Media Advisory: Coast Guard Cutter Elm to arrive in Astoria

united states coast guard 

News Release  

U.S. Coast Guard 13th District PA Detachment Astoria
Contact: Coast Guard PA Detachment Astoria
Office: (503) 861-6380
After Hours: (206) 819-9154
PA Detachment Astoria online newsroom

Coast Guard Cutter Elm to arrive in Astoria

The crew of the Coast Guard Cutter Elm, homeported in Atlantic Beach, N.C., prepares to moor up at Coast Guard Training Center Cape May Thursday, Sept. 20, 2007.

Editors' Note: The media is invited to ride aboard the Elm or meet the Elm and its crew at the Tongue Point dock in Astoria. Media interested in riding aboard the Elm need to RSVP with Petty Officer 1st Class Levi Read at levi.a.read@uscg.mil or 206-819-9154 by Friday at 12 p.m.

ASTORIA, Ore. — The Coast Guard Cutter Elm is scheduled to cross the Columbia River bar and arrive in Astoria, its new homeport, for the first time, Monday, at 10 a.m.

 

The Elm, a Juniper Class 225-foot seagoing buoy tender, is operated by the same crew that operated the Coast Guard Cutter Fir, which left Astoria, June 2018 as part of a Coast Guard-wide hull swap.

 

The Elm is coming out of a midlife, dry-dock, major-overhaul period at the Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore. The major overhaul began in January 2018. 

 

The Elm, commissioned in 1998, was previously homeported in Atlantic Beach, North Carolina, as part of Sector Field Office Macon, North Carolina. It spent the last 20 years maintaining over 250 floating aids to navigation from central New Jersey to the border of North and South Carolina.

 

The Elm’s primary mission will continue to be servicing aids to navigation, but its new area of responsibility stretches along the Pacific coasts of Oregon and Washington as well as in the Columbia River. Its area extends from the Oregon/California border north to the Strait of Juan de Fuca, and east in the Columbia River to Longview, Washington.

The aids that its crew will service and maintain are essential to commercial vessel traffic in shipping ports such as Coos Bay, Newport, Astoria, Portland, Longview, and Seattle.

 

The Elm’s crew will be responsible for 114 floating aids. The buoys, which the crew normally service, range in size from 13-feet tall and 5-feet wide to 35-feet tall and 9-feet wide and weigh up to 18,000 pounds. The Elm has heavy lift capabilities with a crane that can extend to 60 feet and lift up to 40,000 pounds.

 

-USCG-