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Construction begins on newest Washington state ferry

Published 8:35 am Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Members of the Suquamish Indian Tribe arrive at the Vigor Industrial Shipyard Tuesday in Seattle for a keel-laying ceremony for the state’s newest ferry, which will bear the name of their tribe.
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Members of the Suquamish Indian Tribe arrive at the Vigor Industrial Shipyard Tuesday in Seattle for a keel-laying ceremony for the state’s newest ferry, which will bear the name of their tribe.

Members of the Suquamish Indian Tribe arrive at the Vigor Industrial Shipyard Tuesday in Seattle for a keel-laying ceremony for the state’s newest ferry, which will bear the name of their tribe.
Workers at Vigor Industrial’s shipyard in Seattle listen during the keel-laying ceremony Tuesday to mark the construction of the Suquamish ferry being built at the shipyard.
Washington Gov. Jay Inslee makes a ceremonial weld Tuesday during the keel-laying ceremony for the Suquamish.
Frank Foti, CEO of Vigor Industrial, speaks during the ceremony Tuesday.

SEATTLE — Construction is beginning on Washington’s newest state ferry, the Suquamish.

Gov. Jay Inslee, state Sen. Christine Rolfes and Suquamish Tribe Chairman Leonard Forsman struck ceremonial welds Tuesday during a keel-laying for the $123 million Olympic Class vessel at Vigor Industrial’s shipyard on Harbor Island in Seattle. Inslee welded his granddaughter’s initials into the keel, Rolfes etched an orca and Forsman inscribed a circle with a dot — an ancient tribal symbol.

Money for the 144-car, 1,500-passenger boat were included in a $16.1 billion transportation revenue package the Legislature passed last year. The Suquamish is expected to begin service in fall 2018. The Transportation Department has not yet decided which route it will serve.

The Suquamish will be the fourth new ferry of its class since 2014, helping update the system’s aging fleet.