Veterans
Related: About this forumDamning investigation into USS Bonhomme Richard fire reveals sailors were totally unprepared
The sailors aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Bonhomme Richard had no idea what to do when a fire broke out aboard their vessel last year, an investigation into the catastrophic blaze found.
Although the fire was started by an act of arson, the ship was lost due to an inability to extinguish the fire, according to the investigation, which was written by Vice Adm. Scott Conn, then-commander of Third Fleet.
The ship caught fire on July 12, 2020 and burned for five days, spreading to 11 of the vessels 14 levels. Seaman Apprentice Ryan Sawyer Mays, a member of the ships crew, has been accused of starting the fire that destroyed the $2 billion warship. He is scheduled to appear in court on Nov. 7, his attorney told Task & Purpose.
But the Navys investigation into the fire found that the Bonhomme Richards crew was ill-prepared and under-trained to contain the fire once it broke out.
Once the fire started, the response effort was placed in the hands of inadequately trained and drilled personnel from a disparate set of uncoordinated organizations that had not fully exercised together and were unfamiliar with basic issues to include the roles and responsibilities of the various responding entities, reads the investigation.
https://taskandpurpose.com/news/uss-bonhomme-richard-fire-investigation/
IrishAfricanAmerican
(4,183 posts)This is a horrible report. Shocking.
douglas9
(4,483 posts)A cascade of failures from a junior enlisted sailor not recognizing a fire at the end of their duty watch to fundamental problems with how the U.S. Navy trains sailors to fight fires in shipyards are responsible for the five-day blaze that cost the service an amphibious warship, according to an investigation into the July 2020 USS Bonhomme Richard (LHD-6) fire reviewed by USNI News.
The investigation into the fire aboard Bonhomme Richard, overseen by former U.S. 3rd Fleet commander Vice Adm. Scott Conn, found that the two-year-long $249 million maintenance period rendered the ships crew unprepared to fight the fire the service says was set by a crew member.
Although the fire was started by an act of arson, the ship was lost due to an inability to extinguish the fire, Conn wrote in his investigation, which was completed in April and reviewed by USNI News this week.
In the 19 months executing the ships maintenance availability, repeated failures allowed for the accumulation of significant risk and an inadequately prepared crew, which led to an ineffective fire response.
https://news.usni.org/2021/10/19/long-chain-of-failures-left-sailors-unprepared-to-fight-uss-bonhomme-richard-investigation-finds