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T&T: Boating Accidents in the News

From: Mike Maurice (no email)
Date: Sat Mar 24 2007 - 14:55:00 EDT

  • Next message: Bob Peterson: "Re: T&T: Boating Accidents in the News"

    It used to be that the only boating accidents you heard about were those
    within 100 miles or so. The radius of interest that the local newspaper,
    radio or TV station were interested in. Today the internet brings us the
    same info from around the globe.

    Are there more accidents than there used to be; probably not. But, if
    there are not, what is pretty certain is that the nature of those
    accidents is changing. There are far more small boats out cruising than
    40 years ago. Back then the major obstacles were the weather and running
    into some solid piece of rock.

    GPS, depth sounders and radar have eliminated many, but not all of these
    kinds of accidents. Weather forecasting is much improved. What is
    disturbing is the number of GPS, radar and weather assisted accidents
    that now are happening. There are numerous and recent accidents which
    have involved fancy yachts being lost, while running into solid and
    charted obstacles. Or, from totally disregarding the weather.

    A collision is a COLLISION, whether it be a boat, a fishing net, a log
    or an iceberg. Collision avoidance is dealt with in the ColRegs, which
    are rules, intended to give guidance as to how to deal with potential
    collision situations. They are not regulations in the sense that they
    are to be followed slavishly into a collision. Regulations specify
    actions to be taken literally, the rules and there are less than 40 of
    them are there to keep you from having an accident and if you have one,
    your faults will be calculated based upon them.

    In other words everything we do at sea starts with the ColRegs. We are
    all legally bound by them, from the Captain to the crew and the
    passengers. What I am driving at here is that accidents like the
    Earthrace boat or the Nordhavn that went on the rocks in Baja, and
    others, involved a failure to keep a proper lookout, rule #5.

    Can we prove this last statement; not necessarily from the facts in
    hand. But, since they each involved running into something, it is a
    legal presumption that rule 5 was violated and such presumption will be
    the cornerstone of any legal preceding.

    Even, if after an accident you are willing to claim as your defense that
    you are not "legally" culpable, what about your moral responsibility for
    live(s) lost and damage done. It is almost impossible to credibly claim
    that "all was done that could be done".

    In any event, what I am getting at is that we are all part of the
    solution, or part of the problem. In order to claim morally and legally
    that we have followed the ColRegs there must be a chain of command and
    someone has to be in charge.

    In effect, if there is no chain of command, then there is no
    accountability and without it there is almost no chance of the ColRegs
    being followed. This, before even any accident has happened.

    The chain of command implies that any situation that is out of the least
    ordinary, requires that mere fact be presented to the most senior and if
    not available the most experienced person at hand, regardless of fatigue
    or reluctance by either party. There is no greater failure than to delay
    where delay can not be tolerated or to fail to act where your action
    alone is required. Better to wake the captain while there is time to
    act, even if it turns to be unnecessary, than to delay and have an accident.

    I point all this out because I have become convinced that many of the
    accidents that are happening in the small boat community are as a direct
    result of this lack of chain of command. Or, a failure to follow it.

    If you think that accidents that happen to other recreational boaters
    can't happen to you, then think again. It is just the accidents that
    happen to them, that are most likely to happen to you.

    Just as I am inclined to believe that the accidents that happen to
    professional mariners are the one's that are most likely to get me. We
    either learn from our peer's mistakes or we are guaranteed to make them
    ourselves.

    Regards,
    Mike

    _____________________________________
    Capt. Mike Maurice
    Beaverton Oregon(Near Portland)
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