The Philadelphia Fire Department started operating the fireboat Independence in 2007.[1][2] The vessel was purchased for $5 million, $4.5 million of which came from a FEMA Port Security Grant.
On September 10, 2010, both the Independence and a smaller fireboat, Fireboat Seven from Westville, New Jersey, responded to a dock fire in Paulsboro, New Jersey.[3][4] Fireboat Seven arrived first and put the fire out prior to the arrival of Independence. Independence received orders to turn around when it was near the dock. She reversed quickly generating a large wake which apparently caused Fireboat Seven to collide with shore-side equipment.
Westville's insurance adjuster determined Fireboat Seven was damaged beyond repair.[3][4][5] Having initially failed to reach a settlement with the City of Philadelphia, on July 30, 2014, Westville filed a lawsuit in Federal Court. Philadelphia countersued. Philadelphia settled on March 31, 2016 for $117,000.
Length | 20.15 metres (66.1 ft) |
Beam, Moulded | 6 metres (20 ft) |
Depth, Moulded | 2.28 metres (7.5 ft) |
Draft | 0.81 metres (2.7 ft) |
Power | 4 x 681 kilowatts (913 shp) |
Maximum speed | 36 knots (67 km/h) |
Fire monitors |
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Shortly before Christmas the City of Philadelphia Fire Department commissioned ' Independence', the new RAnger 2000 Class fireboat designed by Robert Allan Ltd and built by Derektor Shipyards of Bridgeport in Connecticut.
This new fast response, shallow-draft fireboat, which is of all-welded aluminium construction, is designed to specifically address the fire fighting and rescue needs of the Philadelphia region waterfront.
Westville's fire boat No. 7 was dispatched to the scene, as was the Independence, a fireboat in the Philadelphia Fire Department's Marine Unit.
According to the lawsuit, on the evening of Sept. 16, 2010, Westville firefighters arrived first in their FB7 vessel, contained the blaze, and advised Philadelphia that further assistance was not needed from the city's boat, the Independence.
England repelling the Spanish Armada in 1588. The United States smashing a Japanese fleet at Midway in 1942. And for the last six years, Westville and Philadelphia fighting over a fire boat.