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![]() Bryan wrote: "Varis" wrote in message oups.com... This seems to be one of the perpetual boating discussion topics in Finland as well. We still live in a free wild world, though there has been some effort in building a formal education system. One fear is that if the authorities get involved in setting up the system it will introduce quite a bit of costs to burden boaters. By all means the beaurocratic BS must be kept to a minimum and the education should be immediately available to all and free. No one wants to buy their boat, or God help us a PWC, then spend the summer taking a class before they can put the boat in the water! I see 2 levels of certification: a mandatory quickie information only computer course before registration of the vehicle can occur and a longer voluntary hands on course. Our law in Washington State, enacted in 2005, allows a very short window of time after taking delivery of boat to get the education. (This was included at the insistence of the boat dealers, who, rather understandably, didn't want to see a lot of sales stall out when the buyer was hot to trot and then realized he hasn't taken the course). One of the neat aspects of our state law is that there really isn't a new governmental department created to oversee this. The training itself can be any course that is "approved" by the regulatory agency (in our state it is the State Parks Department), and the list includes the typical courses taught by the USCG Auxiliary or the Power Squadron. In fact, anybody who can produce a certificate showing that they ever completed such a course has automatically met the requirements. In our state the "Boatsmart" course offered by both the USPS and the USCGA meets the education qualification, and that is often offered in a one-Saturday full day format. Washington issues cards showing that the boater has met the minimum education requirements. The cards cost $10 or $15, and are good for a lifetime without renewal. The only additional future cost would be for a replacement card if the boater should happen to lose the original. The Parks Department is using the card fees to pay the salaries of the people they hired to run the database of "educated" boaters and send out the card, so it is a self-funding program. Our law phases in over a period of years, with the youngest boaters required to meet the requirements first. Each year the age group that is required to show proof of boating education expands upward by a few years. The law applies to everybody except old fossils like me, born before 1955. I guess the state figures that by the time enough years go by to where our age group would be included, we'll all be senile and unteachable anyway. *************** We must have had a group of students down on the fuel dock last weekend. I was topping off my fuel.....($400!....but I'll go hundreds of miles and would not need any more fuel until spring if I didn't want to have the tanks relatively full for winter)... when a group of mostly men followed a young female instructor down to the dock. Everybody was wearing life jackets, which is an unusual sight when you see people walking out onto the fuel dock from shore. While I was fueling up, they gathered around the pump and the instructor lectured them about proper fueling procedures. I was glad that I had followed all the basics, (including having a petro diaper positioned at the vent to intercept any accidental burps). It would have been embarrassing to be pointed out as the example of "how not to fuel your boat." |
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