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Kitsilano coast guard increases staffing

FILE - Members of the Canadian Coast Guard stand on a hovercraft docked outside the Kitsilano Coast Guard facility during an official visit by Minister of Fisheries and Oceans Hunter Tootoo in Vancouver in a December 16, 2015, file photo. Fisheries and Oceans Canada says starting this May long weekend, Kitsilano station will have four crews of three working 12-hour shifts. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

VANCOUVER – A Vancouver coast guard base reopened by the federal Liberal government is increasing its staffing levels during the summer months.

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Fisheries and Oceans Canada says starting this May long weekend, Kitsilano station will have four crews of three working 12-hour shifts.

Fisheries department spokesman Dan Bate says before the change, the station had two crews of three working eight-hour shifts with 16 hours on call.

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The union representing coast guard workers had complained that when the base first reopened May 1, it only had three crew members and didn’t have 24/7 rescue capacity.

Bate says the old staffing model provided around-the-clock capacity through a combination of standby and working hours, while the new model will have rotating 12-hour shifts.

The previous Conservative government closed the base and the Liberals made a campaign promise last year to reopen it amid criticism of the coast guard’s response to a fuel spill in English Bay.

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