Plan to wait
USCG will review timeline to cut 500-ton license.
A4
Hot spot Triton Expo
Captains, crew find tools to improve. A12 Vol.7, No. 2
www.the-triton.com
TRITON SURVEY: Getting bids on a paint job We heard the charge at a meeting of Ft. Lauderdale marine business leaders: Yacht captains get seven or eight bids, then choose “the absolute lowest one.” Really? So we asked. The answers will likely surprise marine business leaders . More charts and the story, C1
10 or more – 0.9% 4 to 6 – 23.3% 2 to 3 – 75.9%
If you get quotes from vendors when it’s time to have a job done, how many will you get?
With the recent revision of pilotage regulations on Canada’s Pacific coast, let’s see how this move affects large private pleasure craft using western waters, and compare them with the pilotage regulations and ship movements on Canada’s Atlantic coast. Under the Transport Canada ministry, navigation is managed by a separate federally created Crown Corporation on each coast with responsibility for providing safe, efficient regional marine pilotage services. Each Pilotage Authority works in co-operation with ports, the shipping industry and other stakeholders. There are 17 compulsory pilotage regions on the Atlantic Coast and five regions on the Pacific Coast.
In January 2010, the Pacific Pilotage Authority (PPA) changed tonnage requirements, bringing British Columbia coastal regulations in line with Washington State pilot rules to the south and Alaska to its north. According to the latest PPA Regulation, section 9(1), “.... every pleasure craft over 500 gross tons is subject to compulsory pilotage.” PPA President and CEO, Kevin Obermeyer, emphasizes that the recent pleasure craft regulation change from 350 GRT to 500 GRT only applies to private yachts. “Any yacht that is engaged in charter operations with an advertised itinerary and passengers will require a pilot if over 350 GRT,” he says. By contrast, the Atlantic Pilotage Authority (APA) has not amended its regulations regarding pleasure yachts
Explaining your job to your boss
navigating the waters of Canada’s four Atlantic provinces since 1999 when the pilotage exemption was raised from 200 GRT to 500 GRT. “The only waiver from these regulations (applying to both commercial and non-commercial ships),” points out Captain David Fox, Director of Operations for APA, “would be if the vessel is in a rescue operation or in peril, or if a pilot is not available.” On the other coast, the PPA regulations do leave open the possibility of allowing pleasure craft larger than 500 GRT to request a waiver of pilotage requirements if the ship’s officers are Canadian or American having demonstrated a clear familiarity with local waters.
Employers hire you with clear expectations to fulfill a job. You do what is asked and they pay you. As you hold up your end of the bargain, and do it well, the boss may forget why he is writing you that monthly check. “Just what is it that you are doing for me, again?”, he asks. From the Bridge This month at Dorie Cox The Triton’s From the Bridge captains luncheon, we invited yacht captains to tell us what they do all day in their jobs, how they document their work and how they share the information with the people who want to know. “I take boats to exotic ports for repairs,” came a quick reply from a captain. “I fix toilets on elegant yachts,” another said. “I make lists and keep adding to them,” offered the next. As always in the monthly meeting, individual comments are not attributed to any one person in particular so as to encourage frank and open discussion. The attending captains are identified in a photograph accompanying this article on page 15. Everyone who works on a boat understands the never-ending task lists onboard. But the people who visit an immaculate and perfectly functioning yacht don’t ponder the behind-thescenes work that makes it so. When a boat is in good shape, there can be a perception that captains have their feet up with a cup of coffee, when in reality, the captains said, their job is continual. “When the owner comes, everything needs to be working,” said a captain. “I had the owner call for a surprise visit, but the boat was torn apart. He got to see us working and what it really takes.” “Yeah, it’s good to let the owner see a working boat, and let them climb over the crap also,” another captain added. A lot of owners have never seen
See PILOTAGE, page A10
See BRIDGE, page A15
PHOTO from Dave Roels
Rules updated on Atlantic, Pacific coasts By Alison Gardner
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May 2010
PILOTAGE IN CANADA
A British Columbia pilot boat underway.
Get up close to Italy’s offshore volcanos.