Former Irish Coast Guard director Chris Reynolds has expressed concerns over the timeline for transition to the new 800 million euro search and rescue helicopter (SAR) contract.
As The Sunday Independent reports, the Irish Coast Guard and Bristow Ireland have defended the timeline.
Reynolds said that he believes that the timeline is “too tight” for the handover for all four SAR helicopter bases from current contract holder CHC Ireland to Bristow Ireland.
Reynolds, who headed up the Irish Coast Guard from 2007 to 2017, said that “three months minimum per helicopter base” is required for a handover, but “they are trying to have it all done by July 1st 2025”.
The Department of Transport responded that it “does not comment on ill-informed speculation regarding contract transition and must also be mindful of commercial sensitivity and ongoing legal proceedings dating back to 2023 in relation to initial contract award”.
“Contract transition is progressing well and is on schedule for completion by end of June 2025,” a department spokesperson said.
Bristow Ireland said its “global experience and capabilities underpin our carefully planned approach”, and it is “ensuring a safe, phased, responsible transition to the new contract which becomes fully operational mid- 2025”.
Separately, the Irish Coast Guard has defended its decision to appoint Martony Vaughan as acting officer in charge (OIC) at the Doolin Coast Guard unit.
The North Clare unit has been beset by difficulties since the death of one of its experienced volunteers, advanced coxswain Caitriona Lucas, after a rigid inflatable boat (RIB) capsized in September 2016.
A petition objecting to the recent appointment and calling for Mr Vaughan’s removal has been initiated by a former Doolin Coast Guard member Deirdre Linnane, and has almost 500 signatures.
Friends of Ms Lucas’s husband Bernard, a former Doolin unit member now with a new separate voluntary search unit, have described Mr Vaughan’s appointment as “completely insensitive”.
Mr Vaughan had been OIC at the neighbouring Kilkee Coast Guard unit, where Lucas (41) was assisting due to a shortage of volunteers.
At the November 2023 inquest into her death, the jury heard that Mr Vaughan had just stepped down from his role in Kilkee but attended the scene on the day of the incident.
In a response to the newspaper, the Department of Transport for the Irish Coast Guard said that “senior volunteers will regularly take over as acting volunteer OIC during periods where the OIC is unavailable or where the position becomes vacant.. to ensure the 24/7 availability of the service”.
“Mr Vaughan is one of a number of senior volunteers within the Doolin Coast Guard Unit authorised to act in the role of acting OIC, as he has on multiple occasions over the last number of years…and is currently acting in the role,” the department said.
The department said Mr Vaughan is “a dedicated member of the Irish Coast Guard”, there have been “no findings of any wrongdoing against” him, and it would “challenge the personalised narrative” towards him.
It said it retained full confidence in him, and said that the Doolin unit “continues to provide a vital SAR service within Co Clare and wider region”.
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