BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   General (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/)
-   -   Coastwise USCG endorsement (https://www.boatbanter.com/general/68474-coastwise-uscg-endorsement.html)

Jeff April 9th 06 05:39 PM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
Tamaroak wrote:
I have a trawler which I captain for charter on Lake Superior. In
reading over the requirements in 46CFR67.23 I find "recreational
endorsement entitles a vessel to pleasure use only." 46CFR67.325 states
"a vessel documented exclusively for recreation may not be used for
purposes other than pleasure." I subsequently obtained the waiver, as I
really couldn't think of anything I would rather spend the $500 on.

I'm reading this to state that all who fail to obtain either the waiver,
coastwise, or Great Lakes endorsements on our documentation are in
violation of this every time we take someone out for hire.

I'm told that even though the USCG may not be overly concerned about
enforcing this, one insurance company could deny a large claim if I were
operating outside the limits of my documentation.

Comments??

Capt. Jeff


I thought the waiver had to do with using a foreign built boat for
charter, not a US built boat.

Wayne.B April 9th 06 05:56 PM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
On Sun, 09 Apr 2006 12:39:04 -0400, Jeff wrote:

I thought the waiver had to do with using a foreign built boat for
charter, not a US built boat.


Most recreational trawlers are foreign built. Not sure if it makes a
difference or not with regard to charters, but your insurance company
definitely needs to know if you are chartering.


Tamaroak April 9th 06 07:20 PM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
I have a trawler which I captain for charter on Lake Superior. In
reading over the requirements in 46CFR67.23 I find "recreational
endorsement entitles a vessel to pleasure use only." 46CFR67.325 states
"a vessel documented exclusively for recreation may not be used for
purposes other than pleasure." I subsequently obtained the waiver, as I
really couldn't think of anything I would rather spend the $500 on.

I'm reading this to state that all who fail to obtain either the waiver,
coastwise, or Great Lakes endorsements on our documentation are in
violation of this every time we take someone out for hire.

I'm told that even though the USCG may not be overly concerned about
enforcing this, one insurance company could deny a large claim if I were
operating outside the limits of my documentation.

Comments??

Capt. Jeff

Tamaroak April 9th 06 07:58 PM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 

It does, that's why I had to get it, but it also allows commercial use,
which the recreational documentation does not, in my opinion.

Capt. Jeff

Tamaroak April 9th 06 08:01 PM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
And my insurance company does know about the chartering, although they
specifically prohibit bareboat w/o a captain, but they don't ask
questions about the documentation issue. Why not?

And it's interesting that it appears you can charter your boat for
bareboat without a captain on a recreational documentation.

Capt. Jeff

Bob April 10th 06 01:14 AM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 

Tamaroak wrote:
I have a trawler which I captain for charter
I find "recreational
endorsement entitles a vessel to pleasure use only." 46CFR67.325 states
"a vessel documented exclusively for recreation may not be used for
purposes other than pleasure.

I'm reading this to state that all who fail to obtain either the waiver,
coastwise, or Great Lakes endorsements on our documentation are in
violation of this every time we take someone out for hire.
Comments??

Capt. Jeff


Okay........... so are you saying if I have a 16' sailboat on inland
waters and give sailing lessons I need a USCG OUPV or Master of some
GRT tons inland?

REC Bob


William Andersen April 10th 06 05:36 AM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
a 16' sailboat is not eligible for documentation.

"Bob" wrote in message
ups.com...

Tamaroak wrote:
I have a trawler which I captain for charter
I find "recreational
endorsement entitles a vessel to pleasure use only." 46CFR67.325 states
"a vessel documented exclusively for recreation may not be used for
purposes other than pleasure.

I'm reading this to state that all who fail to obtain either the waiver,
coastwise, or Great Lakes endorsements on our documentation are in
violation of this every time we take someone out for hire.
Comments??

Capt. Jeff


Okay........... so are you saying if I have a 16' sailboat on inland
waters and give sailing lessons I need a USCG OUPV or Master of some
GRT tons inland?

REC Bob




Bob April 10th 06 10:04 AM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 

William Andersen wrote:
a 16' sailboat is not eligible for documentation.


Hi William:

Very good. Since you caught that a vessel's documentation eligibility
is not determined by length, what is the minimum vessel GRT eligible
for documentation?

So then my question wold be................is a sailboat boat of not
more than 100 GRT and carring 6 or less pasangers for hire (SubChapter
C) engaged in sailing lessons on inland waters but documented
Recreational legal? Or does that little sailboat need to be documented
Coast Wise and have an OUPV?

In other words, if I give sailing lessons on a river and my boat is
documented Recreational, am I breaking any CFR?
Bob


Tamaroak April 10th 06 03:43 PM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
Bob wrote:
William Andersen wrote:
a 16' sailboat is not eligible for documentation.


Hi William:

Very good. Since you caught that a vessel's documentation eligibility
is not determined by length, what is the minimum vessel GRT eligible
for documentation?

So then my question wold be................is a sailboat boat of not
more than 100 GRT and carring 6 or less pasangers for hire (SubChapter
C) engaged in sailing lessons on inland waters but documented
Recreational legal? Or does that little sailboat need to be documented
Coast Wise and have an OUPV?

