Never the less my attitude at 66 years old is just that if I get I get I'm not going to let covid 19 run my life.
Covid is an infectious disease. If YOU get it you’re endangering others. Nothing to do with freedom. Happy 4th! I’m going diving...
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Never the less my attitude at 66 years old is just that if I get I get I'm not going to let covid 19 run my life.
Covid is an infectious disease. If YOU get it you’re endangering others. Nothing to do with freedom. Happy 4th! I’m going diving...
The USCG Aux had/still has a very good boating course. My wife and I took in 1981 we both passed and still have our cards. Every boat driver should be required to take that course if it still is available or something akin to it. Also the state should be kept out of it as much as possible the USCG should handle the nuts and bolts of it. Just a state DEM regulation requiring proof at time of boat registration and the operator must have it in possession when operating a boat.
Enforced by fines and refusal to register. Judging by how people operate cars it's probably futile anyway. Also let us not forget the..........................JET SKI! They use the dive flag as a slalom marker!
Coast Guard has no interest in licensing beyond professional. Recreational is a waste of time for them and can be left up to states.
Well the State of RI will f it up so we're better off doing nothing. The USCG can be compelled by law or executive order to do that which it may find a waste of time, but those giving the may orders disagree. That would be if those that giving the orders gave a fig.
All the USCG would do is give the course, the state would just not allow you to reg. a boat without proof you took it. A rather simple mission for both state and CG, KISS.
Then you have the issue of enforcement. States have no interest in enforcing federal laws. There's no money in it for them. The CG is spread thin enough as it is, we're at maybe a tenth of the active stations we used to have now.
The Coast Guard gives millions of dollars in grants to state boating law administrators so they can promote boating safety in their states.
This makes sense because the states do not have uniform boating laws, registration and titling of most recreational vessels are state matters, and there are lots waterways where (as TuckerIdaho mentioned) the Coast Guard has no boats or stations.
Also, a lot of the operational boating safety laws are state, not federal. For example, where I live, it's a Florida law, not a federal law, that boaters are supposed to try to stay 100 yards from a dive flag. (If it's also a federal law, someone can correct me.)
The Coast Guard has both enforcement and educational roles in boating safety, but (as of when I retired) it has neither the ambition nor the capability to license or certify the millions of recreational boaters.