Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Nova Scotia

HMCS Preserver commander relieved of command

The Royal Canadian Navy has confirmed to CBC News that the commander of HMCS Preserver has been relieved of his command.

Navy ship rammed into floating dock in Halifax Nov. 4

HMCS Preserver ran into a floating dock in Halifax Nov. 4 after undergoing a $45-million refit. (CBC)

The Royal Canadian Navy has confirmed to CBC News that the commander of HMCS Preserver has been relieved of his command.

Cmdr. Larry Jones was in charge of the ship when itrammed into a fixed floating dockat the Halifax Irving Shipyard on Nov. 4.

The navy won't say how extensively the ship was damaged or how much the repairs cost.

HMCS Preserver is the largest ship in Canada's east coast fleet and had just undergone a $45-million refit before the incident.

In a statement to CBC News about Jones, the navy said there is "enough evidence for the navy to lose confidence in his ability to command at sea."

The navy has yet to completeits official inquiryinto the collision.

The navy said there is a direct link between the collision andJones's removal, andsaid Jones was relieved of command because ofthe "result of the preliminary finding of the Nov. 4 incident."

Jones has been transferred to a job ashore.

Any navyonline pagescontaining Jones's name have now been taken downand all pictures and information about him have been removed.

It took months to repair HMCS Preserver, but the navy said the ship left for sea trials earlier this week.

Just three months ago, another navycommanding officer lost his position. Lt.-Cmdr. Paul Sutherland of the submarineHMCS Corner Brookwas relieved of his command after the sub hit the seafloor off British Columbia last June.