On crippled cruise ship, icky jobs fell to 'amazing' crew - CNN.com
www.cnn.com/2013/02/15/travel/triumph-cruise-crew
3 days ago – The crew aboard Carnival Triumph didn't hesitate when a fire broke out and power was lost, an emergency that turned the cruise liner into a ...On crippled cruise ship, icky jobs fell to 'amazing' crew
updated 9:10 PM EST, Sun February 17, 2013
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Triumph passengers praised crew members for keeping calm
- Crew had nasty job of picking up bags filled with human waste
- "It's a part of the job," one crew member says
From blackjack dealers to
chefs to dishwashers, the disparate crew, from about 60 countries, did
"things I wouldn't do," one passenger said.
The scene that unfolded
aboard the Triumph has been well-documented: Sewage spilled into rooms
and halls, steak and lobster rotted when freezers went out, and swimming
pool decks turned into a tent city.
"I just wanted to vomit, like every second probably," said 12-year-old passenger Allie Taylor.
See sewage run down walls inside ship
Passengers: Waiting in limbo for hours
Lawyer on Carnival: 'You're out of luck'
Carnival's history of cruise nightmares
But most passengers said the one thing that kept their sanity was the professionalism of the crew.
Passengers: Waiting in limbo for hours
Built in 1999, the
Triumph spans three football fields, weighs 102,000 tons and covers 13
decks, complete with four swimming pools, seven whirlpools, a giant
casino and a relaxing spa. Passengers could dine at an array of
restaurants, from the South Beach Club to the Paris Dining Room. They
could lap up drinks in many of the ship's bars, including the Big Easy.
On such a massive ship,
the jobs of the 1,086-member crew vary widely. But when emergency calls,
their duties shift to make the best of a bad situation. At least two
passengers were evacuated, including one for dialysis treatment.
Carnival's history of cruise nightmares
The ship had reached its
destination of Cozumel, Mexico, and was en route back home when a fire
broke out in the engine room early Sunday, and then power was lost.
Every time the boat tilted with the wind, toilets overflowed and spilled
into halls, seeping through walls to floors below.
Without functioning
toilets, passengers were given red biohazard bags to use -- and it
became the crew's duty to pick up the used ones.
Some passengers shared the bags; others lined baskets with them and turned them into makeshift outhouses.
"At first, nobody wants
to use it. But, I mean, after a while, you have no choice," said Darryl
Malone, a student at Texas A&M who was vacationing. "It got so bad, I
was walking through the ship, and this little girl was like, 'I need a
red bag; I need a red bag.' "
The crew tried to keep
passengers calm as they slept on decks and waited in food lines,
sometimes for as long as four hours. At times, the only food was stale
vegetables.
The crew figured out one way to appease guests: "Free beer and wine for everybody," said chilled-out passenger Ed Buck.
The crew worked around
the clock to try to make the situation somewhat bearable. They
constantly checked on passengers, often with smiles on their faces.
"The people onboard the ship, the crew, has been amazing," said Trey Love, who was celebrating his 40th birthday on Triumph.
"They did the dirtiest work," said Dee Tucker, "doing things I wouldn't do."
"We've had our breaking
moments. We've had our panic attacks. But it is what it is," Bethany
Nutt said while the boat was still being tugged toward shore.
Once the ship docked
late Thursday and passengers disembarked, the crew members were shuttled
to hotels in Mobile. Carnival employees work on a contract basis, often
on the same ship, for months at a time.
The Triumph workers will
receive full and normal compensation and be sent to other ships or
offered vacation if they had some scheduled soon, said Carnival
spokesman Vance Gulliksen.
Crew member Sachin
Sharma of India said workers had no problems with being thrust into the
icky job of handling the red bags filled with human waste.
"It's very simple," he
said, "because we are used to it. That's why we make the best effort for
them. ... It's a part of the job."
He will enjoy three days off.
Then, it's off to the next ship.
CNN's Victor Blackwell contributed to this story.
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