Engineering:Third mate

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A third mate (3/M) or third officer is a licensed member of the deck department of a merchant ship.[1] The third mate is a watchstander and customarily the ship's safety officer and fourth-in-command (fifth on some ocean liners). The position is junior to a second mate. Other duties vary depending on the type of ship, its crewing, and other factors.

Duties related to the role of safety officer focus on responsibility for items such as firefighting equipment, lifeboats, and various other emergency systems.

Watchstanding

International Maritime Organization (IMO) regulations require the officer be fluent in the English language.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag monitoring communications,[2] and monitoring the anchor or mooring lines.[3]

Cargo handling

The ship's officer must be able to oversee the loading, stowage, securing and unloading of cargoes.[4] He must also understand the care of cargo during the voyage.[4]

Of particular importance is knowledge of the effect of cargo including heavy lifts on the seaworthiness and stability of the ship.[4] The officer must also understand safe handling, stowage and securing of cargoes, including cargoes that are dangerous, hazardous or harmful.[4]

Safety officer

Demonstration of wearing a life vest for safety especially during on abandon ship.

The third mate is usually responsible for the upkeep of lifesaving and firefighting equipment.[5][6] This includes a responsibility for some or all of the ship's boats,[5] and particularly the lifeboats.[6]

The third mate is also generally an active participant in fire and boat drills.[7]

Working conditions

Merchant mariners spend extended periods at sea. Most deep-sea mariners are hired for one or more voyages that last for several months. The length of time between voyages varies depending on job availability and personal preference.[8]

At sea, these workers usually stand watch for 4 hours and are off for 8 hours, 7 days a week.[8]

People in water transportation occupations work in all weather conditions. Although merchant mariners try to avoid severe storms while at sea, working in damp and cold conditions is inevitable. While it is uncommon nowadays for vessels to suffer disasters such as fire, explosion, or a sinking, workers face the possibility that they may have to abandon their craft at short notice if it collides with other vessels or runs aground. They also risk injury or death from falling overboard and hazards associated with working with machinery, heavy loads, and dangerous cargo. However, modern safety management procedures, advanced emergency communications, and effective international rescue systems place modern mariners in a much safer position.[8]

Most newer vessels are air-conditioned, soundproofed from noisy machinery, and equipped with comfortable living quarters. For some mariners, these amenities have helped ease the sometimes difficult circumstances of long periods away from home. Also, modern communications, especially email, link modern mariners to their families. Nevertheless, some mariners dislike the long periods away from home and the confinement aboard ship and consequently leave the occupation.[8]

National details

United Kingdom Certification

Initial Officer of the Watch (OOW) Certification in the United Kingdom can be achieved through the various training programme options, these are;

MNTB Deck Officer Cadet training programme (Degree Route), leading to the following qualifications: Foundation Degree (FdSc) in Marine Operations Direct pathway to BSc (Hons) Marine Operations Management MCA STCW’95 II/I OOW certification

MNTB Deck Officer Cadet training programme (HND Route), leading to the following qualifications: Higher National Diploma (HND) in Nautical Science NVQ Level 3 in Merchant Vessel Operations MCA STCW’95 II/I OOW certification

Alternative training programmes for Experienced Seafarers (Examination or NVQ Level 3 Routes), leading to the following qualifications: MCA STCW’95 II/I OOW certification HND Part I in Nautical Science

All entry routes require the UK candidate to have successfully undertaken STCW'95 safety and certification training in the following; Personal Survival Techniques, Fire Prevention and Firefighting, Elementary First Aid, Personal Safety & Social Responsibilities, Proficiency in Medical First Aid Aboard Ship, Proficiency in Survival Craft & Rescue Boats, Advanced Firefighting, Efficient Deck Hand, MCA Signals Examination, GMDSS General Operator's Certificate and Navigation Radar & ARPA Simulation Training (Operational Level)

United States

Licensing

A third mate must have a number of qualifications, including a license.

There are two methods to attain an unlimited third mate's license in the United States: to attend a specialized training institution, or to accumulate "sea time" and take a series of training classes and examinations.[9]

Training institutions that can lead to a third mate's license include the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy (deck curriculum),[9] or any of the other state maritime colleges. The Coast Guard Academy does not give licenses to its graduating cadets.

