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Some may recall last winter I posted an observation that 10 years had
passed since three USCG "surfmen" perished off the Washington Coast during a major storm. (They were trying to rescue a USN sailor enroute from San Francisco to Bremerton on his private sailboat). A publication with which I am associated just received a manuscript from a USCG officer outlining some of the changes that the Coast Guard implemented as a result of that tragedy. Among the items mentioned is a new policy that would have made sense to implement long ago. Formerly, USCG recruits who qualified for "surfman" school would report for training, learn the required skills, but then be required to serve a tour of duty aboard a cutter until they had achieved sufficient rank and seniority for assignment to surfman duty. In most cases, this process was lengthy enough that Guardsmen entering active surfman duty had forgotten many of the skills they learned when training. Along with a new generation of surf rescue boats, new USCG policies allow graduates of surfman school to be assigned to the appropriate duty without having to "pay their dues" by serving on a cutter. Makes rather obvious sense, IMO. |
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