Vieques Ferry

Vieques Ferry
Route Fajardo Vieques, Puerto Rico
Carries passengers and cargo
Authority Maritime Transport Authority

The Vieques Ferry or Lancha de Vieques, is a ferry system that carries passengers and cargo from Fajardo, Puerto Rico to Vieques, Puerto Rico and vice versa, both complementing and competing with commercial air service available from San Juan, Puerto Rico to the island of Vieques.

A typical ticket from Fajardo to Vieques (or from Vieques to Fajardo) costs US$2 one-way and US$4 round-trip.[1]

The Vieques Ferry system runs services from and to Fajardo each day of the week for passengers, and from Mondays to Fridays for cargo-only travel.[2]

There is a similar ferry service from Fajardo to Culebra, an island located slightly northwest of Vieques. That service is named Culebra Ferry, or Lancha de Culebra.

Daily Schedule[3] (as of Nov '14)
Fajardo (M-F) Vieques (M-F) Fajardo (S-S) Vieques (S-S)
<--- 6:30AM <--- 6:30AM
9:30AM ---> 9:00AM --->
<--- 11:00AM
1:30PM ---> <--- 1:00PM
<--- 3:00PM 3:00PM --->
4:30PM ---> <--- 4:30PM
<--- 6:00PM 6:00PM --->
8:00PM --->

History

On January 1, 2000, the Puerto Rican Government passed ownership of all legal passenger ship services to the Puerto Rican Maritime Transport Authority. This was made mostly to enhance service between Culebra, Fajardo and Vieques.

On October 16, 2013, Ceiba mayor Angelo Cruz Ramos requested that the Fajardo-Vieques ferry service go from Ceiba to Vieques instead, alleging that it would only take 25 minutes to get from Ceiba to Vieques and vice versa by boat, cutting the travel time between Vieques and mainland Puerto Rico by more than one hour.[4]

On November 8, 2013, the American Civil Liberties Union made allegations that diabetic people were not being allowed to eat inside the ferries during the trips between Fajardo and Vieques.[5]

On January 16, 2014, an incident occurred when a group of ten passengers interrupted a trip from Fajardo to Vieques because they thought the boat named Cayo Largo, was leaving for Culebra instead of Vieques. Police intervened and the boat was able to leave 2 hours later.[6]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.