96-7304. Propeller Injury Prevention Aboard Rental Boats  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 59 (Tuesday, March 26, 1996)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 13123-13125]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-7304]
    
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    33 CFR Part 183
    
    [CGD 95-041]
    
    
    Propeller Injury Prevention Aboard Rental Boats
    
    AGENCY: Coast Guard, DOT.
    
    ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The purpose of this Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
    (ANPRM) is to gather current, specific, and accurate information about 
    the injuries involving propeller strikes and rented boats. In a request 
    for comments published May 11, 1995, the Coast Guard solicited comments 
    from all segments of the marine community and other interested persons 
    on various aspects of propeller accident avoidance aboard houseboats 
    and other displacement type recreational vessels. The information 
    received was voluminous, but was too general to be helpful. Consistent 
    with the President's Regulatory Reinvention Initiative, the Coast Guard 
    is interested in obtaining maximum public involvement before it makes 
    any decision that would impose a new burden on the regulated community. 
    Information gathered in response to this ANPRM will supplement that 
    which the Coast Guard received in response to the request for comments 
    and will be used to determine the appropriate Federal and State roles 
    in reducing propeller-strike incidents, whether governmental 
    intervention is appropriate and, if so, whether it should be directed 
    at the vessels, their manufacturers, their operators or owners, or the 
    companies leasing such vessels. This ANPRM also announces one public 
    meeting at Coast Guard Headquarters at which individuals and interested 
    parties may make oral presentations about the propeller strike 
    avoidance issue. The Coast Guard has also arranged four other 
    opportunities, throughout the country, for those interested in this 
    subject to express their views.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before September 1, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments may be mailed to the Executive Secretary, Marine 
    Safety Council (G-LRA/3406)(CGD95-041),
    
    [[Page 13124]]
    U.S. Coast Guard Headquarters, 2100 Second Street SW., Washington, DC 
    20593-0001, or may be delivered to room 3406 at the above address 
    between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal 
    holidays. The telephone number is (202) 267-1477.
        The Executive Secretary maintains the public docket for this 
    notice. Comments will become a part of this docket and will be 
    available for inspection or copying at room 3406, U.S. Coast Guard 
    Headquarters.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Mr. Randolph Doubt, Project Manager, Recreational Boating Product 
    Assurance Division, (202) 267-0984.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Request for Comments
    
        The Coast Guard encourages interested persons to submit written 
    data, views or arguments. Persons submitting comments should include 
    their names and addresses and identify this notice (CGD 95-041). Please 
    submit two copies of all comments and attachments in an unbound format, 
    no larger than 8\1/2\ by 11 inches, suitable for copying and electronic 
    filing. Persons wanting acknowledgment of receipt of comments should 
    enclose a stamped, self-addressed postcard or envelope.
        The Coast Guard will consider all comments received during the 
    comment period.
    
    Background Information
    
        The Coast Guard published a request for comments on propeller 
    accidents involving houseboats and other displacement type recreational 
    vessels on May 11, 1995 [60 FR 25191]. In a second Federal Register 
    notice published August 9, 1995, the Coast Guard reopened and extended 
    the comment period until November 7, 1995. The Coast Guard received 
    1,994 responses. More than 1,800 of these were form letters from 
    individuals who support the development of regulations to require the 
    use of propeller guard technology or pump jet propulsion on vessels 
    used in the rental houseboat industry. An additional 69 comments 
    supporting the development of regulations to prevent the incidence of 
    propeller-strike accidents were received from accident victims and 
    their relatives, attorneys, physicians, State law enforcement agencies, 
    manufacturers of devices designed to prevent propeller-strike 
    accidents, and other individuals. Comments opposing regulations were 
    received from 57 boaters, nine houseboat livery operators and marinas, 
    members of 10 associations, committees, or councils, 13 boat and engine 
    manufacturers, and six naval architects or marine consultants.
    
