"Chuck Gould" wrote in message
oups.com...
On Oct 9, 8:11?am, "JimH" ask wrote:
"Corsair23" wrote in message
ups.com...
Do you, or do you NOT have boating and drinking laws on that side of
Erie?
If so, can you simply describe them, and briefly, the penalties for
these acts. ie: When are you allowed to drink on a boat, Do you have
to be moored? Can you drink in transit.
A friend says the laws are vastly different for the US, as opposed to
Canada.
S.
http://www.boater101.com/Course/docu...Hstatelaws.pdf
================================================== ===
SL 14. Boating Under the Influence
It is unlawful to operate or be in physical control of any vessel
underway,
or manipulate any
water skis or similar device if the person is under the influence of
alcohol
and/or drugs. A
person is considered to be under the influence with a Blood Alcohol
Content
(BAC) of 0.08 or
more.
NOTE: The legal detection limit for persons under 21 years of age is 0.02
Blood Alcohol
Content (BAC).
Anyone who operates a vessel, water skis or similar device is deemed to
have
given consent
to a chemical test or tests of their blood, breath, or urine to determine
alcohol or drug content
if arrested. If a person under arrest refuses to submit to a chemical
test,
the person is
prohibited from operating a vessel or water skis or from registering a
vessel for a one-year
period. If the person is the owner of the vessel, the registration
certificate and tags will be
impounded for a one-year period.
========================================
So how about open containers?
Can the skipper be sipping a highball at the helm and be OK as long as
he only blows 07.9?
Don't you mean 0.079? The leading zero in 07.9 is meaningless, and anyone
with that high a blood/alcohol level would be the equivalent of "embalmed".
8)