Posts Tagged ‘Guard’

Coast Guard publishes final action memo

Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

A damaged hoist cable and the inability to find equipment needed to repair the fraying cable are the two causal factors in the Coast Guard’s unsuccessful rescue of an injured crewmember off the sailing vessel Freefall during heavy weather Oct. 28, 2008, according to a Coast Guard final action memo released Wednesday.
 

The memo directs 12 actions including reviewing existing policies, checklists, and maintenance and gear stowage procedures related to aircraft search and rescue mission preparation; determining the feasibility of equipping the MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter with cable chaffing guards in critical areas when right external fuel tanks are installed;  and, evaluating the emergency rescue device for effectiveness in heavy weather hoisting operations.

 

The purpose of the investigation was to identify and better understand the factors that led to the unsuccessful rescue and what can be done to prevent future mishaps. “The crew of CG 6003 attempted to prosecute this search and rescue case in the most hazardous conditions,” wrote Vice Adm. Sally Brice O’Hara, Coast Guard vice commandant.  “The tragic loss of Freefall’s crewmember reminds us that we must continue to diligently commit and direct our efforts to perform operations as safely and effectively as possible.”


The 5th Coast Guard District command center received an emergency position indicating radio beacon signal from the sailing vessel Freefall the evening of Oct. 28, 2008.  Subsequent reports indicated the vessel had rolled, de-masted and begun to flood, but flooding had been stabilized.  The Freefall’s owner requested that he and his crew of two, which included a man who had been injured, be removed from the vessel.

 

The crew of the Coast Guard Jayhawk helicopter CG 6003 launched from Air Station Elizabeth City, N.C.  On scene weather conditions consisted of 40-knot winds with gusts up to 50-knots, 20- to 40-foot waves, and low visibility.

Based on the condition of the vessel and weather conditions, the pilot decided to deploy the rescue swimmer to begin hoisting the crew from the vessel.  Once aboard the Freefall, the rescue swimmer learned the injured male crewmember was ambulatory and decided to hoist the survivor from the water.

 

After multiple attempts to hoist the injured crewmember, a section of hoist cable was damaged, precluding further use without repair.  The flight mechanic cut the cable, intending to splice it, but was unable to locate the device necessary to make the repair.

 

CG 6003 used the last remaining hoist option, the Emergency Rescue Device.  While the Emergency Rescue Device was being rigged for use, CG 6003 deployed a life raft which the rescue swimmer recovered.  The rescue swimmer then placed the injured crewman into the the life raft.   The Emergency Rescue Device was lowered, the rescue swimmer attached it to his harness and maintained his grip on the crewmember, but the rescue swimmer was pulled violently through strong waves numerous times and was eventually separated from the injured crewmember.

 

The rescue swimmer, who was injured during the rescue attempt, was hoisted into CG 6003 without the Freefall crewmember.  Without any further means to rescue the injured Freefall crewmember, the CG-6003 returned to base.  A Coast Guard fixed-wing aircraft dropped a life raft for the injured crewmember, but he was never seen getting into it.

 

When recovered from the water approximately four hours later by an Air Station Cape Cod helicopter crew, the injured Freefall crewman was unresponsive.  He was later pronounced dead.

 

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Coast Guard Evacuates New Bedford Fisherman

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Coast Guard crews medically evacuated a fisherman at approximately 8:00 a.m., Wednesday, approximately two miles west of Block Island, R.I.

 

Watchstanders at Coast Guard Sector Southeastern New England received a notification at 7:52 a.m. from the fishing vessel Explorer, homeported in New Bedford, Mass., reporting that a crewmember sustained a head injury due to the parting of a wire.


A Coast Guard Station Point Judith 47-foot Motor Life Boat crew immediately launched and safely transferred the fisherman to waiting emergency medical services at Station Point Judith for further transport to South County hospital, R.I.


“Crews were able to get underway in less than 10 minutes after notification, he was transferred to waiting EMS at 8:36 a.m.,” said Chief Petty Officer Jesse Jordan, the command duty officer at Sector Southeastern New England

Coast Guard crews work closely with the commercial fishing fleet, not only to enforce federal fishing regulations, but to ensure the safety of men and women that operate in the near-shore and offshore environment.


