WASHINGTON — The Coast
Guard announced Wednesday the launch of its third Sentinel-class, Fast
Response Cutter, the William Flores, at Bollinger Shipyards, Lockport, La.
The launch of the William Flores into the waters of
Bayou Lafourche marks a production milestone as the Fast Response Cutter readies
for sea trials, delivery, crew training and eventual commissioning.
“The Coast Guard’s new Fast
Response Cutters are national assets, unique to the United States and
uniquely equipped to respond to all threats and all events in times of crisis,”
said Cmdr. Chris O’Neil, chief of media relations for the U.S. Coast Guard.
“The Sentinel-class Fast Response Cutters will be capable of speeds in excess of
28 knots and operating in seas up to 18-feet. Armed with a 25-mm chain gun and
four, .50 caliber machine guns, the speed, stability and firepower of the Fast
Response Cutter deliver tremendous lifesaving, law enforcement and homeland
security capabilities in the same package. Like the Island-class patrol boats
the Fast Response Cutters replace, the fleet of 58 Sentinel-class cutters will
serve as the workhorses of America's littoral, maritime fleet.”
Seaman Apprentice William
Flores, namesake of the cutter, posthumously received the Coast Guard Medal,
the service’s highest award for heroism not involving combat, for his unselfish
acts and sacrifice Jan. 28, 1980, following the collision between the Coast Guard
Cutter Blackthorn and the tanker Capricorn. Flores and another crewmember
threw life jackets to their shipmates who had jumped into the water. Later,
when his companion abandoned ship as the Blackthorn began to submerge, Flores,
who was less than a year out of boot camp, remained behind and used his belt to
strap open the life jacket locker door, allowing additional life jackets to
float to the surface. Even after most crewmembers abandoned ship, the
19-year-old Flores remained aboard Blackthorn to assist trapped shipmates and to
comfort those who were injured and disoriented. Seaman Apprentice William Ray
“Billy” Flores and 22 other Coast Guardsmen perished as the Blackthorn capsized
and sank near the entrance of Tampa Bay, Fla. Twenty seven of his shipmates
survived.
After commissioning, the William Flores will be
homeported in Miami, with a crew of 24 to conduct alien migrant interdiction
operations, port, waterways and coastal security patrols, search and rescue and
national defense missions.
Named for enlisted Coast Guard heroes, Fast
Response Cutters have an overall length of 154 feet, a beam of 26 feet and
are capable of speeds in excess of 28 knots. The Fast Response Cutter also
features a stern launch ramp for rapid and safe deployment of its 7.9-meter
small boat. The William Flores is scheduled to be delivered and commissioned in
2012.
For more information about the Fast Response Cutter
visit http://www.uscg.mil/acquisition/sentinel/default.asp or to learn more about the recapitalization of Coast
Guard assets visit
http://www.uscg.mil/acquisition/programs/pdf/CG9recap.pdf.
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