USS San Francisco Commander Guilty Of Hazarding Vessel

Since 02-19-05
From: w9jwt
[burrows@bellsouth.net]
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2005 6:03 PM
To: SVARA@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [SVARA] San Francisco CO
I suspect most of you have heard/seen this already. If not, here it is:
USS San Francisco Commander Guilty Of Hazarding Vessel
By ROBERT A. HAMILTON Day Staff Writer, Navy/Defense/Electric Boat Published on
2/12/2005
The captain of a submarine that hit a seamount Jan. 8 in the western Pacific
Ocean, one crewman and seriously injuring 23 others, has been found guilty of
operating the submarine unsafely and has been issued a letter of reprimand,
effectively ending his career.
Cmdr. Kevin Mooney, the captain of the USS San Francisco, was permanently
relieved as skipper after an administrative proceeding known as an admiral's
mast. The proceeding was convened by an order of the commander of the Seventh
Fleet, Vice Adm. Jonathan Greenert.
Cmdr. Ike N. Skelton, a spokesman for the Seventh Fleet in Yokosuka, Japan, said
late Friday night that Greenert determined during the investigation that Mooney
failed to follow "several critical navigational and voyage planning" standards.
"By not ensuring those standards were followed, Mooney hazarded the vessel,"
Skelton said, reading from a statement issued by Greenert.
The mast concluded that Mooney's crew had access to charts that showed there
might have been an underwater obstruction in the area, and that a sounding taken
just minutes before the did not correlate with the charts that were in use at
the time, which should have prompted him to be more cautious.
The news stunned several Navy sources who have been following the accident
investigation, particularly because Mooney's actions after the were
characterized as heroic by everyone familiar with the situation. Despite
extensive damage to the ship, he and his crew got it to the surface and kept it
floating long enough to limp back to its homeport of Apra Harbor, Guam.
The San Francisco was heading to Australia when it came to periscope depth a
little more than 400 miles southwest of Guam to fix its position accurately.
Minutes after diving, and while traveling at a high rate of speed, the submarine
slammed into a seamount in an area where official Navy charts list 6,000 feet of
water.
Other charts of the area, however, show muddy water in the area, which normally
indicates shallowness, and other government agency charts show evidence of the
seamount less than 150 feet below the surface.
The grounding destroyed three of the four ballast tanks in the submarine's bow,
shattered the sonar dome and smashed the sonar sphere. In addition, a bulkhead
at the front end of the ship was buckled.
Machinist Mate 3rd Class Joseph Ashley was killed when he was thrown more than
20 feet and struck his head on a large pump. Almost two- dozen others were
injured so badly they could not perform their duties, though they have all since
been treated and released from the hospital in Guam. Seventy-five others
received less severe injuries.
The crew saved the ship by constantly running a low pressure blower meant for
only intermittent use to force water out of the badly damaged forward ballast
tanks, as well as using exhaust from the ship's diesel motor to augment the
blower.
Despite the force of the blow, the nuclear reactor and the ship's turbine
generators continued to operate normally, and even sensitive electronic and
navigation gear continued to function.
On Jan. 20, Mooney was reassigned to Submarine Squadron 15 in Guam, pending the
results of an investigation to determine the cause of the sub's grounding. Cmdr.
Andrew Hale, the squadron's deputy commander, assumed duties as captain of the
San Francisco.
The mast means that Mooney will not face a more serious proceeding known as a
court martial, but the letter of reprimand and the decision to relieve him of
command "for cause" means that his promising career is over, the Navy sources
said.
In a related development, Lt. Cmdr. Jeff A. Davis, a spokesman for the Pacific
submarine force commander, said late Friday night that assessment of the damage
to the San Francisco is proceeding and that shipyard workers in Guam are
planning to make temporary repairs to the bow of the ship so it can be moved
under its own power to a shipyard where it can be repaired.
Although the location where it will be repaired has not been determined, Navy
sources said it would likely be Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, or Bangor, Wash.
"These temporary repairs will be engineered to ensure a successful transit,"
Davis said. "As part of having on-hand materials for potential use in these
temporary repairs, a large steel dome about 20 feet high and 20 feet in diameter
will be arriving at Guam in the next few days. As of now, no decisions have been
made about when USS San Francisco will depart Guam, where it will go, or what
her final disposition will be."
Other Navy sources said that if the assessment determines it makes sense to
repair rather than scrap the San Francisco, the Navy will likely use the entire
bow section from the recently decommissioned USS Atlanta to replace the badly
damaged bow of the San Francisco.
73 de Dave, W9JWT
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