    Solicitation of Views
    
        While available data in the Coast Guard's regulatory docket on this 
    subject does not fully support the costs or burdens that would be 
    imposed by Federal regulation, the number of responses received to the 
    request for comments indicates a great deal of public interest in 
    whether and how the Federal Government should act to prevent propeller-
    strike accidents.
        Persons submitting comments should do as directed under Request for 
    comments above, and reply to the following specific questions. Form 
    letters simply citing anecdotal evidence or stating support for, or 
    opposition to regulations, without providing substantive data or 
    arguments do not supply support for regulations.
        1. The Coast Guard is making an effort to improve its database of 
    recreational boating accidents resulting in injuries which require 
    medical treatment beyond first aid. Part of that effort consists in 
    trying to determine the extent to which accidents involving propeller 
    strikes by rented boats are a problem. What information is available 
    regarding the incidence of propeller-strike injuries or fatalities 
    involving individuals who rent boats, and what trends, if any, do the 
    data indicate?
        2. To what extent are data available to indicate whether the type 
    of propulsion (e.g., outboard motor, inboard engine or inboard-outboard 
    engine) contributes to the incidence of propeller-strike accidents 
    involving rental boats?
        3. In two fatal accidents during the last several years, one on 
    Lake Shasta and one on Lake Havasu, the victim was in the water and was 
    struck by the propeller when a rental houseboat was put in reverse and 
    backed into them. Several other houseboat accidents have resulted in 
    injuries. The Coast Guard is interested in determining whether 
    accidents involving propeller strikes and rented houseboats occur 
    nationwide, or are limited to a few States or bodies of water. If the 
    latter is the case, do any particular hazardous local conditions 
    contribute to the likelihood of such accidents? If so, the Coast Guard 
    is interested in determining the nature and location of those 
    conditions.
        4. To what extent are data available on the relationship between 
    the consumption of alcohol or the use of controlled substances and 
    propeller-strike accidents involving rental boats?
        5. Some States have laws requiring boat operators to complete a 
    boating safety course.
        a. To what extent do available data indicate whether boater 
    behavior patterns, a lack of boating education, or a lack of boating 
    law enforcement contribute to the incidence of propeller-strike 
    accidents involving rental boats?
        b. Do data indicate whether mandatory boating education for 
    individuals renting boats with propellers significantly contribute to a 
    reduction in the number of propeller-strike accidents?
        c. If so, do data indicate what type of boating education would be 
    the most effective?
        d. What other vessel operator-oriented requirements might reduce 
    the incidence of propeller-strike accidents involving rental boats?
        e. What economic or other burdens would be imposed on companies 
    leasing recreational boats if either the Federal or State Government 
    was to require education of individuals renting propeller-driven boats?
        6. The two fatal accidents mentioned above occurred when 
    individuals were in the water astern of the vessels and the vessels 
    were put in reverse. While limited operator visibility astern may have 
    contributed to the accidents, the transom is also the usual location 
    for swim platforms and boarding ladders for swimmers. Do available data 
    indicate whether vessel design features contribute to the incidence of 
    propeller-strike accidents involving rental boats? If so, what vessel 
    design features might reduce the incidence of propeller-strike 
    accidents involving rental boats?
        7. Are there any proven technologies that would help reduce the 
    risk of propeller-strike accidents involving rented boats? What 
    technologies are unacceptable, and for what reasons?
        8. The two fatal accidents mentioned above involved rental 
    houseboats. If the Coast Guard developed regulations in this area, how 
    should it define the term, ``houseboat?'' Are there any other vessel 
    types the Coast Guard should consider regulating? If so, what vessels, 
    if any, should be excepted from such regulations?
        9. What, if any, types of information should be displayed on boats 
    and/or motors leased, rented or chartered for noncommercial use for the 
    purpose of alerting operators or passengers to the dangers of a 
    propeller strike?
        10. What are the economic and other impacts on companies renting 
    boats or other entities if the Coast Guard were to require companies to 
    retrofit such vessels with devices or methods of propulsion designed to 
    reduce the
    
