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Evaristo and Sons Sea Transport Corp.
Company typePrivate
IndustryShipping
Founded2017; 8 years ago (2017)
FounderEric Tiu
Headquarters
Km. 4, National Highway, Brgy. Luna, Surigao City
,
Philippines
Area served
Philippines
Key people
Eduardo Andit (General Manager)

Evaristo and Sons Sea Transport Corp. is a Philippine domestic shipping line based at Km. 4, National Highway, Brgy. Luna, Surigao City. The office is located at Km. 4, National Highway, Brgy. Luna, Surigao City. It operates passenger, cargo and RORO vessels to various destinations in the Philippines.[1]

History

[edit]

Evarsito and Sons Sea Transport was established in 2017 by Eric Tiu. The first route that the company served is from Surigao City to Dapa, Surigao del Norte , using the boat MV Precious Ferry.

In 2018, Evaristo and Sons has additional brand new fastcrafts: MV Sean Ferry 2 and 2019 MV Nathan Ferry 3. In October 2021 another additional Roro vessel: MV Sabina Ferry 6 and last MV Evaristo Ferry 8 acquired in 2023.

In July 30, 2022 Evaristo and Sons has launched the additional route: Surigao City - Libjo, Dinagat Islands using MV Precious Ferry until decided to ceased operation of said route in January 2024.

In August 2023 has launched the additional route: Dapitan City - Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental using MV Evaristo Ferry 8.

In July 24, 2024 has launched the additional route: Surigao City - Dinagat, Dinagat Islands using MV Precious Ferry.

Destinations

[edit]

As of July 2024, Evaristo and Sons Sea Transport Corp. has 5 destinations. Evaristo and Sons serves the following destinations:[2]

Former Routes:

Vessels

[edit]

Evaristo and Sons Sea Transport Corp. has a total of 5 operating vessels. Evaristo and Sons operates the following vessels as of July 2024:

Roro

[edit]
Precious Ferry
  • MV Precious Ferry
  • MV Sabina Ferry 6 (For car-carrier)
  • MV Evaristo Ferry 8 [3]

Fastcrafts

[edit]
Sean Ferry 2
  • MV Sean Ferry 2
  • MV Nathan Ferry 3[4]

Incidents and accidents

[edit]
  • On 25 May 2024, which was preparing to depart for a bound to Siargao Island, was reportedly executing undocking maneuvers when it collided with MV Sean Ferry 2. The latter was maneuvering to dock at the Surigao Port at the time of the incident. The collision resulted in damage to the port side of MV Nathan Ferry 3. Fortunately, there have been no reports of injuries sustained by any passengers onboard either vessel.

See also

[edit]


References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Evaristo and Sons Schedule, Route List 2024". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2024-12-29.
  2. ^ "Check out our latest schedule for December 23 - 29, 2024!! 🤩". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2024-12-29.
  3. ^ "𝗦𝗛𝗜𝗣 𝗨𝗣𝗗𝗔𝗧𝗘 𝗠/𝗩 𝗘𝘃𝗮𝗿𝗶𝘀𝘁𝗼 𝗙𝗲𝗿𝗿𝘆 𝟴 - 𝗘𝘃𝗮𝗿𝗶𝘀𝘁𝗼 & 𝗦𝗼𝗻𝘀 𝗦𝗲𝗮 𝗧𝗿𝗮𝗻𝘀𝗽𝗼𝗿𝘁 𝗖𝗼𝗿𝗽'𝘀 𝗻𝗲𝘄𝗲𝘀𝘁 𝘃𝗲𝘀𝘀𝗲𝗹!". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2024-12-29.
  4. ^ "M/V Nathan Ferry 3 of Evaristo & Sons Sea Transport Corp. - Photo by Cid Montanes of PSSS". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2024-12-29.


