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Undocumented boat: input on penalties
Hi,
I am trying to avoid a costly mistake for someone. The Coast Guard failed to notify them months ago of problems with documentation and now it looks like it will take 2-3 months for the Coast Guard to get the papers to them. So...they of course want to sail! What are the fines/penalties for having an undocumented boat in Massachusetts waters? I assume this would have insurance implications too. Does anybody know? Thanks, Karin |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
K Pilson wrote:
What are the fines/penalties for having an undocumented boat in Massachusetts waters? I assume this would have insurance implications too. Does anybody know? Thanks, There are very likely no penalties. Documentation for pleasure boats is optional and if MA is like other states your friends will already have a state registration. That aside if the folks at Gettysburg (i.e., the Documentation Office) are the culprits, or even if this is NOT the case, it is unlikely that a penalty will be imposed. The $ megabucks/day penalties relate to large vessels. This is what happens when the same sets of rules that are applicable to the Exxon Valdez are later applied to 27 foot sailboats. Hey, if the morons in Washington are rounding up innocents on the West Coast for having "almost the right fingerprints" or for enjoying a Mojito in Havana, I guess anything is possible. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://kerrydeare.home.comcast.net/ |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
Don't know about Ma., but in MD, I was offered to buy a MD state sticker
till my documentation came through. Would have needed hull numbers, but was legal. I saved the $15 and sailed without for a few months. No problems. -- Scotty S/V Lisa Marie Balt. MD USA "K Pilson" wrote in message ... Hi, I am trying to avoid a costly mistake for someone. The Coast Guard failed to notify them months ago of problems with documentation and now it looks like it will take 2-3 months for the Coast Guard to get the papers to them. So...they of course want to sail! What are the fines/penalties for having an undocumented boat in Massachusetts waters? I assume this would have insurance implications too. Does anybody know? Thanks, Karin |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
Mass. is one of those rare states like Texas that exempts documented
boats from having to be registered with the state. They just want their property tax. It would cost $80 to $100 depending on LOA (and maybe a day standing in line at the DMV) to get legal until the documentation comes through. OTOH, if you just spent a wad on a new boat, a few more bucks might not be all that bad to get to use the boat for the summer. What I wonder about is why it would take 3 months to get papers? Only thing I can think of is a cloud on the title that has to be cleared up. Dave wrote: On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 17:50:35 GMT, said: What are the fines/penalties for having an undocumented boat in Massachusetts waters? When I needed proof of registration in CT, and the change in documentation wouldn't come through quickly enough to get the state decal, I simply registered the boat in CT while applying for new documentation. Then when the documentation came in it cost about $3 to switch the state registration to a certificate of decal. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
In Mass its the Sales Tax (5% of the actual transaction) that gets you. There
is also an annual Excise Tax (as there is on cars) but boats tend to be undervalued. Of course, these taxes must be paid regardless of the registration/documentation status, but folks with documented boats have been known to forget to pay. Although the registration resembles the DMV automobile registration, its actually handled by the Environmental Police, and there was no wait the last several times I went there. "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message news:3vozc.1072$3W3.148@lakeread04... Mass. is one of those rare states like Texas that exempts documented boats from having to be registered with the state. They just want their property tax. It would cost $80 to $100 depending on LOA (and maybe a day standing in line at the DMV) to get legal until the documentation comes through. OTOH, if you just spent a wad on a new boat, a few more bucks might not be all that bad to get to use the boat for the summer. What I wonder about is why it would take 3 months to get papers? Only thing I can think of is a cloud on the title that has to be cleared up. Dave wrote: On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 17:50:35 GMT, said: What are the fines/penalties for having an undocumented boat in Massachusetts waters? When I needed proof of registration in CT, and the change in documentation wouldn't come through quickly enough to get the state decal, I simply registered the boat in CT while applying for new documentation. Then when the documentation came in it cost about $3 to switch the state registration to a certificate of decal. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
FYI, Texas now require federally registered boats to be registered with the