 

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Coast Guard suspends search for overboard tug master

Thursday, April 26th, 2012

Mid-Atlantic Waterways Conference 2012 Meets



USCG , other concerned authorities, commercial interests, meet for annual Mid-Atlantic Waterways Conference in Norfolk, Va.

The Coast Guard, Army Corps of Engineers,

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U.S. Coast Guard Chooses Videotel on Demand

Wednesday, March 21st, 2012

Videotel Marine International announced that the United States Coast Guard (USCG) in Yorktown, Virginia, which trains Port State Control Officers, has taken delivery of three Videotel on Demand (VOD) units.


The units are pre-loaded with top quality marine safety and operational training videos, computer-based training materials (CBT) and instructional courses. Comprehensive and interactive, the training material will be used by the USCG to augment existing Port State Control Office training.


“We are delighted to be supporting the USCG’s efforts,” said Nigel Cleave, CEO of Videotel. “Toward the end of last year, we worked with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Customs and Border Protection agency to develop a training program, which offered a new and updated approach to U.S. Port State Control. We welcome the opportunity to once again contribute to the training needs within this complex and important environment.”


Videotel is the world’s leading multi-media producer of high quality maritime safety training software and materials serving the international maritime community today. As well as its award-winning videos, programs and courses on board over 10,000 vessels, Videotel has the largest portfolio of maritime CBT materials in the world. With 800 titles and over 100 million training hours accomplished to date, Videotel is dedicated to promoting the learning of hundreds of thousands of seafarers across the world.


 

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Coast Guard Conducts MI Spill Drill

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Coast Guard, Response Agencies deploy equipment for oil-recovery training in Michigan waters.

 

Members of the U.S. Coast Guard, Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, oil spill response organizations, Enbridge Energy Partners and several other agencies this week participated in a unique exercise out of St. Ignace, Mich., Monday through Wednesday, during which several techniques for recovering spilled oil and other hazardous materials from icy waterways were tested and evaluated. Four vessels participated in a project that demonstrates capabilities for removing spilled oil from an icy environment. Personnel from the Coast Guard’s Research and Development Center, in New London, Conn., along with other agency partners, tested and evaluated methods for removing spilled oil from an icy environment. Notably, the crew of the USCG Hollyhock participated in the project led by the Coast Guard’s Research and Development Center, showcasing techniques for removing spilled oil from a frozen environment. In one part of the drill, crewmembers aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Hollyhock, homeported in Port Huron, Mich., used an oil-skimming device to recover peat moss, acting as a substitute for spilled oil, near Mackinac Island.

 

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Coast Guard, BSEE: Repsol Rig Review Complete

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Personnel from the U.S. Coast Guard and the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement completed a review of the mobile offshore drilling unit Scarabeo 9, Monday, off the coast of Trinidad and Tobago.

 

The review followed an invitation from the vessel’s operator, Repsol. While aboard the Scarabeo 9, personnel reviewed vessel construction, drilling equipment, and safety systems – including lifesaving and firefighting equipment, emergency generators, dynamic positioning systems, machinery spaces, and the blowout preventer – in anticipation of its scheduled drilling operations in Cuba’s exclusive economic zone in the coming months.

 

The review is consistent with U.S. efforts to minimize the possibility of a major oil spill, which would hurt U.S. economic and environmental interests. The review compared the vessel with applicable international safety and security standards as well as U.S. standards for drilling units operating in the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf. U.S. personnel found the vessel to generally comply with existing international and U.S. standards by which Repsol has pledged to abide.

 

BSEE and the Coast Guard exercise no legal or regulatory authority over the MODU or its intended operations in Cuba’s EEZ. Additionally, their review does not confer any form of certification or endorsement under U.S. or international law.

 

In anticipation of an increase in drilling activities in the Caribbean Basin and Gulf of Mexico, the United States is participating in multilateral discussions with the Bahamas, Cuba, Jamaica and Mexico on a broad range of issues including, drilling safety, ocean modeling, and oil spill preparedness and response that are providing valuable information on each country’s plans and capabilities that will improve bilateral and regional cooperation should a major pollution incident occur. The Coast Guard is also working closely with federal, state and local agencies, as well as maritime industry officials to update contingency plans to ensure readiness to respond to any potential oil spills in international waters that could potentially affect U.S. waters and coastline.