Vessel Date Deaths Missing Survivors Remarks

MV Doña Paz
20 December 1987 4,3412[1] Un­known2 25[2][3] MV Doña Paz left from Tacloban City, Leyte, for the City of Manila, with a stopover at Catbalogan, Samar. At 10:30 p.m. (PST), the passenger vessel collided with a motor tanker, MT Vector, near Dumali Point between the provinces of Marinduque and Oriental Mindoro.[4] The vessel's manifest only listed 1,493 passengers and a 53-member crew, but survivors claimed that the vessel was carrying more than 4,000 passengers. The incident was the worst peacetime disaster and the worst in the 20th century,[2] and the vessel was even named the Asia's Titanic.[5]
MV Doña Marilyn 24 October 1988 389 2 197 While sailing from Manila to Tacloban City, the vessel was caught up in Typhoon Unsang and sank.[6] It was the sister ship of MV Doña Paz.

MV Princess of the Orient
18 September 1998 70 80 355 The 13,935-ton, 195-metre (640 ft) long vessel sailed from Manila to Cebu during a typhoon and capsized at 12:55 p.m. (PST) near Fortune Island in Batangas.[7]

MV Princess of the Stars
21 June 2008 437 605 32 MV Princess of the Stars capsized off the coast of San Fernando, Romblon at the height of Typhoon Frank. The ferry left Manila en route to Cebu City and was permitted to sail because the vessel was large enough to stay afloat in the typhoon's periphery. However, Frank unexpectedly changed course, placing the ferry closer to the storm.[8] According to survivors the ship ran into rough seas and capsized off the coast of Romblon.[9]

MV Sulpicio Express Siete
16 August 2013 0[10] 0[10] 36[10]

On 16 August 2013 at 8:45pm as it approached Cebu City's harbor, the 2GO ferry the M/V St. Thomas Aquinas, formerly the SuperFerry 2,[11] collided with the cargo ship the Sulpicio Express Siete of Sulpicio Lines and sank in 144 meters of water off Lauis Ledge Talisay, Cebu.[12] The ship was carrying 831 people—715 passengers and 116 crewmembers.[12] 629 people were rescued immediately. As of 17 August 2013 31 bodies had been recovered, leaving 172 unaccounted for.[12] The Sulpicio Express Siete with 36 crew members on board did not sink and returned safely to port[12] but sustained a large hole in its bow above the water line.[12]


Filipina Princess - She was known as the Ferry Akashia of Shin Nihonkai Ferry in Japan. She was acquired by Sulpicio Lines Inc. in 1988 together with M/V Cotabato Princess and M/V Nasipit Princess and became the flagship of the fleet. She was then one of the biggest, one of the longest and one of the fastest passenger vessels that ever arrived in country. In 2011 she was broken up in Alang, India.

Dipolog Princess - Acquired by Sulpicio Lines in 1978 as the M/V Don Eusebio and was one of Sulpicio Lines’ contenders in the speed wars of that era. She belonged to a class of “fast cruiser-liners” that was rapidly becoming common in the country during that time. In 1989, the Don Eusebio was renamed as the M/V Dipolog Princess. In 2008, the Dipolog Princess was laid up along with the bulk of the SLI fleet following the MV Princess of the Stars tragedy. The met its inevitable end Later, in 2011, Dipolog Princess was sold for scrap. She was one of the Philippines’ longest-serving ships; in her almost 42 years of existence, 33 were spent in local waters.

Princess of the orient - She was built in 1974 as the Sunflower 11 (Japanese: さんふらわあ11) of Nippon Kosoku Ferry. Operations of the vessel was transferred to Blue Highway Line in 1990, and she was renamed the Sunflower Satsuma (Japanese: さんふらわあ さつま). She sailed for three more years until she was retired from service in Japan. Sulpicio Lines acquired this ship in 1993, which earned them the distinction of owning the largest and most luxurious ferry ever to sail in Philippine waters. She was renamed as the M/V Princess of the Orient, and entered service with some modifications to her original structure. On September 18, 1998, She had her unfortunate incident and sank somewhere off coast of Cavite at the height of Typhoon Gading (internationally known as Typhoon Vicki).

palawan princess - She was built in 1956 in Dubigeon Shipyard, Nantes-Chantenay, France and was launched on September 6, 1956 as the Enee. She was sold Sulpicio Lines, and became the Doña Vicenta in 1974. She was fielded as a competitor to the MV Cebu City of William Lines. She was renamed as the Doña Susana in 1980, and once again as the Palawan Princess in 1989. She was later sold to breakers in China.

