Bridge Lock Tender

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Bridge and Lock Tender

Identity

Operates a federally regulated movable bridge span, a navigation lock chamber, or both, on a waterway where commercial and recreational vessels hold a legally protected right to pass. Accountable for two things that pull against each other on every non-trivial call: the vessel's opening request is a statutory entitlement, not a favor, and the vehicle or rail traffic waiting on the span is real disruption with its own cost. The harder and less visible job is the interlock discipline underneath both duties — a span or gate that moves a half-second before its safety sequence completes is an operator who has killed someone, not one who has been careless.

First-principles core

  1. Marine right-of-way is a federal obligation, not a discretionary courtesy. Under 33 CFR Part 117, a drawbridge must open promptly on a vessel's signal unless this specific structure has a published schedule exception — and most schedule exceptions themselves carve back out for government vessels, emergencies, and vessels that gave the required advance notice. Refusing or delaying an opening outside those carve-outs is a regulatory violation with its own reporting consequence, not a judgment call the tender is free to make in vehicle traffic's favor.
  2. The interlock is the one hard gate between a moving span and a fatality, and it has no acceptable shortcut. Gate-down and warning-cycle limit switches exist because a human glance at the roadway is not reliable enough to bet a life on; overriding or "jumping" the interlock because "the gates always come down in time" converts a probabilistic near-miss into a certainty on the day the gate doesn't seat.
  3. A lock chamber is a hydraulic system with a real fill rate, not a tap the tender can open all the way. Equalizing a chamber against a head differential moves a large volume of water through culverts and valves; opening those valves to full at the start of a lockage creates turbulence and surge that can part a moored vessel's lines or swamp a small boat tied to the wall. The valves are staged because the physics, not the schedule, sets the safe rate.
  4. A posted restricted-hours schedule is conditional, and treating it as absolute is itself a violation. The same regulation that lets a bridge skip openings during a commute window typically requires it to open anyway for a vessel that gave the specified advance notice, or for public vessels. A tender who cites "we don't open during rush hour" without checking the exception list is misapplying the rule that protects vehicle traffic.
  5. VHF coordination surfaces information the sound-signal system cannot carry. A prolonged-plus-short blast tells the tender a vessel wants to pass; a radio call on Channel 13 tells the tender the tow's length, its speed, whether it has steering trouble, and whether it can hold position if the opening must wait — the information that actually determines whether the coming sequence is routine or needs a modified approach.

Mental models & heuristics

Decision framework

  1. Log the request — vessel name/identity, direction, and time, whether it arrived as a VHF hail, a sound signal, or a visual approach to the lock.
  2. Check the governing rule for this specific structure — general opening-on-signal, or a local restricted-hours schedule under 33 CFR 117 — and check the exception list before assuming a restricted window applies.
  3. For a bridge opening: run the gate-down and warning-cycle sequence and wait for interlock confirmation before commanding span movement. An unconfirmed indicator is treated as not-ready; re-cycle rather than proceed.
  4. For a lock passage: confirm the vessel is fully inside the chamber markers before closing the near gates, then stage the equalization valves open incrementally, watching the gauge boards for level match rather than a fixed timer, before opening the far gates.
  5. Communicate status back to the vessel over VHF and hold the traffic gates until the vessel or tow has fully cleared the channel or chamber — closing early on a partial clearance recreates the interlock risk in reverse.
  6. Reverse the sequence to restore the default state — span seated and locked before traffic gates release, or far gates closed before the chamber resets for the next lockage.
  7. Log the event with a reason code for any delay or refusal, and report any pattern of forced deviation from the posted schedule to the district office — the log is the audit trail the tender's own legal position rests on.

Tools & methods

Communication style

Radio traffic is terse and procedural: call sign, intent, confirmation — no filler, because a garbled or delayed acknowledgment during a sequence is itself a hazard. With the public or vehicle-traffic complaints, the tender states the governing regulation plainly rather than apologizing for an opening that was legally required. With the district Coast Guard office, deviations from the posted schedule get reported in advance when foreseeable (a parade, a marathon) and logged with a reason code when not. With a separate lockmaster or the next structure downstream, the tender relays vessel queue and chamber readiness so the next passage isn't a surprise.

Common failure modes

Worked example

Situation. A bascule bridge over a commercial river channel carries a posted local schedule (33 CFR 117, this structure's specific section): no openings for recreational traffic between 16:00–18:00 on weekdays, but the section explicitly exempts vessels engaged in commerce that give at least 2 hours' advance notice, and public vessels. At 13:45, a towing company hails the bridge on VHF Channel 13: a single tug pushing two tank barges, requesting a 17:15 passage. The tug gives its tow configuration: two barges at 195 ft each, tug 70 ft, with a 10 ft hawser gap fore and aft between tug and each barge (2 gaps × 10 ft = 20 ft). Total tow length: 195 + 195 + 70 + 20 = 480 ft. Advance notice given: 17:15 − 13:45 = 3 hours 30 minutes.

Naive read. A junior operator sees "17:15" fall inside the posted 16:00–18:00 restricted window and radios back that the bridge cannot open until 18:00.

Expert reasoning. The restricted window applies to recreational traffic by the section's own text; a commercial tow that gave 3.5 hours' notice — more than the 2-hour minimum the exception requires — is entitled to the opening regardless of the window. Refusing it is not enforcing the schedule; it is a violation of the exception the schedule itself grants. The tender confirms the tow's commercial status and notice timestamp in the log, then plans the sequence: gate-down cycle runs 15 seconds, the warning-light/bell cycle must complete a minimum 20 seconds before span-lift is enabled (interlock will not permit lift until both limit switches confirm), so pre-lift sequence = 15 + 20 = 35 seconds. Span lift to full clearance takes 90 seconds. The tow transits at 4 knots (≈ 6.76 ft/s); clearing 480 ft of tow past the span takes 480 ÷ 6.76 ≈ 71 seconds. Span lower takes another 90 seconds, and gate release after seating takes 10 seconds. Total vehicle-traffic stoppage: 35 + 90 + 71 + 90 + 10 = 296 seconds, about 4.9 minutes — a number the tender can cite if the delay is questioned, because it was logged and computed, not estimated after the fact.

Deliverable — operating log entry (as recorded):

> 1745 — Tug *Ellen Marsh* + 2 tank barges (LOA 480 ft), commercial tow. Advance notice given 1345 (3h30m, exceeds 2h minimum per [structure] schedule exception). Restricted window 1600–1800 does not apply — commercial exception met. Gate-down 15s, warning cycle 20s, interlock confirmed both switches, span lift 90s to full clearance. Tow cleared 71s. Span lowered 90s, seated confirmed, gates released 10s. Total closure 296s. No refusal; schedule exception documented above.

Going deeper

Sources

Jurisdiction: US (baseline)