 

At the local level, Florida Coast Guard Sectors Jacksonville, Miami, Key West and St. Petersburg are updating their Area Contingency Plans, which will provide guidance for near and on-shore response efforts along the coast. In addition, the Coast Guard’s Seventh District, headquartered in Miami, is overseeing work on an Offshore Drill Response Plan and Regional Contingency Plan that focuses on response strategies and tactics to combat a spill at sea. More than 80 federal, State of Florida, Florida coastal county and maritime industry representatives held a table top exercise on Nov. 18, 2011, utilizing response plans to address a hypothetical international spill off the coast of Florida. The exercise allowed participants to discuss sensitive environmental areas, planning strategies, likely issues and response coordination principles that responders would face, as well as gather additional information to use in future planning.

The United States remains committed to supporting best practices to prevent and contain oil spills, and is pursuing immediate and long term initiatives that seek to minimize risks to U.S. waters and shores.

 

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U.S. Coast Guard Marine Safety Alert

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

United States Coast Guard Assistant Commandant for Marine Safety, Security and Stewardship Marine Safety Alert 07-11 December 14, 2011 Washington, DC.

 

Listen & Live / Develop & Follow Smart Safety Procedures.This alert reminds all maritime personnel of the dangers associated with working around or near moving machinery. 

 

A recent marine casualty resulted in a death onboard a Great Lakes ore carrier. Two crewmembers had been working on clearing the vessel’s sump pump bilge piping within a cargo conveyor belt tunnel.  The piping ran vertically along the bulkhead adjacent to the conveyor belt.  Because the clearance between the belt and piping was small, the crew had to step on a large pulley that was part of the system.  Simultaneously, a shore-side contractor was working on the conveyor system in another part of the vessel and well removed from the crew working on the bilge piping.

 

Prior to undertaking the work, the person in charge and all involved working on or near the conveyor had taken some precautions to establish a sequence of audio alarms to use as an alert. It consisted of an initial alarm sounding the need to clear the belt, followed by another alarm notification five minutes later and just prior to starting of the conveyor. While the crewmembers were working on the piping the initial alarm sounded and they removed their tools and got off of the belt.  Shortly thereafter, one person went back on the belt to resume work.  His co-worker emphatically told him to get off the belt several times but the he refused, stating that the audible tunnel alarm was not the conveyor  belt alarm but rather a watertight door alarm which created a similar sound.  The alarm sounded again, the belt started, and the crewmember was entangled in the conveyor system and killed.

 

In a very recent casualty another man was killed by entanglement with a conveyor system.  Although this investigation is in its early stage it appears his arm was caught and severed within components of the conveyor.  It is reported that no safety procedures existed pertaining to work on or around the conveyor system and that the deceased did not have a radio or other device to call for help. Although the investigations are not yet complete and other causal factors may be discovered the Coast Guard strongly recommends that Owners/Operators, Classification Society Surveyors, vessel managers and those involved with the inspection of vessels to ensure that, regardless of  how “its been done before,”:

  • develop and implement operational,  maintenance and repair procedures, including a focus on safety precautions for any element of vessel operations that presents a risk of injury or death;
  • every crewmember working in remote spaces be provided with radio / similar communication devices to ensure instant communication with others onboard;
  • effective lock out and tag out systems are utilized and involve all persons working on a particular system as responsible parties for the process and clearing;
  • verbal acknowledgements from involved personnel of  “All Clear” are required prior to the remote starting of any system when work is taking place on or near the system;
  • work actually upon or near live machinery is prohibited  while other work is being performed on the same machinery; and

 

For crewmembers, the Coast Guard strongly recommends:

  • Review frequently and ensure that safe work practices and procedures are always followed.
  • If safe work procedures and safe working practices are not available request that they be developed. Study them, raise questions, don’t embrace methods or procedures that present risk, even if it has always been done like that before.
  • Listen to your shipmates when warnings of potential dangers are given.