princess of the south - She was built as the New Katsura in 1981 by Naikai Zosen, Setoda, Japan. She joined the fleet of Sulpicio Lines in 2005 and was assigned to the Manila-Iloilo-Zamboanga-General Santos v.v. route as a replacement to her fleetmate, the Princess of the World which caught fire on that same year. She would also be assigned to the Cebu-Cagayan de Oro v.v. route until 2008 when the sinking of the M/V Princess of the Stars led to the suspension of Sulpicio's operations for a period of time. After a few months, the suspension was partially lifted and the Princess of the South then took over the flagship Manila-Cebu v.v. route. Sulpicio Lines had also changed its name to Philippine Span Asia Carrier Corp. during this time and her livery was slightly repainted to reflect this change. She would go on to sail for 6 more years until she was sold off for scrap to Bangladeshi buyers in 2014. Shortly after her sale, PSACC formally stopped passenger shipping operations to focus on their cargo shipping business.

Princess of the World - She was the former Marimo when she was still in Japan. She was acquired by Sulpicio Lines in 1996 and was renamed to M/V Princess of the World. She was running the Manila-Iloilo-Zamboanga-General Santos and vice versa route which was considered to be one of the most important routes of Sulpicio Lines Inc during that time. She encountered a fire off the Dulungin Point somewhere near Siocon, Zamboanga del Norte on July 7, 2005. The fire engulfed the vessel's passenger accommodation areas including the vessel's navigational bridge. All the 200 plus passengers onboard the vessel were rescued while the vessel was declared beyond economic repair and eventually later sold as scrap.

Princess of the Stars - She was built by Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries (IHI) in Aioi shipyard in Japan in 1984 as the second Ferry Lilac of the Shin Nihonkai Ferry in Japan. She was acquired by Sulpicio Lines Inc in 2004 as the new flagship of the fleet. and became the largest vessel ever to sail in Philippine waters during that time. She capsized & sunk in 2008 near San Fernando, Romblon, with the loss over 800 lives. She was salvaged and later broken up in Navotas.

cagayan princess - She was the former Uwakai when she was still Japan. She was aquired by Sulpicio Lines in 1982. She was sold to Roble Shipping Inc.

Historical fleet

[edit]

2GO Travel

[edit]
  • St. Augustine of Hippo (Formerly Cebu Ferry 1)
  • St. Anthony de Padua(Formerly Cebu Ferry 2)
  • St. Therese of the Child Jesus (Formerly SuperFerry 16)
  • St. Leo the Great (Formerly SuperFerry 21)
  • St. Pope John Paul II (Formerly SuperFerry 12)
  • St. Joan of Arc (Formerly SuperFerry 5)
  • St. Gregory the Great (Formerly SuperFerry 20)
  • St. Peter the Apostle
  • St. Joseph the Worker
  • St. Rita de Casia (Formerly SuperFerry 1)
  • St. Thomas Aquinas (Formerly SuperFerry 2)

2GO Freight

[edit]
  • San Rafael Uno
  • San Agustin Uno
  • San Lorenzo Ruiz Uno (Chartered)
  • San Pedro Calungsod (Chartered)
  • St. Nicholas of Myra (Chartered)
  • 2GO 1 (I)
  • St. Vincent the Paul (formerly 2GO 1 (II))
  • St. Martin de Porres (formerly 2GO 2 and Dubai World)
  • Myriad (Chartered)
  • Medbay (Chartered)
  • Markella (Chartered)
  • Eponyma (Chartered)
  • Ingenuity (Chartered)
  • Brinkness (Chartered) (formerly Ramon Aboitiz)
  • Ocean Papa (Chartered)

