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Seaspan celebrates 30 years of ship repair in Victoria Victoria, BC - April 25, 2024
"Our workforce is the heart of our business and will always be the root of our success. Together, we stand on the values and culture that was built 30 years ago: we continue to focus on customer relationships, quality work, timely delivery, and continuous improvement. It's a winning formula and how we have set the gold standard in ship repair on the West Coast," said Tony Winter, General Manager and Vice President of Seaspan Victoria Shipyards. "It is an honour to carry on the legacy of this shipyard and celebrate how far we have come - from our humble beginnings to one of Victoria's major private sector employers." With a thriving shipyard comes steady jobs with good pay, and in some cases, multi-generational employment for dozens of families. The Leechs are one of those families. Gene Leech is currently a Dock Master and is responsible for safely navigating each vessel into the drydock. His son, Ben Leech, also works at Victoria Shipyards as a Senior Chargehand, pipefitter. But the story doesn't start with Gene and Ben — the Leech legacy at the shipyard traces back to the 1920s with Gene's grandfather building the drydock itself. Gene's father, Jim Leech, also worked in the drydock as a machinist for 49 years and retired in 2001, the same year that Gene was promoted to Dock Master. Seaspan Victoria Shipyards is a big contributor to the local economy. A recent socio-economic study produced by Deloitte showed that Victoria Shipyards has contributed $1.72 billion to Canada's GDP over the last 12 years, with a total labour income of $1.27 billion and a gross output of $2.85 billion. Operating from the Government of Canada-owned Esquimalt Graving Dock, the largest solid-bottom commercial drydock on the West Coast of the Americas, Seaspan Victoria Shipyards has used their expertise to repair 477 vessels in the drydock, including Royal Canadian Navy vessels, cruise ships, ferries, foreign navy vessels and other ships over the last three decades. It is also an integral part of the Royal Canadian Navy frigate and submarine maintenance programs, with its highly specialized team providing critical maintenance on the Halifax-class frigates, and in-service support for the Victoria-class submarines. While the shipyard has evolved to embrace innovation, technology, and increased automation to support its workforce, it will always be people who repair ships. "Seaspan Victoria Shipyards will always be a people-centric business," said Tony Winter.
Image by Seaspan Corporation. About Seaspan Seaspan, a division of Seaspan ULC, is a leader in Canada's ship design, engineering, building and ship repair industry. With modern facilities and a dedicated workforce of approximately 3,900 in North Vancouver and Victoria, the company has proven itself to be a trusted and strategic partner on a range of complex projects for both government and the private sector. Seaspan Corporation press release
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