By Chris Philips, Managing Editor, Pacific Maritime Magazine 
Spring has finally arrived on the West Coast. (Summer has apparently 
been spotted in several Midwest and East Coast locales, but so have 
tornadoes, so we should count our blessings.)
With spring comes rebirth – a reawakening of the earth after a 
particularly bleak winter. Signs of this reawakening are everywhere, 
even in the maritime industry.
One company experiencing a rebirth is the venerable Black Ball Ferry Line, operator of the M/V Coho, a vehicle and passenger ferry that travels between Port Angeles, Washington and Victoria, British Columbia.
The 341-foot by 72-foot Coho was 
designed by renowned naval architecture firm Philip F. Spaulding & 
Associates of Seattle, and made her first commercial sailing to 
Victoria, BC on December 29, 1959.
Earlier this year Black Ball announced that its current executive
 management team has agreed to purchase the company from the Oregon 
State University Foundation, which had held the company since it was 
bequeathed to the Foundation by former owner in 2004.
“Our management team will continue a strong commitment to the 
local community, the employees and culture of Black Ball Ferry Line,” 
said Ryan Burles, President of Black Ball Ferry Line. “We will ‘stay the
 course’ while continuing to improve our service and invest in the 
future.”
The M/V Coho has a capacity of 110 
vehicles and 1,000 passengers, and during her more than 50 years of 
service the ferry has transported more than 22 million passengers and 
six million vehicles. Originally outfitted with two 2,080 BHP 
Cooper-Bessemer diesel engines, the vessel was repowered in 2004 with 
two General Motors EMD Engines rated at 2,550 BHP each.
Black Ball employs more than 120 people, and transports 400,000 
passengers and 120,000 vehicles annually, with an estimated yearly 
economic impact of more than $160 million within the local communities.
Philips Publishing Group congratulates the new owners on their 
historic acquisition. We look forward to producing our first issue of 
the company’s onboard magazine, M/V Coho Magazine, the first issue of which will be available this spring.
Another company celebrating spring is Fremont Maritime Services. 
Founded by Captain Jon Kjaerulff in 1989 to provide safety and survival 
training to mariners sailing in Alaska and along the Pacific Coast, the 
Seattle-based maritime safety and fire training organization has opened a
 new, state-of-the-art training facility in Seattle’s Fishermen’s 
Terminal.
Captain Kjaerulff holds a US Coast Guard-issued license as Master
 of inspected vessels to 1,600 tons, and Chief Mate of inspected vessels
 of any tons. He is a 1983 graduate of the US Merchant Marine Academy at
 Kings Point, NY and has sailed as captain and licensed ship’s officer 
on a variety of civilian and naval vessels operating in numerous trades 
all over the world. His first fishing vessel safety program, the 
Survival Afloat Seminar, was specifically designed to provide training 
to crews of fishing vessels under 100 feet. Since then the academy has 
built a fire training simulator, the M/V Fire Dragon
 and added basic and advanced firefighting courses, towing vessel 
responsible carrier and STCW refresher programs, as well as many more 
USCG-approved programs.
Over the past 23 years Fremont Maritime has started and 
extinguished thousands of fires while preparing its student mariners for
 the real thing. The school has provided training to thousands of 
mariners and hundreds of companies including Alaska Tanker Company, the 
previously mentioned Black Ball Ferry Line, Dunlap Towing, Foss Maritime
 and Harley Marine Services. The training center has also trained crews 
from the US Army, Navy and Coast Guard.
With success comes the need for expanded facilities, and the new 
Fishermen’s Terminal location offers two 24-student classrooms with flat
 screen monitors for video conferencing and equipment display. The new 
site also provides easy water access and more parking, while a student 
shuttle offers quick access to the Fire Dragon, less than a mile away.
The success of Fremont Maritime Services indicates the quality of
 training the facility has provided over the years, and speaks well of 
the commercial fishing and maritime companies that train their crews to 
be safe on the water.