SuperCat

[edit]
  • St. Camael
  • St. Sariel
  • St. Micah
  • St. Nuriel (formerly SuperCat 22)
  • St. Uriel (formerly SuperCat 23)
  • St. Seathiel (formerly SuperCat 25)
  • St. Emmanuel (formerly SuperCat 26)
  • St. Jhudiel (formerly SuperCat 30)
  • St. Braquiel (formerly SuperCat 32)
  • St. Dominic (formerly SuperCat 36)
  • St Benidict (formerly SuperCat 38)
  • SuperCat 1
  • SuperCat - I
  • SuperCat 2
  • SuperCat 3
  • SuperCat 5
  • SuperCat 6
  • SuperCat 7
  • SuperCat 8
  • SuperCat 9
  • SuperCat 10
  • SuperCat 11 (Formerly St. Raphael)
  • SuperCat 12 (Formerly St. Gabriel)
  • SuperCat 17
  • SuperCat 18
  • SuperCat 20
  • SuperCat 21
  • SuperCat 2001 (Formerly Tricat 50)
  • SuperCat 2002

SuperFerry

[edit]

SuperFerries

  • SuperFerry 1 (renamed to St. Rita de Casia)
  • SuperFerry 2 (renamed to St. Thomas Aquinas)
  • SuperFerry 3
  • SuperFerry 5 (renamed to St. Joan of Arc)
  • SuperFerry 6
  • SuperFerry 7 (formerly Mabuhay 2)
  • SuperFerry 8/19 (formerly Sugbu and Mabuhay 3)
  • SuperFerry 9 (formerly Mabuhay 5)
  • SuperFerry 10 (formerly Mabuhay 1)
  • SuperFerry 11 (renamed to Our Lady of Banneux)
  • SuperFerry 12 (renamed to St. Pope John Paul II)
  • SuperFerry 14
  • SuperFerry 15
  • SuperFerry 16 (now St. Therese of the Child Jesus)
  • SuperFerry 17
  • SuperFerry 18
  • SuperFerry 20 (renamed to St. Gregory the Great)
  • SuperFerry 21 (renamed to St. Leo the Great)

Ferries

  • M/V Our Lady of Medjugorje
  • M/V Our Lady of Sacred Heart
  • M/V Our Lady of Good Voyage (formerly Mabuhay 6)
  • M/V Our Lady of Lipa
  • M/V Our Lady of Naju
  • M/V Doña Virginia
  • M/V Zamboanga City
  • M/V Maynilad (renamed to Our Lady of Akita 2)
  • M/V Masbate I (renamed to Our Lady of Manaoag)

Freighters

  • M/V Millenium Brinkness
  • M/V Millennium Dragon
  • M/V Millennium Eagle
  • M/V Millennium Tiger

Cebu Ferries

[edit]

Ferries

  • Cebu Ferry 1 (renamed to St Augustine of Hippo)
  • Cebu Ferry 2 (renamed to St Anthony de Padua)
  • Cebu Ferry 3 (renamed to St Ignatius of Loyola)
  • Our Lady of Mount Carmel[13]
  • Our Lady of Lourdes
  • Our Lady of Montserrat (formerly Misamis Occidental)
  • Our Lady of Good Voyage
  • Our Lady of Manaoag (Formerly Masbate I)
  • Our Lady of Banneux
  • Our Lady of Fatima[14]
  • Our Lady of Guadalupe
  • Our Lady of the Rule[15]
  • Our Lady of Lipa
  • Our Lady of Akita 2
  • Dona Cristina
  • Dona Lili
  • Don Calvino


Freighters

  • Our Lady of Charity
  • Our Lady of Rosary

William Lines Inc.

[edit]

Passenger

  • Wilines Mabuhay 1 (renamed to SuperFerry 10)
  • Wilines Mabuhay 2 (renamed to SuperFerry 7)
  • Wilines Mabuhay 3 (formerly Sugbu, renamed to SuperFerry 8 and later SuperFerry 19)
  • Wilines Mabuhay 5 (renamed to SuperFerry 9)
  • Wilines Mabuhay 6 (renamed to Our Lady of Good Voyage)
  • Doña Virginia
  • Maynilad (renamed to Our Lady of Akita 2)
  • Masbate I (renamed to Our Lady of Manaoag)
  • Manila City
  • Cebu City
  • Zamboanga City
  • Iligan City
  • Tacloban City
  • Tagbilaran City
  • Cagayan De Oro City
  • Ozamis City
  • Iloilo City
  • Misamis Occidental (renamed to Our Lady of Monsterrat)
  • Misamis Oriental
  • Elizabeth
  • Dona Maria
  • Albert
  • Edward
  • Don Jose I
  • Don Victoriano
  • Grace I
  • Henry
  • Victor
  • Elena

