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Northumberland Ferries moving quickly to reimburse Holiday Island passengers

Northumberland Ferries says it has already resolved a lot of the compensation claims of passengers who were evacuated from the MV Holiday Island due to a fire on July 22.

Out-of-pocket expenses were in the 'thousands of dollars, not hundreds of thousands'

Holiday Island passengers to receive compensation from Northumberland Ferries

2 years ago
Duration 2:09
'A lot of the claims have already been resolved, I believe. This past weekend we were looking for bank transfer information from our customers ... so we can transfer funds directly,' says Northumberland Ferries vice-president Don Cormier.

Northumberland Ferries says it hasalready resolved a lot of the compensation claims of passengers who had to be evacuatedfrom the MV Holiday Island due to a fire on July 22.

Vice-president Don Cormier told CBC News: Compass on Tuesday the company has been requesting bank transfer information from customers this past week so the company could transfer funds to them directly.

More than 200 passengers and crew had to be evacuatedfrom the ferry after a fire broke out in its engine room while it was making its way from Caribou, N.S., to Wood Islands, P.E.I.

But some people were stuck without vehicles, clothing and personal belongings for days.

Cormier said he didn't think it was appropriate to get into specifics, but that immediate out-of-pocket costs are in the "thousands of dollars, not hundreds of thousands."

"People had hotel bills, meals, car rentals, transportation needs since theywere without their vehicles, some had to return home," he said.

"All of those expenses will be processed and people will get a satisfactory resolution to their out-of-pocket expenses."

More than 200 people were safely evacuated from MV Holiday Island after a fire broke out in the vessel's engine room on Friday, July 22, about an hour into the ferry's crossing from Caribou, N.S., to Wood Islands, P.E.I. (John Morris/REUTERS)

MV Saaremaa work still underway

Cormier saidit could take months before it can be determined how much the claims will cost the company in total.

"Obviously there's an insurance component to it, so maybe things in terms of resolution of claims have not been quite as quick as we might have hoped," he said. "But a lot of claims have already been resolved."

Meanwhile, work is still ongoing to get MV Saaremaa1 ready to start service between Nova Scotia and P.E.I. along with Northumberland Ferries' other ship, MV Confederation.

The Saaremaa, owned by Socit des traversiers du Qubec, was brought in as a temporary replacement for the Holiday Island and was docked in Caribou for over a week while Northumberland Ferries did some testing and modifications.

two ferries docking
MV Saaremaa, left, and MV Confederation in Caribou, N.S. (Patrick Morrell/CBC)

Forty-four crew members have been training over the last eight days or so, and the company has recentlyperformed some dockingtrials in Wood Islands.

The Holiday Island fire is still under investigation. Cormier said it may take months before the Transportation Safety Board identifies a root cause.

With files from CBC News: Compass