 

This Safety Alert is provided for informational purposes and does not relieve any foreign or domestic requirement.  Developed and distributed by the USCG Office of Investigations and Analysis, Washington, DC.   Questions may be addressed to HQS-PF-fldr-G-PCA@uscg.mil.  

 

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Metal Shark Awarded $192M Coast Guard Contract

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

Louisiana Manufacturer will Replace Coast Guard’s Small Response Boat Fleet.  

  

Metal Shark Boats has been awarded a contract to replace the U.S. Coast Guard’s fleet of Response Boat – Small (RB-S) vessels. Up to 470 boats will be delivered across the Coast Guard fleet, with an additional 20 boats will be available to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, with another ten slated for purchase by the U.S. Navy. The $192 million contract is one of the largest boat buys of its kind for the Coast Guard, and provides a significant economic boost to the state of Louisiana. To better manage the increase in manufacturing requirements, Metal Shark plans to expand its 65,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Jeanerette while increasing its production team of skilled aluminum welders, rigging and electronics experts, and installation professionals from 80 to 120 employees over the next six months.

 

  • A New Breed of Coastal Security  

 

Based on Metal Shark’s exceptional Defiant platform, the 28-foot RB-S is powered by twin 225-horsepower (hp) Honda outboards for speeds exceeding 40 knots with a minimum range of 150 nautical miles. RB-S meets all Port Security Grant requirements and is ideally-suited for port and waterway enforcement, search and rescue operations, drug and coastal interdiction, environmental and other law enforcement missions. The boat is road transportable for service between missions, and may also be transported via C130 aboard a specialized trailer. RB-S also includes a full complement of communications and navigation gear, as well as shock-mitigating seats for enhanced crew comfort. The crew is further protected from foes – and the elements – by a fully-enclosed cabin enhanced with ballistic materials. The vessel’s side and rear windows drop down to improve crew communication and ventilation.


RB-S is also weapons-ready, with multiple weapons racks and an integrated weapons-ready mounting system at the bow. The forward-mounted gunner’s platform provides 180-degree firing capability while a pass-through hatch leads to the cabin for easy access in any conditions.

 

 

  • Specifications

 

LOA:   28′ 6″ Beam: 8′ 6″ Draft: 1′ 8″

Fuel Capacity: 110 gallons   Dry Weight: 9,800 lbs Max HP: 450 hp

 

 

Metal Shark sells directly to qualified government and commercial organizations, and custom-builds all boats to mission specifications. Metal Shark products are also available for purchase using General Service Administration (GSA) Supply Schedule 084. GSA pricing is also available to State, County, and Municipal agencies qualifying under the 1122 Counterdrug Program. A subsidiary of Gravois Aluminum Boats, LLC, Metal Shark offers a dependable lineup of CBRN, law enforcement, military, fire/rescue, and commercial vessels ranging from 16 to 65 feet.  Metal Shark’s all-aluminum construction provides a solid, durable, and low-maintenance platform built to withstand extreme conditions, harsh environments, and years of abuse.

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Coast Guard Foundation Hosts 31st Annual Salute to USCG

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

Non-Profit’s Annual Gala Celebrates the United States Coast Guard Service Across the Nation.

 

The Coast Guard Foundation, a non-profit organization committed to the education, welfare and morale of all Coast Guard members and their families, announced today that its 31st Annual Salute to the United States Coast Guard will take place on Thursday, October 13, 2011 in New York City. The event will honor the bravery and courage of the guardians who enforce maritime law, protect our homeland and preserve the environment. Guest will include Master of Ceremonies James Loy, USCG (Ret.) former commandant, ADM Robert Papp, USCG commandant, VADM Robert C. Parker, USCG commander of the Coast Guard’s Atlantic Area, and Anne B. Brengle, Coast Guard Foundation president. Performances will be given by the Coast Guard Band and the United States Coast Guard Academy Glee Club.

