{"id":5170,"date":"2018-01-11T23:32:00","date_gmt":"2018-01-12T07:32:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/alaska-class-ferry-misses-goal-parts-to-be-built-outside\/"},"modified":"2018-01-11T23:32:00","modified_gmt":"2018-01-12T07:32:00","slug":"alaska-class-ferry-misses-goal-parts-to-be-built-outside","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/alaska-class-ferry-misses-goal-parts-to-be-built-outside\/","title":{"rendered":"Alaska-class ferry misses goal: Parts to be built Outside"},"content":{"rendered":"
As Alaska struggles to solve a multibillion-dollar annual deficit, it seems like a distant dream: A state, flush with cash, spending $120 million to build two ships without a dime of federal help.<\/p>\n
On Thursday, the state of Alaska and Vigor Maritime confirmed that one of the goals of the Alaska-class ferry program has failed.<\/p>\n
At least one module of the under-construction ferry Hubbard will be built in Washington state instead of Alaska.<\/p>\n
“It’s disappointing,” said Robert Venables, chairman of Alaska’s Marine Transportation Advisory Board and head of Southeast Conference, a coalition of municipal governments and organizations.<\/p>\n
“In our most perfect world, we do want to have the ability to construct ferries here in the region and the state. I think we’re lightyears ahead of where we were,” he said.<\/p>\n
Under the Alaska-class ferry program, the state forfeited more than $100 million in potential federal aid in order to build two 280-foot ships entirely within Alaska. The federal government typically pays almost 90 percent of the cost of infrastructure projects, but in this case, it would have required the state to take bids from Outside shipyards. With oil prices high and the state’s coffers overfull, then-Gov. Sean Parnell turned down the federal aid, even returning more than $1 million that had already been spent, to build the ships here. Ketchikan’s shipyard, then known as Alaska Ship and Drydock Inc., won the state bid.<\/p>\n
As originally designed in the early 2000s, the Alaska-class ferry program was to build a single 350-foot oceangoing ship with crew quarters. It was to serve as a model for a smaller, more efficient design of ship to supplement and possibly replace the state’s aging mainline ferries. At the time, Parnell called it<\/a> “the next generation of ferries to serve communities across Alaska.”<\/p>\n