| Home | Mailing Lists | Bookstore | Weather | Tide Predictions | Bowditch |

T&T: Legislative alert

From: Keith (no email)
Date: Thu Mar 01 2007 - 06:45:41 EST

  • Next message: (no name): "T&T: Boating Mystery"

    Here we go again. Want to have to apply for a discharge permit in every
    state you travel in with your boat? If things don't change, you'll have to.

    General information site with ideas of what to do: http://www.boatblue.org/
    Here's the court case that started this mess: http://tinyurl.com/3dm2o8

    Here's a sneak preview of an article coming up:
    __________________
    Don't Pump the Baby Out with the Bilge Water

    Maybe we should send up a collective flare and hope that somebody will
    notice. Once again it appears that well-intentioned Great and Powerful
    Wizards (please pay no mind to that man behind the curtain) have
    entirely overlooked the interests of pleasure boaters while seeking to
    protect the environment.

    A recent court decision in a lawsuit filed against the US
    Environmental Protection Agency by a Portland, Oregon group known as
    the Northwest Environmental Advocates could potentially require all
    pleasure boaters to purchase "discharge permits" from state
    governments. The newly regulated discharges in question have nothing
    to do with untreated human waste, engine oil, trash and garbage, or
    other nasty stuff that any responsible boater will voluntarily contain
    and dispose of appropriately ashore. Anything passing from a boat
    into the surrounding waters will be considered a discharge.

    Want to wash your boat? You will need a permit for the wash and rinse
    water to "discharge" through your scuppers and into the sound.

    Too much water in the bilge? Too bad. You may not be able to switch on
    that bilge pump without a state permit.

    So fed up that you're ready to start your engine and motor off to some
    country with more reasonable regulations? Not so fast, that cooling
    water cycling through the raw water side of your system becomes a
    "discharge". (We won't even be allowed to escape without a permit!)

    Despite the draconian potential effects of the legal ruling, there
    wasn't actually a conspiracy against pleasure boaters. The Northwest
    Environmental Advocates sued to address a worthy issue: the discharge
    of ballast water from foreign vessels in US ports.
    Ships entering American waters from overseas ports often travel with
    enormous amounts of water in the bilge to serve as ballast.
    Unfortunately, when a ship takes on ballast water huge numbers of
    marine plants and animals are scooped up in the process and will be
    released whenever and wherever the vessel pumps its bilges. Most of
    the foreign organisms die in the new environment, but certain species
    discover that they have been introduced to an area where they have no
    natural predators.

    With natural balance disrupted, many of these immigrant life forms
    (such as the zebra mussel) tend to compete too efficiently for food
    and habitat and can ultimately eliminate native species that have long
    served as integral links in important eco-system relationships. A new
    species supplanting a native species may no longer be considered
    edible by predators higher on the food chain. Organisms at the top of
    the food chain (such as humans), have a vested interest in sustaining
    a healthy eco-system with co-dependent plants and animals that thrive
    in the local environment.

    The Northwest Environmental Advocates demanded that states issue
    permits to any vessel planning to discharge into waters of the state.
    Presumably, the states aren't going to issue permits to all applicants
    without some level of prior inspection, and perhaps even requiring
    that a state inspector be on hand when the material in question is
    being discharged. When the court ruled in favor of the Northwest
    Environmental Advocates, it omitted any specification that the ruling
    applied only to commercial shipping. Similar previous regulations have
    always specifically exempted recreational boaters, but no such
    exemption is included in the regulations mandated by the court
    decision.

    The court specifically ordered the EPA to rescind its previous
    exemption from permit and regulation those discharges "incidental to
    the normal operation of a vessel".

    States typically lack the will, and most certainly lack the manpower,
    to enforce a regulation that would require pleasure boaters to apply
    for permits prior to starting an engine, pumping a bilge, taking a
    shower, or washing the highway and industrial soot from the house and
    decks. Washington State alone would need thousands, if not tens of
    thousands, of inspectors and permit processors to monitor every single
    discharge of any material from all vessels of any description. The law
    would be routinely ignored, but perhaps not entirely.

    The potential risk is that some zealous environmental extremist could
    seize upon the court's oversight. In the ultimate fantasies of some
    fanatics, the waters of the Pacific NW would be unsullied by any human
    activity afloat. Leaping salmon, cavorting porpoises, and spouting
    whales wouldn't be obliged to dodge around any boats or ships, (with a
    possible exception for limited numbers of extensively regulated and
    duly licensed kayaks, of course). It would never rain, the sun would
    never set, beribboned unicorns and Technicolor rainbows would be seen
    everywhere, and the gentle breezes would always be warm. With a
    glaring defect in the newly refined law, the opportunity remains for
    such an extremist to seek a court injunction or other legal avenue to
    disrupt pleasure boating.

    Most boaters make conscientious environmental choices. The few that
    persist in dumping holding tanks in inland waters or pumping the bilge
    after an oil change "accident", deserve to be ostracized by the
    responsible majority. Our recreational enjoyment depends upon
    maintaining acceptably clean waterways and a healthy fishery.
    Environmental activists on the radical fringes of that movement would
    do well to recognize that the average pleasure boater isn't a serious
    threat to the eco-system.

    We can indeed send up a flare by contacting our congressional
    representatives and urging them to exempt pleasure vessels from the
    court ruling mandating that all vessels apply for discharge permits.
    Let's not pump the baby out with the bilge water.
    (article by Chuck Gould)

    (listmeisters: this was posted in an open public forum, not copyrighted)

    Keith
    _____
    My wife has a slight impediment in her speech. Every now and then she stops
    to breathe. -Jimmy Durante
    _______________________________________________
    http://lists.samurai.com/mailman/listinfo/trawlers-and-trawlering

    To unsubscribe send email to
     with the word
    UNSUBSCRIBE and nothing else in the subject or body of the message.

    Trawlers & Trawlering and T&T are trademarks of Water World
    Productions. Unauthorized use is prohibited.


  • Next message: (no name): "T&T: Boating Mystery"



    | Home | Mailing Lists | Bookstore | Weather | Tide Predictions | Bowditch | Trawlerworld |