Cargo

  • Wilcon I
  • Wilcon II
  • Wilcon IV
  • Wilcon V
  • Wilcon VI
  • Wilcon VIII
  • Wilcon IX (formerly Dumaguete City)
  • Wilcon XI
  • Rocon 1 (renamed to SuperRORO 200)
  • Davao City

In recounting the history of William Lines, Inc. we have first to go back to early 1933 when the late Don Victorino T. Chiongbian embarked on shipping business with two boats –M/V Don Victorino and M/V Doña Rosario. Avidly watching his father operate his shipping business was William Chiongbian who soon learned the operations and intricacies of shipping. It is not surprising therefore that William Chiongbian picked up where his father left off. And so on December 13,1945, right after World War II, William L. Chiongbian began his shipping venture. He first acquired a salvaged Japanese boat from the Property Custodian and operated it for inter-island passenger and cargo traffic. Finding it inadequate, he sold the boat after two months of operation and in November of the same year bought a more suitable ship, the M/V San Pedro renamed M/V Don Victorino. Again the ship could not cope up with the increasing demand and was sold in February 1946. On April 15,1046, he acquired F-120 and a month later F-8 was added and they were christened M/V Virginia VI and M/V Doña Rosario respectively.

Chiongbian

Inspired by the results of the operations, William Chiongbian decided to augment his two ships and acquired larger ships the “FE” type. In January 1947, FS-372 renamed M/V Albert and FS-311 renamed M/V Elizabeth were acquired, followed by FS-268 renamed M/V Elena and FS-526 renamed M/V Don Victorino in July 1948. By this time, employees and ship personnel had tremendously increased to meet the corresponding increase in volume of business.The branch offices in Manila, Misamis, Iligan and other agencies were opened as the William Lines flag unfurled in these seaports. Also the main office, established in Mabolo, Cebu City, was transferred to a more strategic location at Gotiaco building on M.C. Briones st.

On May 1949, to improve and bolster management and to cope up with future expansion, William Chiongbian decided to incorporate his business. He then bought out the De la Rama Interisland vessels namely; Luzon, Cebu and Panay and had then renamed after his children.

Additional branches opened in Tagbilaran, Dumaguete, Zamboanga and Davao. In 1950, three more ships were acquired. That same year, the Business Writers’ Association of the Philippines voted William L. Chiongbian “Shipping Man of the Year”.

The company then embarked on an expansion program to enlarge and modernize its vessels. And one after the other the ships were sent to HongKong and Japan for enlargement and improvement. By the end of 1960, the company had acquired four more vessels, making a total of 14 ships with a gross tonnage of 8,900.

When in 1962, due to economic depression, a retrenchment program had to be implemented. Personnel had to be reduced , two vessels had to be sold and only five vessels were run while the rest were tied up.

Working twice as hard as before after he lost the congressional elections (he entered politics in 1953, was reelected and lost when he run for his third term in 1961 and was reelected again in 1965 and 1969), Chiongbian reinvigorated his business and in 1963 operations picked up and the other boats started operating again.

In 1964, the eldest son of William Chiongbian – Victor S. Chiongbian, then a fresh graduate of Ateneo de Manila Majoring in economics – assumed the vice presidency of the corporation. In the same year, Dadiangas, Iloilo and Bacolod branches were opened.

Two years later, William Lines acquired two ships. M/V Fylgia(now M/V Dumaguete City) and her sistership M/V Varda (now M/V Zamboanga City), through the financing of the Private Development Corporation of the Philippines (PDCP), the largest private financing institution in the Philippines – bringing the total gross tonnage to 15,400. And in 1967, Albert S. Chiongbian, the second son of William L. Chiongbian, assumed office as General Manager. Cong. William L. Chiongbian retired from active management of the corporation in 1970 (though he still remains as chairman of the board) and his two sons, Victor and Albert run the business as president and vice-president respectively. Together, they have planned a massive modernization/expansion program for the company, mapping a schedule to acquire six brand new ships possibly within the next eight years – the first of which is the M/V Misamis Occidental . Early this year (1972), a pair of twin sons, Edward and Henry, assumed training positions in the company, both having just graduated from Woodbury College, Los Angeles, USA and San Beda College in Manila respectively.

