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Safe boating council launching Operation Dry Water for weekend

July 31, 2014   ·   0 Comments

Drinking and boating accounts for approximately 40 per cent of boating-related fatalities on Canadian waterways.
To raise awareness and reduce alcohol related deaths, the Canadian Safe Boating Council (CSBC) is launching the second year of an initiative called Operation Dry Water. Its goal is to discourage this dangerous practice.
With the summer boating season in high gear, the Aug. 2 long weekend is the perfect time to remind Canadian boaters about the risks of drinking and boating. Combined with sun, wind, waves and the rocking motion of the boat, the effects of alcohol on the water can be greatly increased.
“The CSBC and its partners would like, through this initiative, to raise attention to the problem of boating under the influence and to remind boaters not to drink and boat,” stated CSBC Chair Jean Murray.
Operation Dry Water will focus on the potential risks of drinking and boating, and remedies that are currently in place to discourage it.
Federal statutes dictate that, whether or not a craft is motorized, the operator can be charged with impaired operation of a vessel under the Criminal Code of Canada if their blood alcohol level exceeds the legal threshold. This means a person can be charged even if they are impaired while operating a canoe and a judge is able to, upon conviction, suspend their boating privileges. But that’s not all; it can get worse.
In Ontario, Bill 209 amended the Highway Traffic Act to also applies to “anyone operating or having the care or control of a vessel.” As such, anyone found boating with a blood alcohol level above .05, faces an on-the-spot automobile drivers’ licence suspension. Should the person’s blood alcohol concentration exceed .08, upon conviction, an additional suspension of up to one year can be applied.
Operation Dry Water is aimed at reducing the number of alcohol-related accidents and fatalities on the water while fostering a stronger and more visible deterrent to alcohol use while boating. The end goal? To achieve safer and more enjoyable recreational boating.

         

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