state. They realized they could pick up on a lot of unpaid sales/use taxes. Also, the normal time to get ANYTHING from the NVDC is 5-6 months now, regardless of what they tell you. Privitazation, you know. The only way to speed things up is to send them a letter saying you're going cruising soon out of the country. Because of this, I can't see anyone successfully levying penalties on you... with that type of turnaround time, some folks could spend their entire boating life waiting on a certificate of documentation, especially if they change addresses often. -- Keith __ Remember, there's always free cheese in a rat trap! "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message news:3vozc.1072$3W3.148@lakeread04... Mass. is one of those rare states like Texas that exempts documented boats from having to be registered with the state. They just want their property tax. It would cost $80 to $100 depending on LOA (and maybe a day standing in line at the DMV) to get legal until the documentation comes through. OTOH, if you just spent a wad on a new boat, a few more bucks might not be all that bad to get to use the boat for the summer. What I wonder about is why it would take 3 months to get papers? Only thing I can think of is a cloud on the title that has to be cleared up. Dave wrote: On Mon, 14 Jun 2004 17:50:35 GMT, said: What are the fines/penalties for having an undocumented boat in Massachusetts waters? When I needed proof of registration in CT, and the change in documentation wouldn't come through quickly enough to get the state decal, I simply registered the boat in CT while applying for new documentation. Then when the documentation came in it cost about $3 to switch the state registration to a certificate of decal. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
Karin:
I bought a used and previously documented boat on March 11 of this year. There was an outstanding lein on the boat from the current owner. There are at least two steps towards getting a USCG document. The first is paying off the previous owner's loan and getting the lender to issue a "Satisfaction of Mortgage" certificate. The latter can take as long as the lender wants to make it. I have seen this take several months and many phone calls to the lender to get this done. Then once the Satisfaction of Mortgage is in hand from the lender, it can take many months for the USCG to process the application and return your new document. It has been three months and I still don't have my new document. But I have also enjoyed my new boat over the last several months. No responsible law enforcement official and certainly no court is going to fine you for not being documented- provided you have timely submitted your application for documentation to the USCG. I know how to document my own boat (I was a yacht broker for a short period in my career), but I chose to pay a documentation service precisely for this reason. They gave me a letter inidcating that documentation has been applied for and the USCG was processing the application. If I am stopped (and I have only been stopped once by the USCG in thousands of hours of sailing), I will show them that letter and they will smile and let me go on my way. And for the state police, harbor patrol, etc. What they care about is getting their sales tax. So also keep a receipt for sales tax paid on board. So, the bottom line is don't worry about it if you have followed the rules. Enjoy your new boat. David |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
I have been waiting 11 months for my renewal. I had a name change and had to
refile as if I was just buying the boat. I had a loan when I bought the boat and it was paid off 6 years ago and I have been playing the paper shuffle with them as they say there was no record of it and there is still a lien against it. I have a copy of the bill of sale from them referencing the page and file. I have sent the release from the bank (satisfaction of mortgage) 3 times and it keeps coming back. Wrong form or they can't read the seal of the notary. I am about to register the boat and tell them what to do with my doc papers. Calling them on the phone for answers and the standard reply is, well it is not on my desk, so it must be in work. The first time they waited three months to tell me there was still a lien on the boat. Our wonderful tax dollars at work. Btw, if you are documented in South Carolina, you do not have to register with the state, but the county nails you for personal property tax. Leanne "Keith" wrote in message ... Also, the normal time to get ANYTHING from the NVDC is 5-6 months now, regardless of what they tell you. Privitazation, you know. The only way to speed things up is to send them a letter saying you're going cruising soon out of the country. Because of this, I can't see anyone successfully levying penalties on you... with that type of turnaround time, some folks could spend their entire boating life waiting on a certificate of documentation, especially if they change addresses often. |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
My documentation papers were filed last October and by late March I had
still not gotten my certificate due to the "normal" three month backlog having been compounded by a missing social security number on the transfer of ownership form. Wary of our increasingly active local, state, and CG marine patrols and wanting to be "street legal", I called the Documentation Center with my sad story. A very efficient and helpful clerk found my paperwork, and faxed a copy the next day to the local Maryland DNR office which then issued me a valid state sticker. I'd give very high marks to the MD and CG office staff, but a failing grade to legislators who are underfunding traditional coast guard operations, ICW dredging and the like. I think I'll call my congressman tomorrow . . . Scott Odell S/V Itchen "Scott Vernon" said, Don't know about Ma., but in MD, I was offered to buy a MD state sticker till my documentation came through. Would have needed hull numbers, but was legal. I saved the $15 and sailed without for a few months. No problems. |
Undocumented boat: input on penalties
"Scott Odell" wrote
....... I'd give very high marks to the MD and CG office staff, but a failing grade to legislators who are underfunding traditional coast guard operations, ICW dredging and the like. I think I'll call my congressman tomorrow . . . I already did, and my Senators and followed up with letters, being careful to praise the CG and ask that (s)he give them the help and funding they need. Every boater should do the same. CG problems go beyond staffing - somebody sold them computer SW designed for a hospital, not boat management, that compounds their short handedness. Tell your congressman they need a new one that works more than Iraq needs our money - and dump the shrub next fall. |
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