[Title 46 CFR 131.530]
[Code of Federal Regulations (annual edition) - October 1, 1996 Edition]
[Title 46 - SHIPPING]
[Chapter I - COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF]
[Subchapter L - OFFSHORE SUPPLY VESSELS]
[Part 131 - OPERATIONS]
[Subpart E - Tests, Drills, and Inspections]
[Sec. 131.530 - Abandon-ship training and drills.]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]




  46
  SHIPPING
  4
  1996-10-01
  1996-10-01
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  Abandon-ship training and drills.
  131.530
  Sec. 131.530
  
    SHIPPING
    COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF
    OFFSHORE SUPPLY VESSELS
    OPERATIONS
    Tests, Drills, and Inspections
  


Sec. 131.530  Abandon-ship training and drills.

    (a) Material for abandon-ship training must be present on each OSV. 
The material must consist of a manual of one or more volumes, or 
audiovisual training aids, or both.
    (1) The material must contain instructions and information about the 
lifesaving appliances aboard the vessel and about the best methods of 
survival. Any manual must be written in easily understood terms, 
illustrated wherever possible.
    (2) If a manual is used, there must be a copy in each messroom and 
recreation room for crew members or in each stateroom for them. If 
audiovisual aids are used, they must be incorporated in the training 
sessions aboard under paragraph (d) of this section.
    (3) The material must explain the--
    (i) Method of donning immersion suits and lifejackets carried 
aboard;
    (ii) Mustering at assigned stations;
    (iii) Proper boarding, launching, and clearing of survival craft and 
rescue boats;
    (iv) Method of launching survival craft by people within them;
    (v) Method of releasing survival craft from launching-appliances;
    (vi) Use of devices for protecting survival craft in launching-
areas, where appropriate;
    (vii) Illumination of launching-areas;
    (viii) Use of each item of survival equipment;
    (ix) Instructions for emergency repair of lifesaving appliances;
    (x) Use of radio lifesaving-appliances, with illustrations;
    (xi) Use of sea anchors;
    (xii) Use of engine and accessories, where appropriate;
    (xiii) Recovery of survival craft and rescue boats, including 
stowage and securing;
    (xiv) Hazards of exposure and need for warm clothing;
    (xv) Best use of survival craft for survival; and
    (xvi) Methods of retrieving personnel, including use of helicopter-
mounted rescue gear (slings, baskets, stretchers) and vessel's line-
throwing apparatus.
    (b) An abandon-ship drill must be held on each OSV in alternate 
weeks. If none can be held during the appointed week, because of bad 
weather or other unavoidable constraint, one must be held at the first 
opportunity afterward. If the crew changes more than once in any 2 
weeks, one must be held as soon after the arrival of each crew as 
practicable.
    (1) Any crew member excused from an abandon-ship drill must 
participate in the next one, so that each member participates in at 
least one each month. Unless more than 25 percent of the members have 
participated in one on that particular vessel in the previous month, one 
must be held before the vessel leaves port if reasonable and 
practicable; but, unless the Commandant (G-MSE) accepts arrangements as 
at least equivalent, one must be held not later than 24 hours after the 
vessel leaves port in any event.
    (2) On a voyage likely to take more than 24 hours to complete:
    (i) A muster of offshore workers must be held on departure. The 
master shall ensure that each worker is assigned to a survival craft and 
is told where to find it. Each person in charge of such a craft shall 
maintain a list of workers assigned to the craft.
    (ii) On a voyage likely to take 24 or fewer hours to complete, the 
master

[[Page 455]]

