In the summer of 1958, a strike by employees of
CP Steamships and the
Black Ball Line caused the
Social Credit government of
W. A. C. Bennett to decide that the coastal ferry service in
British Columbia needed to be government-owned, and so it set about creating BC Ferries. Minister of Highways
Phil Gaglardi was tasked with overseeing the new
Crown corporation and its rapid expansion. was constructed by filling in a large area at the end of a causeway in 1960 BC Ferries' first route, commissioned in 1960, was between
Swartz Bay, north of
Sidney on
Vancouver Island, and
Tsawwassen, an area in
Delta, using just two vessels. These ships were the now-retired
MV Tsawwassen and the MV Sidney. The next few years saw a dramatic growth of the B.C. ferry system as it took over operations of the Black Ball Line and other major private companies providing vehicle ferry service between Vancouver Island and the
Lower Mainland. As the ferry system expanded and started to service other small coastal communities, BC Ferries had to build more vessels, many of them in the first five years of its operations, to keep up with the demand. Another method of satisfying increasing demand for service was BC Ferries' unique "stretch and lift" program, involving seven vessels being cut in half and extended, and five of those vessels later cut in half again and elevated, to increase their passenger and vehicle-carrying capacities. The vast majority of the vessels in the fleet were built in B.C. waters, with only two foreign purchases and one domestic purchase. In the mid-1980s, BC Ferries took over the operations of the saltwater branch of the B.C. Ministry of Transportation and Highways, which ran ferry services to very small coastal communities. This action dramatically increased the size of BC Ferries' fleet and its geographical service area. The distinctive "dogwood on green" flag that BC Ferries used between 1960 and 2003 gave the service its popular nickname "the Dogwood Fleet". During the 1990s, the NDP government commissioned a series of
three fast ferries to improve ferry service between the Mainland and Vancouver Island. The ships
proved problematic when they suffered many technical issues and cost double what was expected. The fast ferries were eventually sold off for $19.4 million in 2003. A controversy began in July 2004 when BC Ferries, under a new American CEO, announced that the company had disqualified all Canadian bids to build three new ships, and only the proposals from European
shipyards were being considered. The contract was estimated at $542 million for the three ships, each designed to carry 370 vehicles and 1600 passengers. The argument for domestic construction of the ferries was that it would employ numerous British Columbia workers, revitalize the sagging B.C. shipbuilding industry, and entitle the provincial government to a large portion of the cost in the form of taxes. BC Ferries CEO David Hahn claimed that building the ferries in Germany would "save almost $80 million and could lead to lower fares." On September 17, 2004, BC Ferries awarded the vessel construction contract to Germany's
Flensburger shipyard. The contract protected BC Ferries from any delays through a fixed price and fixed schedule contract. entered service in March 2008, while was delivered the same month and entered service in June that year. The third ship, , was delivered in June of the same year and entered service in November. On August 18, 2006, BC Ferries commissioned Flensburger to build a new vessel for its Inside Passage route, with the contract having many of the same types of terms as that for the Coastal-class vessels. The new northern service vessel, , was delivered in March 2008, and entered service in May of the same year. On August 26, 2012, BC Ferries announced that it would be cutting 98 round trips on its major routes starting in the fall and winter of 2012 as part of a four-year plan to save $1 million on these routes. Service cuts have included the elimination of supplementary sailings on the Swartz Bay–Tsawwassen route, 18 round trips on the Horseshoe Bay–Departure Bay route, and 48 round trips, the largest number of cuts, on the Duke Point–Tsawwassen route, with plans to look for savings on the smaller unprofitable routes in the future. Free ferry trips for seniors were suspended from April 2014 to April 2018. In the fall of 2014, BC Ferries announced the addition of three new Intermediate-class ferries to phase out
Queen of Burnaby and
Queen of Nanaimo. These three vessels were to be named the ;
Salish Orca,
Salish Eagle and
Salish Raven. In 2022,
Salish Heron, the fourth Salish-class vessel, entered service. All four ferries were designed and built by Remontowa Shipbuilding S.A. in Gdansk, Poland, and are dual-fuel, capable of operating on
liquefied natural gas and marine diesel. These vessels are a part of BC Ferries standardized fleet plan, which will take the number of ship classes in the BC Ferries fleet from 17 to 5. The proposed replacement classes are Northern, Major, Salish, Shuttle, and Island. Additionally, there will still be three unique (
unclassed) vessels in the fleet after standardization is complete. BC Ferries has stated, however, that this total standardization of the fleet will not be achieved for another 40 years. As of March 2024, the fleet has so far been reduced to 11 classes of vessels, with 5 unique (
unclassed) vessels remaining as well. In August 2022, BC Ferries announced plans to launch an official mobile application. The app was released in March 2023. ==Financial results==