A seafarer may start the process of attaining a license after three years of service in the deck department on ocean steam or motor vessels, at least six months of which as able seaman, boatswain, or quartermaster.[9] Then the seafarer takes required training courses and completes on-board assessments. Finally, the mariner can apply to the United States Coast Guard for a Third Mate's license.[8]

A master of 1,600-ton vessels can, under certain circumstances, begin the application process for an unlimited third mate's license.[9]

If approved the applicant must then successfully pass a comprehensive license examination before being issued the license. Hawsepiper is an informal term referring to an officer who did not attend a maritime college or academy and began his or her career as a seafarer.[10] The term derives from the ship’s hawsepipe: the pipe passing through the bow section of a ship that the anchor chain passes through.[11] "Coming up through the hawsepipe" is a nautical metaphor for climbing up the ship's rank structure.[10]

Some maritime unions offer their membership the required training for career advancement, such as the American Maritime Officers RTM-STAR Center and the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education administered by the Seafarers International Union of North America. Similarly, some employers offer financial assistance to pay for the training for their employees.[citation needed] Otherwise, the mariner is responsible for the cost of the required training.[citation needed]

Since the requirements of STCW '95 have been enacted, there have been complaints that the hawsepiper career path has been made too difficult.[citation needed] Examples include the cost in time and money to meet formal classroom training requirements.[citation needed] Critics assert that the newer requirements will eventually lead to a shortage of qualified mariners, especially in places like the United States.[citation needed]

Working conditions

The rate of unionization for these workers is about 36 percent, much higher than the average for all occupations.[8] Consequently, merchant marine officers and seafarers, both veterans and beginners, are hired for voyages through union hiring halls or directly by shipping companies.[8] Hiring halls rank the candidates by the length of time the person has been out of work and fill open slots accordingly.[8] Hiring halls typically are found in major seaports.[8]

Mates employed on Great Lakes ships work 60 days and have 30 days off, but do not work in the winter when the lakes are frozen.[8] Workers on rivers, on canals, and in harbors are more likely to have year-round work.[8] Some work 8-hour or 12-hour shifts and go home every day.[8] Others work steadily for a week or a month and then have an extended period off.[8] When working, they usually are on duty for 6 or 12 hours and off for 6 or 12 hours. Those on smaller vessels are normally assigned to one vessel and have steady employment.[8]

Notable Third Mates

  • Alfred Cheetham served as third officer for Shackleton's 1914 Nimrod Expedition to Antarctica.[12]
  • Jack Lord, American television, film, and Broadway actor.[13]
  • Gregory Cousins, on watch during Exxon Valdez grounding.[14]
  • Charles William Pearson, a pioneer Anglican missionary in Uganda.[15]
  • Harry Lundeberg was sailing as third mate during the 1934 West Coast waterfront strike.[16]
  • Herbert J. Pitman, Third officer on the RMS Titanic
  • John Paul Jones, the Scottish 'Father' of the American Navy was the Third Mate aboard the King George in 1764

Rishul Mathur

See also

Notes

  1. "What are the STCW Requirements for Officer in Charge of a Navigational Watch (OICNW)?". https://www.edumaritime.net/stcw/general-requirement-for-oicnw. 
  2. Hayler, William (1989). Merchant Marine Officers' Handbook 5th. www.cmptp.com: Cornell Maritime Press. pp. 8, 9. ISBN 978-0-87033-379-8. 
  3. Hayler, William (1989). Merchant Marine Officers' Handbook. www.cmptp.com: Cornell Maritime Press. pp. 217. ISBN 978-0-87033-379-8. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named a-ii/1
  5. 5.0 5.1 Turpin and McEwen, 1980:1-1.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Turpin and McEwen, 1980:1-25.
  7. Turpin and McEwen, 1980:1-11.
  8. 8.00 8.01 8.02 8.03 8.04 8.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.10 8.11 8.12 8.13 Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2007:2.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 United States of America. "Subpart D, Section 10.407". Code of Federal Regulations, Title 46.. http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=ecfr;sid=3c91d4046f9587b25d46063179b29ec3;rgn=div5;view=text;node=46%3A1.0.1.2.10;idno=46;cc=ecfr#46:1.0.1.2.10.4.7.7. Retrieved 2007-04-23. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 Halyer, 2003:xvi.
  11. Halyer, 2003:8-15.
  12. "Alred Cheetham, Third Officer.". Nova. https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/shackletonexped/1914/t_cheetham.html. 
  13. "Jack Lord's biography at Internet Movie Database.". https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0520437/bio. 
  14. Daily News Staff (March 24, 1994). "The Wake of the Exxon Oil Spill". Anchorage Daily News. http://www.adn.com/evos/stories/EV321.html. 
  15. "Pearson, Charles William". Dictionary of African Christian Biography. http://www.dacb.org/stories/uganda/pearson_charlesw.html. 
  16. "Centennial Retrospective". West Coast Sailors. http://www.sailors.org/pdf/newsletter/harrylundebergcentennial.pdf. 

References

es:Tercer Oficial de cubierta pt:Oficial náutico