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Destacado Turismo/Transporte

$41.7M Ceiba terminal project, new ferries to improve service

Puerto Rico’s ferry fleet will expand with four vessels to improve service to Vieques and Culebra.

As construction at the Puerto Rico ferry terminal in Ceiba continues, Josué Menéndez, executive director of the Integrated Transportation Authority (ATI, in Spanish), said in an interview with News is my Business that four more ferries will be incorporated into the fleet, with one vessel expected to be ready by year’s end.

“The state has five ferries; with these new ones, there will be nine,” Menéndez said. “So we will have more than enough to mobilize the demand we have” between Ceiba and the island-municipalities of Vieques and Culebra.

The new Ceiba terminal, which is backed by $41.7 million in state funding, will feature a 28,000-square-foot building with two levels and a terrace, including ticketing, administrative offices, a waiting area with a cafeteria, and rental concessions.

Additionally, “the boarding area will be covered so passengers can take shelter in case of rain,” he said.

It will also feature a multistory parking lot with capacity for 350 vehicles, and additional land for about 160 more vehicles. 

The ATI chief noted that several capital improvement projects are underway in Puerto Rico’s transportation system.

“In August 2023, a contract was signed with Conrad Shipyard for the design and construction of four new vessels. This project represents an investment of $70 million, funded by federal funds after an auction process. The first of these vessels is scheduled to be delivered in late 2024,” he said.

The new ferries will be named La Borinqueña, Flor de Maga, Preciosa, and Isla del Encanto. Furthermore, ATI is evaluating the possibility of creating routes to the U.S. Virgin Islands.

By adding four state-owned vessels, “we are saving money” as the government will no longer need to pay a private company to run the ferry system, he noted.

“The ones we will use will be our ferries,” Menéndez said. “The good thing about having it fixed and configured this way is that we can provide maintenance to the fleet. The required preventive maintenance or dry docking can be carried out in a way that keeps them functioning without altering the service offered daily while a particular ferry is under maintenance.”

He acknowledged that “unfortunately, maritime transportation was submerged in inefficiency and poor service quality,” but assured that this has changed since “we came in 2021.”

“Nowadays, we are talking about an efficiency of 96%,” Menéndez added.

Detalles del autor
Detalles del autor
María Miranda es una reportera de investigación y editora con 20 años de experiencia en periódicos en inglés de Puerto Rico. En ese cargo, ha trabajado en proyectos a largo plazo y ha cubierto noticias de última hora con plazos muy estrictos. Es experta en la extracción de datos de bases de datos públicas y en la realización de entrevistas (tanto a figuras públicas como a personas del sector privado). También es traductora y ha editado y traducido un libro de economía sobre la crisis fiscal de Puerto Rico. Trabajó como intérprete para la FEMA durante las recientes labores de recuperación tras el huracán María y obtuvo su insignia de la FEMA.
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3 Comments

  1. Paul 7 de octubre de 2024

    So if I’m reading this correctly, with the new boats the ferry service will go back under control of the government? I sure hope I misunderstood. While the system is not perfect now it is 150% better and more efficient than when government ran.

    Responder
    1. barb octubre 8, 2024

      Paul you are reading it right 🙁

      Responder
  2. Abigail Andino 21 de febrero de 2025

    The people at the Puerto Rico ferry are running g that ferry today like they own it. Staffers are heading off passengers at the line to tell them there was an incident and they no longer have tickets.
    Meanwhile I stood my place in line and asked to see the desk clerk and he was confused and proceeded to sell me tickets until the female staffer tapped on his window and made a gesture.
    Meanwhile the people ahead of me and behind me were sold tickets.
    They were on their way to a day trip , I was on my way to visit a sick aunt who is a life long resident of vieques.
    This is deplorable.
    I am also fluent in both langue’s and her face fell to the floor when he heard my English.
    They’re lieing , and running that ferry as if it’s their family business.
    Today my own native people made me feel jealous of white faces with blue eyes.
    Cause it seemed like those folks were getting tickets.

    Responder

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