 

  • During the tribute, Coast Guard Foundation Heroism Awards will be presented:

 

The crew of CGNR 6038 – Aircraft Commander LT Andy Schanno, Copilot LT William Snyder, Flight Mechanic AMT3 Nick Giumette and Rescue Swimmer AST2 Craig Power – will be recognized for its January 6, 2011 rescue of an injured hiker on Mount Ripinsky near Haines, Alaska. Hiking on top of a 3500-foot mountain when the weather changed for the worse, the hiker used his cell phone to call police and reported he tried to descend the trail in whiteout conditions and became disoriented, slipping on a step slope and falling over a cliff. Unaware of his position, the hiker reported back pain and limited mobility to descend from his location. The crew of CGNR 6038 launched from Air Station Sitka and arrived to the Mountain where weather conditions prevented flying about 500 feet, and ground fog and snow showers greatly limited visibility. Demonstrating exceptional resourcefulness, the crew used a track beam spotlight to signal the hiker to better pinpoint his location. Due to limited fuel and weather conditions, the crew returned the next day. Faced again with dangerous weather conditions, gusting down drafts, and a mountain face encased in snow and ice and marked with rocks and trees, the determined crew located and hoisted the hiker to safety.

 

The crew of CG-MLB 47254 – Surfman BM2 Conor Bennett, Engineer FN Michael Callahan and Crewmembers BM3 Matthew Karas and SN Austin Bartosz – will be awarded for the rescue of two individuals on October 10, 2010 after their vessel capsized in breaking seas in Tillamook Bar Bay, Oregon. The 56-foot DOUBLE EAGLE fishing boat was hit broadside by a 16-foot plunging break. With two crewmembers onboard, the boat immediately capsized and was ripped in half. The crew of MLB 4754 was immediately briefed and prepared the deck to recover the two individuals trapped in the surf and in danger of being swept into the exposed rocks. The crew demonstrated extraordinary teamwork, operational risk management and seamanship battling extreme seas condition to save the lives of the two fishermen.

 

“Our annual tribute brings together our partners and the community to honor the heroic efforts of men and women who wear the Coast Guard uniform,” said Ms. Brengle. “The event is more than a celebration of gratitude for the Coast Guard member who keep America safe. It will raise funds to support important Coast Guard Foundation programs and projects that seek to enhance service and opportunities for Coast Guard members and their families.” For over 40 years, the Coast Guard Foundation has been committed to inspiring leadership, learning and a proud legacy of service to our nation by supporting the men of women of the United States Coast Guard. The Foundation provides higher education grants to enlisted personnel, reservist and their children, higher education financial support for families of Coast Guard members lost in the line of duty, financial relief to Coast Guard families who have lost possessions in natural disasters, and support for morale programs, including funding recreation, exercise and family-oriented facilities.

 

Taking place Thursday, October 13, 2011 at the Marriott Marquis, Broadway Ballroom, 1535 Broadway, New York, New York, the event will begin with a cocktail reception at 6:30 p.m. followed by a 7:30 p.m. dinner reception. For more information on the Coast Guard Foundation’s Annual Salute to the United States Coast Guard, the Coast Guard Foundation, or to help support its work, please visit the Coast Guard Foundation website at www.coastguardfoundation.org.

 

 

  • About The Coast Guard Foundation

 

The Coast Guard Foundation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization founded in 1969. It was initially created to provide funds for academic, athletic, and morale needs of the Coast Guard Academy and its cadets, which were not covered by federal operational funding. In 1986, the Foundation expanded its charter to support projects that enhance the education, welfare and morale of all Coast Guard members and their families. A Board of 100 Trustees from all parts of the country governs the Foundation. The Trustees elect from their members a 30 person Board of Directors to oversee the management of the Foundation. Located in Stonington, Connecticut, the Foundation employs a staff of ten civilians responsible for meeting the Foundation’s objectives and working closely with the Coast Guard on all issues.

 

WHO: The Coast Guard Foundation
WHAT: Annual Salute to the United States Coast Guard
WHEN: Cocktail reception 6:30 pm, Dinner and Program 7:30 pm — Thursday, October 13, 2011
WHERE: Marriott Marquis, Broadway Ballroom, 1535 Broadway, New York, New York

 

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Coast Guard Foundation Announces Inaugural First District Awards Dinner

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

Non-Profit’s Tribute Celebrates the United States Coast Guard’s Finest in Boston.


