Sitka to lose Coast Guard Cutter Maple this summer

The Coast Guard Cutter Maple and the Canadian coast guard vessel Bartlett sit side-by-side at Coast Guard Station Juneau July 16, 2012. The two buoy tender crews, along with four other U.S. Coast Guard cutter crews, travelled to Juneau for the annual buoy tender roundup. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Grant DeVuyst.
The Coast Guard Cutter Maple and the Canadian coast guard vessel Bartlett sit side-by-side at Coast Guard Station Juneau July 16, 2012. (Photo by Coast Guard Petty Officer 3rd Class Grant DeVuyst)

Sitka’s docks will look a bit different this summer. The US Coast Guard Cutter Maple will sail south for maintenance and then be reassigned a new homeport in the spring, leaving Sitka without a large Coast Guard vessel for at least six months.

Lt. Commander Patrick Armstrong is the officer in charge of the Coast Guard cutter Maple.

“There’s been so many hours put on the engines and the generators and things just need to be rebuilt,” explained Armstrong. “Wiring and a lot of the engineering type stuff needs to be overhauled. So there’s nothing specifically wrong with the ship, it’s just a general mid-life maintenance.”

The Maple was commissioned in the mid-1990s. Armstrong says it’s among more than a dozen other cutters now in need of a tune up.

Once work on the Maple is done, the 225-foot vessel will have a new homeport in Atlantic Beach, North Carolina. Although the cutter will have a new home, Armstrong said its crew wouldn’t go with it.

“Here in Sitka, nothing will change in terms of the personnel or the transfers, only the ship itself,” Armstrong said. “In the end, it will be just a name change for the ship.”

That new name is the Kukui. The 225-foot cutter is currently homeported in Honolulu, Hawaii and has long ties to the state, getting its name from Hawaii’s state tree.

Like the Maple, it too was designed to service navigation buoys.

“It’s essentially the same thing, just a few minor engineering configurations on board, but it’s really the same class of ship,” Armstrong said.

Along with being in the same class, it was also commissioned around the same time, so the Kukui, too, will get midlife maintenance done in Baltimore before sailing on to Sitka.

But, Armstrong said, that won’t happen until 2018, meaning Sitka will be without a Coast Guard cutter for at least six months.

“Without having a ship we won’t be sailing and doing our normal ATON [aids to navigation] missions and search and rescue missions. Instead, our crew will be focusing on training and maintaining proficiency by doing temporary service on other units and also assisting local units.”

Armstrong said search and rescue efforts will be well covered in the area with the help of Air Station Sitka and Coast Guard Sector Juneau, but he does have some bad news for Halloween lovers in Sitka.

“This October unfortunately, because we don’t have a ship, we will have one year here without it, but we fully expect when we have Kukui back in 2018, we do plan to have a haunted ship again,” Armstrong reassured.

The Coast Guard cutter Maple will leave Sitka this summer, probably in July, Armstrong said and he expects the Kukui to sail into Sitka’s harbor in the spring of 2018.

KCAW - Sitka

KCAW is our partner station in Sitka. KTOO collaborates with partners across the state to cover important news and to share stories with our audiences.

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