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RNLI Sheerness all weather lifeboat second service in 24 hours

About the author

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Barry Crayford
Lifeboat press officer at Sheerness.

Lifeboats News Release

  • Date:
    29/08/2012
  • Author: Barry Crayford

Sheerness all weather lifeboat (ALB) launched at 12.02pm Wednesday 29 August to a 27ft Motorboat ‘Fyne Explorer’

The craft with 5 persons on board all foreign nationals with limited English speaking language, had suffered cooling pump failure.
The casualty had given his position by mobile phone to Thames coastguard as between Sheerness & Southend, Thames Estuary.
Casualty was located in the Grain Swatchway, with winds South Westerly gusting 30 knots a tow was secured and casualty towed into Queenborough harbour, where they were met by a North Kent Sector Coastguard Officer.
ALB returned to station at 1.53pm.
                                           
 
 
 
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Notes to editors:
 
The Sheerness lifeboat station was established in 1969 by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution and is one of 235 Lifeboat stations around the shores of Great Britain and Ireland.
 
The volunteer crews provide a maritime search and rescue service for the Kent coast.
The station is equipped with a 46ft Trent Class Offshore Lifeboat called “George and Ivy Swanson”, and a IB1 inshore lifeboat called “Eleanor”
 
 
RNLI media contacts

Barry Crayford, Volunteer Lifeboat Press Officer
07969659877 / bazcrayford@btinternet.com

Tim Ash, RNLI Public Relations Manager (London/East/South East)
0207 6207426 / 07785 296252 / tim_ash@rnli.org.uk

Philly Byrde, RNLI Press Officer (London/East/South East)
0207 6207425 / 07886 668825

For enquiries outside business hours, contact the RNLI duty press officer on 01202 336789.
 

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Key facts about the RNLI

The Royal National Lifeboat Institution is the charity that saves lives at sea. Our volunteers provide a 24-hour search and rescue service in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland from 236 lifeboat stations, including four along the River Thames and inland lifeboat stations at Loch Ness, Lough Derg, Enniskillen and Lough Ree. Additionally the RNLI has more than 1,000 lifeguards on over 180 beaches around the UK and operates a specialist flood rescue team, which can respond anywhere across the UK and Ireland when inland flooding puts lives at risk.

The RNLI relies on public donations and legacies to maintain its rescue service. As a charity it is separate from, but works alongside, government-controlled and funded coastguard services. Since the RNLI was founded in 1824 our lifeboat crews and lifeguards have saved at least 140,000 lives. Volunteers make up 95% of the charity, including 4,600 volunteer lifeboat crew members and 3,000 volunteer shore crew. Additionally, tens of thousands of other dedicated volunteers raise funds and awareness, give safety advice, and help in our museums, shops and offices.

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