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New York (CNN) -- A ferry boat that apparently had mechanical problems crashed into the Staten Island Ferry terminal Saturday morning, leaving at least 55 people injured, authorities said.
One person was seriously injured, said Chris Gilbride of New York City's Office of Emergency Management, and was among the 18 victims taken to area hospitals. Thirty-seven others were treated on the scene, authorities said.
The ferry boat, the Andrew J. Barberi, was the same vessel involved in an October 2003 crash that killed 11 people and injured 42, U.S. Coast Guard spokeswoman Barbara Miller told CNN.
Later reporting from hospitals in New York gave conflicting accounts on the number of people injured. Spokesman Christian Preston of Staten Island University Hospital told CNN the facility was evaluating six adults and three children for non-life-threatening injuries, and a spokesman for Richmond University Medical Center said 28 people from the accident were being treated in the emergency room for mostly minor injuries.
There were 252 passengers and 18 crew members on board the vessel during Saturday's crash, Miller said.
Janette Sadik-Khan, a spokeswoman for New York City's Department of Transportation, said at a news conference that about one minute before the ferry reached the terminal, the captain sounded an alarm because he was unable to pull back on the throttle to slow down the boat.
At that time, crew members tried to move passengers to the back of the vessel, said Staten Island Ferry Chief Operating Officer James Disimone. The boat was approaching the terminal at normal speed -- 5 knots, or about 5.7 miles per hour -- when the accident occurred around 9 a.m., Sadik-Khan said.
"As soon as we got to the port it just slammed right into the dock and pushed everybody back. It was chaos, pandemonium. It was something like I've never been through in my life," ferry passenger Alex Gonzalez told CNN affiliate NY1.
New York Fire Department Deputy Chief Bill Tanzosh said the impact left two breaches in the hull about 17 feet above the water line. One measured about 4 by 6 feet and the other was 4 by 4 feet, he said.
Video from NY1 showed rescue workers at the scene, carrying people on stretchers.
Five ferries carry about 65,000 passengers daily on a 5.2-mile run between Staten Island and the southern tip of Manhattan.
About three hours after the accident, the ferry schedules were getting back on track, Sadik-Khan said.
Staten Island Ferry crash injures 55 - CNN.com
One person was seriously injured, said Chris Gilbride of New York City's Office of Emergency Management, and was among the 18 victims taken to area hospitals. Thirty-seven others were treated on the scene, authorities said.
The ferry boat, the Andrew J. Barberi, was the same vessel involved in an October 2003 crash that killed 11 people and injured 42, U.S. Coast Guard spokeswoman Barbara Miller told CNN.
Later reporting from hospitals in New York gave conflicting accounts on the number of people injured. Spokesman Christian Preston of Staten Island University Hospital told CNN the facility was evaluating six adults and three children for non-life-threatening injuries, and a spokesman for Richmond University Medical Center said 28 people from the accident were being treated in the emergency room for mostly minor injuries.
There were 252 passengers and 18 crew members on board the vessel during Saturday's crash, Miller said.
Janette Sadik-Khan, a spokeswoman for New York City's Department of Transportation, said at a news conference that about one minute before the ferry reached the terminal, the captain sounded an alarm because he was unable to pull back on the throttle to slow down the boat.
At that time, crew members tried to move passengers to the back of the vessel, said Staten Island Ferry Chief Operating Officer James Disimone. The boat was approaching the terminal at normal speed -- 5 knots, or about 5.7 miles per hour -- when the accident occurred around 9 a.m., Sadik-Khan said.
"As soon as we got to the port it just slammed right into the dock and pushed everybody back. It was chaos, pandemonium. It was something like I've never been through in my life," ferry passenger Alex Gonzalez told CNN affiliate NY1.
New York Fire Department Deputy Chief Bill Tanzosh said the impact left two breaches in the hull about 17 feet above the water line. One measured about 4 by 6 feet and the other was 4 by 4 feet, he said.
Video from NY1 showed rescue workers at the scene, carrying people on stretchers.
Five ferries carry about 65,000 passengers daily on a 5.2-mile run between Staten Island and the southern tip of Manhattan.
About three hours after the accident, the ferry schedules were getting back on track, Sadik-Khan said.
Staten Island Ferry crash injures 55 - CNN.com
