factors to the accident. It appears that insufficient oversight of work done by contractors also played a role in the accident. ==See also==