Pictures 'Show Silt Damage Caused By Bimini Ferry'

THE environmentalist group Bimini Blue Coalition has released photographs taken a week ago by a ferry passenger which it claims shows a plume of mud and silt thrown up by the Resorts World Bimini (RWB) SuperFast.

The Coalition has been fighting RWB’s construction of a cruise ship terminal, 1,000-foot pier and man-made island and dredging activities associated with it. Its concerns include turbidity issues related to the SuperFast ferry operation, which brings passengers from Port Miami on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays.

“What were once the clearest waters in the Bahamas, world famous for their beauty and bounty, are now becoming a disgusting plume of mud and silt,” the Coalition said in a statement. “RWB is also now stating that they are going to increase the schedule for the SuperFast, further polluting Bimini’s waters and killing our reefs every day of the week.

“This is terrible for all of Bimini’s businesses and residents, and is making the island far less appealing to tourists. What will be left for Bimini’s residents and tourism industry, including RWB, once they’ve further destroyed the beauty of what draws people here in the first place? There is no plan in their Environmental Management Plan to address turbidity issues during operation, despite it being one of the most serious threats of this whole project.”

RWB announced on Thursday that it has completed construction of the pier and that the ferry will start using it from September 18. In addition, Genting Group, which owns the resort and the ferry, announced that it will begin ferry service from Fort Lauderdale to Bimini on October 14. The ship will leave Port Everglades on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, in addition to its departures from Port Miami.

Genting has been tendering passengers from the ferry to the bay side of the island, a process that takes about an hour each way. Guests then take a shuttle to the resort or to Alice Town for sightseeing. Time on the island for a day trip totals only about two and a half hours.

However, with the new port, which was built on the ocean side, guests will disembark directly from the ferry onto land and be able to spend five to six hours on the island, Genting says.

The ferry — a 13-year-old cruise ship renamed the BiminiSuperFast — began sailing from Miami to Bimini just over a year ago after Genting bought the former Bimini Bay Resort, built a casino and started work on a 305-room marina hotel, to be completed this autumn.

Although some passengers stay on the island overnight, a large majority are daytrippers on the ferry, which leaves Miami at 9am and returns around 7pm. The ferry has two casinos, a sports book and VIP rooms for high-rollers, and many of the daytrippers play at Genting’s casino on the island.

Although construction of the dock was approved by the Bahamas government, it ran into opposition from people who complained that it would damage coral and the rest of the underwater environment.

The new dock includes a temporary Customs and Immigration facility; permanent facilities are the next phase of the project. Genting also will build new beach amenities, including a restaurant, beach club and craft market.