In other words, if I give sailing lessons on a river and my boat is
documented Recreational, am I breaking any CFR?
Bob

All sailboat instructions are exempt from these parts of the CFR, in my
interpretation of the law. Powerboat chartering is different, and I
believe powerboat instruction is, too, but don't take my word for it.

You CAN be documented if you are more than 5 net tons (usually around
25'), measured the way the USCG measures it. See their web site on
vessel documentation for detailed explanation.

Capt. jeff

Bob April 10th 06 10:14 PM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 

Tamaroak wrote:

All sailboat instructions are exempt from these parts of the CFR, in my
interpretation of the law. Powerboat chartering is different, and I
believe powerboat instruction is, too, but don't take my word for it.
Capt. jeff



Hi Capt Jeff:
Thanks for the details. So would it be possible to "charter" your
trawler as a Recreational boat if everyone was "actively engaged in
learning?" I have never heard about a "Documentation Waiver"
Are you documented Recreational AND doing Subchapter C uninspected
passenger vessel work? Are you also the master? Is this Beyond the
boundary Line stuff or Inland?

Where do you do your chartering. Is it a sight seeing sort of thing?
I am very interested in a similar thing. I am not trolling or anything
here. Just genuinely interested.

In may case I am not sure how hard I want to push the IRS Hobby - Loss
3/5 year obstacle. All the reading I found relating to charter
operations is that they are real dollar eaten propositions with an even
more bleak forecast. And add to that the advice I got from my CPA about
hobby- loss.

Always interested in finding a way to ease the cash out flow regarding
my boat. (Yea, know keep dreaming..)
Suggestions?
The Frugal Sailor, Bob


Bob April 12th 06 07:32 AM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 

Tamaroak wrote:
I have a trawler which I captain for charter on Lake Superior. In
reading over the requirements in 46CFR67.23 I find "recreational
endorsement entitles a vessel to pleasure use only." 46CFR67.325 states
"a vessel documented exclusively for recreation may not be used for
purposes other than pleasure." I subsequently obtained the waiver, as I
really couldn't think of anything I would rather spend the $500 on.


Capt. Jeff


HI Capt.

Is this the program you are talking about?
http://www.marad.dot.gov/programs/sm...sel/index.html
Bob


Tamaroak April 13th 06 06:30 AM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
Bob wrote:
Tamaroak wrote:
I have a trawler which I captain for charter on Lake Superior. In
reading over the requirements in 46CFR67.23 I find "recreational
endorsement entitles a vessel to pleasure use only." 46CFR67.325 states
"a vessel documented exclusively for recreation may not be used for
purposes other than pleasure." I subsequently obtained the waiver, as I
really couldn't think of anything I would rather spend the $500 on.


Capt. Jeff


HI Capt.

Is this the program you are talking about?
http://www.marad.dot.gov/programs/sm...sel/index.html
Bob

Yes, I obtained this because my boat was built in Canada. However the
USCG states I still have to obtain coastwise registry, which will cost
another $113. I am excited....

Capt. jeff

Tamaroak April 17th 06 06:00 AM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
Bob wrote:
Tamaroak wrote:
I have a trawler which I captain for charter on Lake Superior. In
reading over the requirements in 46CFR67.23 I find "recreational
endorsement entitles a vessel to pleasure use only." 46CFR67.325 states
"a vessel documented exclusively for recreation may not be used for
purposes other than pleasure." I subsequently obtained the waiver, as I
really couldn't think of anything I would rather spend the $500 on.


Capt. Jeff


HI Capt.

Is this the program you are talking about?
http://www.marad.dot.gov/programs/sm...sel/index.html
Bob

Yes, and it now allows me to spend another $113 on the actual coastwise
registry. I would not have had to spend the $500 if the boat was US built.

Capt. Jeff

Tamaroak April 17th 06 06:06 AM

Coastwise USCG endorsement
 
Bob wrote:
Tamaroak wrote:

All sailboat instructions are exempt from these parts of the CFR, in my
interpretation of the law. Powerboat chartering is different, and I
believe powerboat instruction is, too, but don't take my word for it.
Capt. jeff



Hi Capt Jeff:
Thanks for the details. So would it be possible to "charter" your
trawler as a Recreational boat if everyone was "actively engaged in
learning?"


You can bareboat it, but it has to be coastwise if i'm doing the
captaining. My insurance doesn't want me to send it out without a USCG
captain anymore.

I have never heard about a "Documentation Waiver"
Are you documented Recreational AND doing Subchapter C uninspected
passenger vessel work? Are you also the master? Is this Beyond the
boundary Line stuff or Inland?


Yes, I'm the master and it's on Lake Superior, uninspected. And I'm
changing to coastwise registry.

Where do you do your chartering. Is it a sight seeing sort of thing?
I am very interested in a similar thing. I am not trolling or anything
here. Just genuinely interested.

In may case I am not sure how hard I want to push the IRS Hobby - Loss
3/5 year obstacle. All the reading I found relating to charter
operations is that they are real dollar eaten propositions with an even
more bleak forecast. And add to that the advice I got from my CPA about
hobby- loss.

Always interested in finding a way to ease the cash out flow regarding
my boat. (Yea, know keep dreaming..)
Suggestions?


The chartering helps, especially the first year when I had to deduct the
cost of getting the boat from Chesapeake bay to Lake Superior and
outfitting it for charter. Lots of big writeoffs. I could make money
some years, though if i charter enough.
Capt. Jeff



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:17 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com