    [[Page 13125]]
    incidence of propeller-strike accidents? In considering regulations, 
    the Coast Guard must assess the potential adverse impacts on small 
    business entities. To what extent are small entities engaged in leasing 
    recreational boats?
        11. a. How many companies are currently leasing propeller-driven 
    boats for bareboat charters by the recreational boating public? How 
    many vessels are involved and on which bodies of water?
        b. How many companies are currently offering propeller-driven 
    uninspected boats for charter by the recreational boating public? How 
    many vessels are involved and on which bodies of water?
        12. What adverse impacts might result from a regulation requiring 
    livery companies to verbally brief individuals renting propeller-driven 
    boats about the dangers of propeller-strike accidents, and requiring 
    individuals chartering such vessels to acknowledge receiving the 
    information?
        13. Under current Federal statutes (46 U.S.C. 4306), the States do 
    not have the authority to establish carriage requirements for 
    associated equipment, such as a mechanical means for preventing 
    propeller strikes, on vessels operated on waters where both the Coast 
    Guard and the State have jurisdiction. However, a State may impose more 
    stringent requirements on vessels such as rental boats on waters 
    subject to the State's exclusive jurisdiction, so long as such a 
    requirement is not imposed upon vessel manufacturers. What is the 
    proper role for the States in reducing propeller-strike accidents 
    involving rented boats? If the Coast Guard allowed the States to 
    regulate the equipment carried, or the use of rental boats, how would 
    interstate commerce be affected?
    
    Open Meetings
    
        A subcommittee of the National Boating Safety Advisory Council, and 
    the National Association of State Boating Law Administrators are 
    studying the propeller injury prevention issue. The Coast Guard invites 
    interested parties and the public to make brief oral presentations 
    about the propeller injury prevention issue during the following 
    meetings or events:
        From 5 to 7 p.m., Monday, April 22, 1996 at the National Water 
    Safety Congress Professional Development Seminar at the Boardwalk 
    Resort in Panama City, FL, (April 23-25, 1996).
        From 3 to 5 p.m., Monday April 29, 1996 at the National Boating 
    Safety Advisory Council Meeting at the Parc Fifty-Five Hotel in San 
    Francisco, CA (April 27-29, 1996).
        From 8:30 to 10:30 a.m., Wednesday May 1, 1996 at the Northeastern 
    States Boating Law Administrators Conference in the Camden Room at the 
    Samoset Resort in Rockland, ME (April 29-30, 1996).
        From 1 to 4 p.m., Monday, May 6, 1996 in Room 2415 of Coast Guard 
    Headquarters in Washington, DC.
        From 10 a.m. to 12 p.m., Sunday, May 19, 1996 at the Southern 
    States Boating Law Administrator Conference at the Royal Sonesta Hotel 
    in New Orleans, LA (May 18-22, 1996).
        Those wishing to give an oral presentation should submit their 
    name, address, and organization represented (if any) at least seven 
    days prior to the particular meeting or event, to COMMANDANT (G-NAB-6), 
    room 1505, U.S. Coat Guard Headquarters, 2100 Second Street SW., 
    Washington, DC 20593-0001, Attn: Mr. Jay Doubt. Individuals wishing to 
    give an oral presentation who fail to notify the Coast Guard within 
    seven days of a particular meeting or event will be allowed to do so if 
    time permits.
        Those giving oral presentations are reminded of the necessity to 
    also furnish written comments, if those comments are intended for 
    inclusion in the regulatory docket.
        The Coast Guard will consider all relevant comments in determining 
    what action may be necessary to address propeller accidents involving 
    rented propeller-driven vessels.
    
        Dated: March 15, 1996.
    Rudy K. Peschel,
    Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard, Chief, Office of Navigation Safety and 
    Waterway Services.
    [FR Doc. 96-7304 Filed 3-25-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-14-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/26/1996
Department:
Transportation Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
96-7304
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before September 1, 1996.
Pages:
13123-13125 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
CGD 95-041
PDF File:
96-7304.pdf
CFR: (1)
33 CFR 183