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On Oct 30, 2:13?pm, HK wrote:
Chuck Gould wrote: On Oct 30, 10:56?am, Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 30 Oct 2007 08:47:41 -0700, Chuck Gould wrote: Question would be; does the local government really have the right to dictate who can run a boat and how that boat can be rigged on a public waterway The answer is yes. There are many lakes with local restrictions. Some allow no power boats at all, and some limit horsepower, typically to under 10 hp or some such. While I generally agree that the public should be able to regulate the use of publicly owned waterways (through their elected representatives), I lean more toward regulating behavior than restricting property ownership. For example: Here in Seattle we have a long stretch of water with speed restrictions- it starts at the entrance to the Shilshole entry channel out in Puget Sound, continues through the locks, runs all the way across the E-W axis of the city and doesn't end until the shoreline of Lake Washington. There is a 7-kt speed limit, which makes all the sense in the world considering that during much of the year this area is very congested and the shorelines are packed solid with parks, marinas, residences, businesses, and other developed areas that would suffer from excessive wakes. As far as I'm concerned, if a guy is going 7 knots it shouldn't matter whether he has 5-HP or 3,000. Some reasonable exceptions make sense- for instance when people are boating on a lake that is used as a reservoir for drinking water it can be prudent to minimize pollution by restricting or prohibiting IC propulsion. Admit it...you just like all the boats to go no faster than yours!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I truly enjoy my regular opportunities to get out on boats that run 15, 20, 25, or 30 knots. Heck, even 10 knots is faster than I normally travel. When I write up descriptions of the boats I have been on and note that most of these boats burn 4-8 times as muh fuel per mile as I do, I remember why I'm very happy to go a bit slower. My opinion is that you should be able to run as fast as you like, as long as you aren't endangering other people. The place for 30 or 40 knot operation is in wide open water with great visibility, not a congested canal, after dark, or in a bank of fog. |
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