January 16, 2012 7:05 PM

Cruise ship safety training, enforcement varies

By
Mark Strassmann
(CBS News) 

With all the reports of confusion during the evacuation of the ill-fated Costa Concordia cruise ship in Italy, CBS News correspondent Mark Strassman decided to look into the training the crews receive.

One simulator outside Ft. Lauderdale trains 2,000 junior and senior officers a year from cruise ships and cargo ships. The mock disaster CBS News witnessed simulated running aground, followed by the order to abandon ship.

Gerry Pannell, a sea captain for thirteen years, directs the training.

"Everyone is going to be looking to the captain to make decisions that have to be made in a timely manner," Pannell said. "He has an onboard team (to get the message out, including) not only his bridge crew, but every other officer on board to deal with that emergency."

Cruise ships around the world are supposed to follow minimum safety codes established by the International Maritime Organization, an arm of the U.N.

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The codes include numbers of life boats, life jackets and a requirement to stage a life boat drill within at least 24 hours of departure.

But enforcement varies, depending on the ship's home port and the country in which it's registered.

The Concordia was owned by Carnival, an American company, but under Italian jurisdiction.

While officers can have several weeks of training, many of the hundreds of waiters, maids and support staff get only two weeks of basic safety training.

Another challenge is communication. Cruise ship staff comes from many countries.

"Most vessels operate internationally on an English basis. So in some cases it may be a second language to these people," Pannell said.

International rules require that a ship be emptied within 30 minutes of an order to abandon ship. But Maritime lawyer Brett Rivkind says that's unrealistic for giant cruise ships that have become an industry standard.

"We've seen these megaships being built with over 4- or 5-thousand passengers, like a floating city, and we haven't had time to see all the dangers that can come with that."

U.S. safety regulations for cruise ships are higher than the international standard.

Right now there are 256 cruise ships registered around the world, but only one of them is registered in the U.S.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
Add a Comment
by MIO42 January 17, 2012 2:42 AM EST
I don't see any cables attached to this ship from the adjacent land to stabilize it ,should it sink further ?
Beginning to look real messy, like The Corporate bottom line trumps training ,follow up and plain common sense! Dangers at Sea are ever present.
Reply to this comment
by Mortpes January 17, 2012 12:44 AM EST
Notice the position of the ship. These top heavy ships will immediately totally sink should there be an accident. This ship did not sink only because of the rocks. A massive loss of life would be expected if an accident occured in deep water.
Reply to this comment
by ajvw January 17, 2012 1:10 PM EST
If these ships were in fact, "top heavy," any small wave would tip them over. Additionally, your chances of hitting rocks in "deep water" are very slim. Not excusing the captain or the cruise line however, your statements don't hold water.
by billpl-2009 January 16, 2012 8:43 PM EST
cruise ship training manual

"don't drive over big rocks."
Reply to this comment
by rsmik January 16, 2012 11:38 PM EST
You forgot "Captain should not abandon ship before the passengers do"
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