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Sunken Lewes fire-and-rescue boat under investigation

Department official: More information will be released following investigation
September 4, 2018

More information regarding the sinking of the Lewes fire-and-rescue boat will be released following an investigation into the incident, fire department spokesman Glenn Marshall said. 

An insurance adjuster is expected to look at the boat early this week and an investigation is underway by the marine police and the U.S. Coast Guard. 

“We will not be releasing information until those investigations are concluded,” Marshall said. “Once those are finalized, we will be able to give more information.” 

Lewes Fire Department officials discovered their sunken vessel about 8 p.m., Aug. 30, at the boat launch at the end of Pilottown Road, near Roosevelt Inlet. Marshall said it took until 5 a.m., Aug. 31, to remove the boat from the water. There were no injuries reported, Marshall said.

The fire-and-rescue boat is the largest of the department’s three marine units. The 44-foot catamaran was purchased in 2008 for about $900,000, with $144,500 coming from a grant from the Department of Homeland Security. It is the department’s open water vessel, capable of operating in the bay. According to the department’s website, the boat has twin 600 horsepower diesel engines with jet drive propulsion with a cruising speed 30 knots and top speed estimated at 40 knots. It’s equipped with a 750-gallon fire pump, state-of-the-art electronics, thermal imaging camera, room for two patients in cabin and seating for operator plus a crew of eight.

Lewes Fire Department is responsible for emergency response in the Delaware Bay, Lewes-Rehoboth Canal, Roosevelt Inlet, Broadkill River, smaller tributaries, 15 miles of coastline, about 25 square miles of the Delaware Bay and about 50 square miles of the Atlantic Ocean.

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