Public Service Articles in the pursuit of
Recreational Boating Safety
Not
just another PFD story
By Wayne
Spivak
National Press Corps
National Marketing & Public Affairs Department
United States Coast Guard Auxiliary
"Just an old fashioned
love song playing on the radio" from the song "Old Fashioned Love
Song" sounds just like every story you read about Personal Flotation
Devices, also known as PFD's and Life Jackets. "You'll swear you've heard
it before as it slowly rambles on and on", how you should wear your PFD.
So, this story will catch
an edge, and won't be "Just an old fashioned love song" but will
hopefully be "Coming down in three part harmony." And those three
parts are Why and When, When and Where, and lastly Who, Why, When and Where.
Why
and When
Why should you wear your
PFD? Because it's the law? Because is can save your life?
Unfortunately, unless
you are a child under 13, and not in the cabin (http://www.uscgboating.org/news/boatingview.aspx?id=47),
there is no requirement to wear a PFD.
Fortunately, it can save
your life. In the latest available Boating Accident Statistics - 2000 (COMDTPUB
P16754.14), the Coast Guard logged 701 fatalities. "Five hundred and
nineteen (519) boaters drowned in 2000... Life jackets could have saved the
lives of approximately 445 boaters who drowned. In 2000, approximately eight
out of every 10 victims in fatal boating accidents were not wearing life jackets."
The Why, in my book provides
a good reason to wear your PFD. The When is also easy! When you get on your
boat. When the boat leaves its slip or the dock. When conditions are such,
that you as a passenger or the pilot become nervous. When the weather conditions
change for the worse. When you just would feel safer!
When
and Where
Our second partner in
the three part harmony is when and where. Where do you keep your PFD's? Where
is extremely important. It could mean the difference between life and death,
and if you don't want to be that dramatic, how bouts the difference from some
time unconvinced or a ticket issued by the Coast Guard.
Why life and death? Should
tragedy strike, there is limited time in which to act, and if you have to
go and start finding where your PFD's are, then you've probably wasted precious
time. A few years back, an amateur videographer caught a boat sink in Florida.
Two people were wearing PFD's, several others, including the skipper weren't.
Those without died. The boat went down in less than 30 seconds!
Federal law requires one
PFD for each passenger on a vessel. In addition, these PFD's must be readily
accessible! The Coast Guard does not consider PFD's still in the manufacturer's
packaging as readably accessible. In addition, PFD's sitting on the bottom
of a compartment, with all sorts of nautical doodads on top of it, are also
not considered to be accessible. If your PFD's aren't readably accessible,
as far as the Coast Guard is concerned, you don't have any.
So, if you're stopped
for a safety check by the Coast Guard and you don't have the required PFD's,
you're gonna get cited!
So when you get stopped
by law enforcement, if you are wearing your PFD's, wow, that's terrific! Otherwise,
where they are located can be a life saver to you and a time saver as well!
Who,
Why, When and Where
Now this is a mouthful.
And the answers are so simple.
Who:
You, and every one else on your boat.
Why:
Because it's the right thing to do!
When:
When you walk onto your vessel.
Where:
Need more information about boating and safety? Why not contact your local
United States Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla and take a safe boating course!
They can be contacted via the internet at http://www.cgaux.org or thru your
local Coast Guard unit (http://www.uscg.mil)
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AuxGuidanceSkills.Info is geared to providing "Public Service Articles in the pursuit of Recreational Boating Safety" to that end, we will continue to add to our series on Help Wanted, Homeland Security, Public Education, Public Service, Vessel Safety and Environmental Issues, though the use of 'case studies', as our teaching tool of choice.
In addition, our Leadership series offers those within the Coast Guard family, as well as outside, an insight into values that will improve their leadership skills.
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