The Coast Guard Foundation, a non-profit organization committed to the education, welfare and morale of all Coast Guard members and their families, announced today that its Inaugural First District Coast Guard Awards Dinner will take place on Thursday, September 15, 2011 in Boston. The evening’s Master of Ceremonies, ADM Thad W. Allen, USCG (Ret.) former commandant and current Coast Guard Foundation board member, and honorary Co-Chairs, Senator John Kerry and Senator Scott Brown will give remarks honoring the bravery and courage of the First District guardians who enforce maritime law, protect our homeland and preserve the environment. The event will also be attended by VADM Robert Parker, commander of the Atlantic Area and RADM Daniel A. Neptun, commander of the First District.

 

Recognizing Coast Guard members of the First District, which stretches from the busy ports of northern New Jersey and New York City to the upper reaches of Maine, the dinner will raise funds for important Foundation programs and projects that seek to improve the lives and performance of Coast Guard members, their families and Coast Guard Academy cadets.

 

Two awards will be presented during the tribute to the First District:

 

Honored with the Coast Guard Foundation’s award for heroism, the Station Chatham duty crew will be recognized for its quick response on July 31, 2010. Their precise actions and on-scene initiatives saved the lives of eleven people on board a yacht engulfed in flames, just south of Wychmere Harbor, Massachusetts. BMI Matthew Hussey (coxswain), BMI Josh Perkins (crewmember), MK2 Jason Martin (crewmember) and BM3 Sherman Baldwin (crewmember) quickly responded to the middle-of-the-night call and arrived on the scene in ten minutes. Employing expert boat handling skills, the crew positioned the bow of their boat alongside the bow of the burning vessel. In the face of flames and intense heat, the crew removed all passengers from danger within six minutes of their arrival on the scene. Moments after the last passenger was rescued, the yacht was completely consumed by flames and the flares onboard began exploding. Confronted with a life-threatening situation where every minute mattered, the crew demonstrated exceptional calm, focus and professionalism in their successful rescue.

 

The second award of the evening will be presented to Mr. Gerald W. Blakeley Jr. Mr. Blakeley will receive the Rescuer Award in recognition of his lifetime of service and support to the Coast Guard Foundation. First elected to the Foundation’s Board of Directors in 1976, Mr. Blakeley served as Chairman from 1989 to 1992. In 2006, he was elected to the position of Trustee Emeritus. He actively served on the Investment Committee, chairing the group until 2009. Mr. Blakeley was instrumental in establishing the Coast Guard Foundation’s boat donation program to benefit the United States Coast Guard Academy Sailing Team. A titan in commercial real estate, Mr. Blakeley also brought his business savvy to the Foundation’s Investment Committee. He has played a key role in transitioning the management of the Foundation’s endowment portfolio to professional investment advisors and was instrumental in turning the Coast Guard Foundation’s property in Stonington, Connecticut into an investment opportunity.

 

“Our First District Awards Dinner brings together our partners and the community in a proud expression of gratitude to honor and celebrate the heroic efforts of men and women who wear the Coast Guard uniform,” said Anne Brengle, president of the Coast Guard Foundation. “This event not only shines a light on the profound bravery and sacrifice of our maritime guardians, it raises funds to support important Coast Guard Foundation programs and projects that enhance the lives of Coast Guard members and their families.”

 

Over the past year, the Coast Guard Foundation provided the Coast Guard’s First District with fitness equipment for cutters and bases that help active duty personnel stay in shape. The Foundation also outfitted the Coast Guard station on Staten Island, New York, with a computer room and learning center for service men and women enrolled in college. The station has an Empire State College satellite classroom for personnel attending classes twice a week. This year, the Foundation is raising $70,000 to rehabilitate and repair the basketball court and playground at the Coast Guard station in Southwest Harbor, Maine. “Big or small, these projects make a difference in the daily lives of the brave men and women of the Coast Guard, who serve us every day,” continued Brengle. Taking place Thursday, September 15, 2011 at the John Joseph Moakley Courthouse, One Courthouse Way, Boston, Massachusetts, the event will begin with a cocktail reception at 6:30 p.m. followed by 7:30 p.m. dinner reception. For more information on the Coast Guard Foundation’s tribute to the Coast Guard’s First District service men and women, the Coast Guard Foundation, or to help support its work, please visit the Coast Guard Foundation website at www.coastguardfoundation.org.

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