shall call the attention of each offshore worker to the emergency 
instructions required by Sec. 131.330.
    (3) Each abandon-ship drill must include:
    (i) Summoning of crew members and offshore workers to survival craft 
with the general alarm.
    (ii) Simulation of an abandon-ship emergency that varies from drill 
to drill.
    (iii) Reporting of crew members and offshore workers to survival 
craft, and preparing for, and demonstrating the duties assigned under 
the procedure described in the station bill for, the particular abandon-
ship emergency being simulated.
    (iv) Checking to see that crew members and offshore workers are 
suitably dressed.
    (v) Checking to see that immersion suits and lifejackets are 
correctly donned.
    (vi) Lowering of at least one lifeboat (far enough that the davit 
head has completed its travel and the fall wire of the lifeboat has 
begun to pay out) or, if no lifeboats are required, lowering of one 
rescue boat, after any necessary preparation for launching.
    (vii) Starting and operating of the engine of the lifeboat or rescue 
boat.
    (viii) Operation of davits used for launching liferafts.
    (4) As far as practicable, at successive drills different lifeboats 
must be lowered to meet the requirements of paragraph (b)(3)(vi) of this 
section.
    (5) As far as practicable, each abandon-ship drill must be conducted 
as if there were an actual emergency.
    (6) Each lifeboat must be launched with its assigned crew aboard 
during an abandon-ship drill, and be maneuvered in the water, at least 
once each 3 months that the OSV is operated.
    (7) Each rescue boat must be launched with its assigned crew aboard 
and be maneuvered in the water--
    (i) Once each month that the OSV is operated, if reasonable and 
practicable; but
    (ii) In any event, at least once each 3 months that the OSV is 
operated.
    (8) If drills for launching lifeboats and rescue boats are carried 
out with the vessel making headway, the drills must, because of the 
danger involved, be practiced only in waters where the drills are safe, 
under the supervision of an officer experienced in such drills.
    (9) At least one abandon-ship drill each 3 months must be held at 
night, unless the master determines it unsafe.
    (10) Emergency lighting for mustering and abandonment must be tested 
at each abandon-ship drill.
    (c) The master of each OSV carrying immersion suits shall ensure 
that--
    (1) Each crew member either--
    (i) Wears an immersion suit in at least one abandon-ship drill a 
month unless it is impracticable because of warm weather; or
    (ii) Participates in at least one immersion-suit drill a month that 
includes donning an immersion suit and being instructed in its use;
    (2) In each abandon-ship drill, each offshore worker aboard is 
instructed in the use of immersion suits; and
    (3) Each offshore worker is told at the beginning of the voyage 
where immersion suits are stowed aboard and is encouraged to read the 
instructions for donning and using the suits.
    (d) Each crew member aboard the OSV must be given training in the 
use of lifesaving appliances and in the duties assigned by the station 
bill.
    (1) Except as provided by paragraph (d)(2) of this section, training 
aboard in the use of the vessel's lifesaving appliances, including 
equipment on survival craft, must be given to each crew member as soon 
as possible but not later than 2 weeks after the member joins the 
vessel.
    (2) If a crew member is on a regularly scheduled rotating assignment 
to a vessel, training aboard in the use of the vessel's lifesaving 
appliances, including equipment on survival craft, must be given to the 
member not later than 2 weeks after the member first joins the vessel.
    (3) Each crew member must be instructed in the use of the vessel's 
lifesaving equipment and appliances and in survival at sea during 
alternate weeks, normally in the weeks when abandon-ship drills are not 
held. If individual instructional sessions cover different parts of the 
vessel's lifesaving system, they must cover each part of the vessel's 
lifesaving equipment and

[[Page 456]]

appliances each 2 months. Each member must be instructed in at least--
    (i) Operation and use of the vessel's inflatable liferafts;
    (ii) Problems of hypothermia, first aid for hypothermia, and other 
appropriate procedures; and
    (iii) Special procedures necessary for use of the vessel's 
lifesaving equipment and appliances in heavy weather.
    (4) Training in the use of davit-launched inflatable liferafts must 
take place at intervals of not more than 4 months on each vessel with 
such liferafts. Whenever practicable this must include the inflation and 
lowering of a liferaft. If this liferaft is a special one intended for 
training only, and is not part of the vessel's lifesaving system, it 
must be conspicuously so marked.
    (e) Dates when musters are held, details of abandon-ship drills, 
drills on other lifesaving equipment and appliances, and training aboard 
must be entered in the OSV's official logbook. Each logbook entry must 
include the following, as applicable:
    (1) Time and date.
    (2) Length of drill or training session.
    (3) Identification of survival craft used in drills.
    (4) Subject of training session.
    (5) Statement on the condition of the equipment used.
    (6) Unless a full muster, drill, or training session is held at the 
appointed time, the circumstances and the extent of the muster, drill, 
or training session held.

[CGD 82-004, CGD 86-074, 60 FR 57658, Nov. 16, 1995, as amended by CGD 
96-041, 61 FR 50731, Sept. 27, 1996]