By Walter Ham, U.S. Coast Guard Headquarters
WASHINGTON -- One fateful evening in 1974 after dropping his
girlfriend at home in Shelby County, Alabama, Bob Trainor heard a U.S. Coast
Guard radio ad that would change his life.
“Within those 60 seconds, I was hooked,” Trainor said. “I
visited the recruiter the next day and within a couple of months was on my way
to Alameda, California.”
Trainor decided to join the Coast Guard because he wanted to
drive boats and save lives. Little did he know at the time he was about to
become a lifelong “Black Hull” sailor who would help maintain the U.S. Aids to
Navigation system, orATON, -- the buoys and beacons that help to keep mariners
and the U.S. economy on course.
Maintaining Navigation Buoys, Beacons
The Coast Guard maintains over 48,000 buoys and beacons
across more than 25,000 miles of the U.S. navigable waterways that make up the
U.S. Marine Transportation System. The Coast Guard ATON system mitigates
maritime transit risks by promoting the safe, economic and efficient movement
of vessel traffic. The U.S. MTS contributes more than $4.6 trillion to the U.S.
economy annually.
“Joining the ATON community was blind luck, but once
assigned to the Coast Guard buoy tender Rambler in 1975 out of Mobile, Alabama,
I never looked back,” said Trainor, who was born in White Plains, New York, and
raised in upstate New York and Massachusetts before moving to Alabama, while still
in high school.
Trainor served 24 of his 31 active-duty years in the Coast
Guard’s ATON mission. Of his 18 years of sea duty, he served on seven different
ATON cutters and two Aids to Navigation Teams, including two commanding officer
tours and one officer in charge tour. From the Gulf Coast to the Pacific
Northwest to the East Coast, he traveled thousands of miles and helped maintain
thousands of the buoys and beacons that safely guide mariners transiting the
MTS.
Early in his career on the Corpus Christi-based construction
tender Anvil, Trainor and his crewmates demonstrated the multimission
capabilities of ATON cutters following the 1979 blowout of a Campeche Bay,
Mexico, oil rig.
Working from sunup to sundown for six weeks, the Anvil crew
set oil containment booms across many of the inlets along the coast to protect
Texas wetlands.
Saving Mariners’ Lives
ATON units also perform search-and-rescue missions. While on
the Seattle-based seagoing buoy tender Fir, Trainor, then a chief petty
officer, and Chief Warrant Officer Tom Murray rescued a man and his young son
who were stranded on a rock island in Deception Pass, Washington, after their
boat crashed into pieces on the rocks.
While serving as the commanding officer of the Coast Guard
Cutter Sledge, a Baltimore-based construction tender, Trainor helped to restore
the ATON system in the waterways of North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland
following the 1999 Category 4 Hurricane Floyd. For three weeks following the
hurricane, Sledge traveled more than 1,200 miles, rebuilt 45 beacons and
corrected many other ATON discrepancies, restoring several critical waterways.
“There is a sense of accomplishment when a construction
tender spuds down at severely damaged range light and within a few hours you’re
underway with new aid to navigation in your wake lighting the way for our
nation’s mariners,” Trainor said.
Trainor retired as a chief warrant officer in 2006. He then
went to work as a civil servant at Coast Guard Headquarters here. He was
assigned to the Office of Navigation Systems, Aids to Navigation and Position,
Navigation and Timing Division.
Coast Guard Civilian Service
As a Coast Guard civilian, Trainor capitalized on his
experience to help shape policy and introduce initiatives, improving both the
design and maintenance of the ATON system. In addition, he helped shape global
ATON standards as a committee member of the International Association of Marine
Aids to Navigation and Lighthouse Authorities.
One of his most memorable contributions was the
establishment of range project in the Delaware River that vastly improved ship
transits through a narrow bridge. One of the Delaware Bay Pilots commented,
“You guys just made the most dangerous part of the river much safer.”
From the Coast Guard Headquarters to the Black Hull fleet,
Trainor has helped to make U.S. waterways safer, more efficient and resilient.
“Saving lives is the foundation of everything the Coast
Guard does,” Trainor said. “From actual rescues to keeping drugs out of the
country, to maintaining a system of signals to mitigate transits risks, all
Coast Guard missions aim to save lives.”
More than four decades after he joined the Coast Guard,
Trainor retired for a second time, wrapping up his 43 years of uniformed and
civilian Coast Guard service during a ceremony here in May 2018. His wife
Cynthia, who was his girlfriend in 1974 on the night he heard the life-changing
radio ad, was there with him.
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