The ferry Tustumena is seen July 20, 2021, in southwestern Alaska. (Photo by James Brooks)

The ferry Tustumena is seen July 20, 2021, in southwestern Alaska. (Photo by James Brooks)

After a false start, Alaska prepares to solicit bids for new mainline ferry

DOT expects to issue new request for proposals from U.S. shipyards next month to replace Tustumena.

A year after a failed prior offering, the state of Alaska is planning to hire a shipyard to build a replacement for the ferry Tustumena.

The new ferry is expected to cost almost $325 million, with the federal government picking up much of the cost, and would give Alaska its first new mainline ferry in decades.

In a meeting with the Alaska Marine Highway Operations Board on Friday, ferry system director Craig Tornga said the ferry system remains on track to issue a request for proposals next month.

“We’re trying to get that turned around so we can get this out on the street before the end of September, and we’d like to be awarding the yard by the end of the year,” he said.

The current Tustumena was built in 1964 and has sailed one of the roughest ferry routes in the world for almost six decades.

It will have to work a while longer: A new ship isn’t expected before 2027.

The Tustumena regularly carries cargo, cars and passengers from Homer to Kodiak, then down the Alaska Peninsula to Unalaska, but the rough seas and ocean-borne corrosion have taken a toll.

In 2016, part of the ship’s hull cracked badly enough that the ferry system began restricting it from strong storms. Those issues have been addressed and the ship remains safe to sail, but its lifespan is limited.

The state has two new Alaska-class ferries, built in Ketchikan, but those ships were designed and built for the confined waters of northern Southeast Alaska and needed extensive modifications before they could sail longer routes and be used in Prince William Sound.

They’re not as capable as the state’s mainline ferries, and even after their modifications, the ships haven’t functioned perfectly.

The ferry Hubbard broke down immediately after delivering Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg to Haines earlier this month, and after more than a week of canceled sailings, it was still awaiting repairs.

The Tustumena replacement will be more complicated than the Alaska-class ferries, and the state can’t afford similar problems on the new ship, ferry captain Keith Hillard told the operations board in July.

“It’s not something we want to rush. We want something to go out as a very solid package, otherwise it’s going to cost the state a lot more money,” he said.

The proposed ship has already caused some concerns. The Department of Transportation put the project mostly on hold during Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s first term before soliciting proposals from shipyards last year.

Federal law requires that an American shipyard build the new Tustumena, but despite a nationwide call, no shipyard offered a bid, and the state canceled the request in July last year.

Speaking to the operations board, Tornga said the proposed management agreement was slanted so much in the state’s favor that no shipyard would take it.

That language has been redrafted, and he appeared optimistic when he briefed the board on Friday.

The request for proposals will go out even though the ship’s design hasn’t been finalized. Since design work began, the ship’s propulsion system has been redesigned three times, most recently in May of this year.

It’s gone from a standard diesel-fired ship to a diesel-electric design and now to a hybrid diesel-electric capable of running (for short distances) on battery power alone.

That third change prompted the resignation of Greg Jennings, DOT’s project liaison, who criticized the design’s growing complexity.

In a letter to the state ferry board and state legislators, he said that when he was brought on board, 2027 was a realistic delivery date.

“Now, however, it is my opinion that 2027 is impossible and the lack of certainty in design requirements now present in the project make even 2028 delivery nearly impossible,” he said.

Jennings declined a phone interview seeking additional comment.

Tornga and other DOT officials have pushed back against Jennings’ criticism, saying the project remains on schedule.

None of the ferry board members contacted for this article expressed concerns about the direction of the project, nor did state legislators familiar with Jennings’ letter.

Speaking Friday, Tornga told board members that hiring a shipyard this year will allow the yard to participate in final design work and start ordering components.

“If we’re working with the yard, they can get started on doing the production engineering for their yard work, and if there’s any long lead items, that’s what we’re really rolling on there. So we’re really rolling into construction late in 2024,” he said.

When asked when the new Tustumena will be finished, Tornga said, “It would be in 2027. That’s a guess at this point. Until we get a yard to give us their full schedule, we’re just estimating at this point.”

If all goes as planned, other new ferries will follow the Tustumena replacement. A draft long-range plan calls for a second oceangoing ship to replace the Matanuska.

Tornga said that could be an incentive for shipyards bidding on the Tustumena replacement.

“No shipyard likes to build just one of anything; we’re trying to put (the Matanuska replacement) right behind it,” he said in July.

• James Brooks is a longtime Alaska reporter, having previously worked at the Anchorage Daily News, Juneau Empire, Kodiak Mirror and Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. This article originally appeared online at alaskabeacon.com. Alaska Beacon, an affiliate of States Newsroom, is an independent, nonpartisan news organization focused on connecting Alaskans to their state government.

More in News

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Aurora forecast through the week of Nov. 17

These forecasts are courtesy of the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Geophysical Institute… Continue reading

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Monday, Nov. 18, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

The Douglas Island Breeze In on Wednesday. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
New owner seeks to transfer Douglas Island Breeze In’s retail alcohol license to Foodland IGA

Transfer would allow company to take over space next to supermarket occupied by Kenny’s Liquor Market.

A butter clam. Butter clams are found from the Aleutian Islands to the California coast. They are known to retain algal toxins longer than other species of shellfish. (Photo provided by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
Among butter clams, which pose toxin dangers to Alaska harvesters, size matters, study indicates

Higher concentrations found in bigger specimens, UAS researchers find of clams on beaches near Juneau.

An aerial view of people standing near destroyed and damaged buildings in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene flooding on Oct. 8, 2024 in Bat Cave, North Carolina. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)
Members of U.S. Senate back disaster aid request amid increasing storm severity

WASHINGTON — The Biden administration’s request for nearly $100 billion in natural… Continue reading

Media members and other observers gather at the Alaska Division of Elections office on Wednesday evening as the results of all ballots, including ranked choice tabulations, were announced. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Ranked choice voting repeal fails by 0.2%, Begich defeats Peltola 51.3%-48.7% on final day of counting

Tally released Wednesday night remains unofficial until Nov. 30 certification.

Looking through the dining room and reception area to the front door. The table will be covered with holiday treats during the afternoon open house. The Stickley slide table, when several extensions are added, provides comfortable seating for 22 dinner guests. (Laurie Craig / Juneau Empire)
The Governor’s House: Welcoming Alaskans for more than 100 years

Mansion has seen many updates to please occupants, but piano bought with first funds still playable.

The language of Ballot Measure 2 appears on Alaska’s 2024 absentee ballots. The measure would repeal the states open primary and ranked choice voting system. (Andrew Kitchenman/Alaska Beacon)
Count tightens to 45-vote margin for repealing Alaska’s ranked choice system going into final day

State Division of Elections scheduled to conduct final tally at 5 p.m. Wednesday.

The drive-through of the Mendenhall Valley branch of True North Federal Credit Union, seen on June 13, is where a man was laying down when he was fatally struck by a truck during the early morning hours of June 1. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police: Driver of CBJ truck not at fault in death of man struck in drive-through lane of bank

Victim laying on pavement during early-morning incident in June couldn’t be seen in time, JPD chief says.

Most Read