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Agency investigators found that both companies -- K-Sea of East Brunswick, N.J., and Ride the Ducks of Norcross, Ga.
-- had strong safety cultures, but that their training was not always followed. But NTSB board members debated that finding, noting the difference between creating safety policies and enforcing them. Hersman asked why Devlin felt comfortable taking so many calls as his deckhand and engineer moved about the boat. Neither reported seeing him on the phone. "This is a culture where he was comfortable with it ... because he'd done it before," she said. She noted the days when boat skippers routinely drank alcohol and pilots smoked in the cockpit. Distracted driving is no less dangerous, she said. In recent years, the NTSB has investigated accidents in which a tug pilot, while texting, ground his vessel in the Baltic Sea, and another in which Northwest Airline pilots used laptops in the cockpit to discuss scheduling woes, ignoring communication with the tower for more than an hour as they zoomed 150 miles past their destination. "At what point do we say it's too much ... it has to stop, we can't do this anymore as a society?" Hersman asked. Drug and alcohol tests on both crews in the duck boat crash were negative. The families of the Hungarians who drowned, 16-year-old Dora Schwendtner and 20-year-old Szabolcs Prem, have filed wrongful-death lawsuits against the city, the operators of both vessels and others. "They're in shock, as to how so many colossal mistakes were made by two very large corporations and their employees," said Peter Ronai, a lawyer for the families. K-Sea, in its statement, said it supports the agency's goal of boosting maritime safety. The company said it may submit a formal response but otherwise declined to comment. Ride the Ducks resumed its operations on the Delaware River this spring. "This tragedy could have been avoided if the Caribbean Sea mate had been doing his job," the company said Tuesday.
[Associated
Press;
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