The two cargo/passenger ships acquired from Copenhagen in the middle of 1972, M/V Tagbilaran City and M/V General Santos City were partly financed by the Chiba Banking Corporation and the Consolidated Bank and Trust Corporation. This long range modernization and expansion program will be financed by PDCP, the Private Investment Company for Asia (PICA) S.A. and other world-renowned financing institutions who have signified their intention of assisting William Lines in this program. PDCP’s sources of funds are the World Bank, AID and other United Nations financing agencies while PICA is one of the biggest financing institution in Asia, based in Tokyo, Japan. William Lines expects to boost Philippine economy by generating more taxes for the government as well as additional employment and the promotion of tourism.

The acquisition of M/V Cebu City means a total of sixteen ships in the William Lines Fleet. Its other ships are the M/V Misamis Occidental, M/V Dumaguete City, M/V Zamboanga City, M/V Davao City, M/V Elizabeth, M/V Victor, M/V Albert, M/V Elena, M/V Henry, M/V Edward, M/V Grace-I, M/V Doña Maria, M/V Don Jose-I, M/V Tagbilaran City and M/V General Santos City calling on the following branches: Manila, Tagbilaran, Dumaguete, Zamboanga, Davao, Dadiangas, Ozamis, Iligan, Cagayan de Oro, Iloilo, Bacolod and by October of 1972 Tacloban. And in November 22,1995, William Lines, Inc. entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Aboitiz Shipping Corporation and Carlos A. Gothong Line, Inc. for the acquisition of the shipping related assets of Aboitiz and Gothong and became William, Gothong & Aboitiz, Inc. (WGA) In July 31,2002, the Chiongbians sold their stake in WG&A to the Aboitiz Group.

  1. ^ "Hundreds Missing After Sinking Of Ferry in a Philippine Storm". The New York Times. September 19, 1998. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  2. ^ a b Gabieta, Joey A. (December 20, 2012). "Doña Paz victims waiting for justice 25 years after". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  3. ^ "MV Dona Paz survivor reunites with family after 25 years on 'Wish Ko Lang'". GMA News Online. GMA Network Inc. May 12, 2012. Retrieved February 10, 2020. Valeriana [Duma] survived using a life jacket given by her employer, but her survival was never recorded by the authorities. If it had been, she would have been the youngest of the few survivors.
  4. ^ "Caltex Philippines versus Sulpicio Lines - G.R. No. 131166". Supreme Court of the Philippines. Arellano Law Foundation. September 30, 1999. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  5. ^ "25 years after the sinking of MV Doña Paz, GMA News TV airs 'Asia's Titanic'". GMA News. December 5, 2012. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  6. ^ "Killer on the loose". Manila Standard Today. August 19, 2013. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  7. ^ Victoria, Eliza (June 25, 2010). "Whatever happened to … Wreck done by 'Princess'". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on August 19, 2013. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  8. ^ "28 Philippines ferry survivors found: report". Yahoo! News. June 22, 2008. Archived from the original on June 26, 2008. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  9. ^ "Sunken ferry abandoned at noon Saturday, say filipino survivors". Xinhua News Agency. June 22, 2008. Archived from the original on June 26, 2008. Retrieved August 20, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference BBC News was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  11. ^ See photo at http://www.wakanatsu.com/philippine/photo/sf2.html Archived 2007-12-19 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ a b c d e De Jesus, Julliane (17 August 2013). "40 dead, 172 missing as two ships collide". Philippine Daily Inquirer (Agence France-Presse). Archived from the original on 20 August 2013. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
  13. ^ "Wakanatsu - Photo of Our Lady of Mount Carmel". www.wakanatsu.com. Retrieved 2016-11-15.
  14. ^ Napallacan, Jhunnex (19 September 2005). "Fire Stalls Trip To Cebu Of Ship With 620 Passengers". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 9 June 2023.
  15. ^ "Wakanatsu - Photo of Our Lady of Rule". www.wakanatsu.com. Retrieved 2016-11-15.