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#1 | |
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Another reason why we need speed limits!
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#2 |
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Really? Show me the stats that show that any one of the accidents would have been prevented by a speed limit. Again...define excessive speed.
Funny that they don't mention that the mandatory boating law was not in effect for all boaters last year. I should know better than to get sucked into another speed limit thread, but I just could not let this one go unchecked. |
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#3 |
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What effect do we all think boat gas at $4.50/gallon or more would do? Some analysts are predicting car gas at $5/gallon before the end of summer.
Go to the websites of manufacturers of the most common boats on this lake and look at the fuel capacity, then multiply it by the current gas price. The larger cigarette boats on this lake now cost over $1,000 to fill up. The smaller performance boats are in the range of $500 per fill. If gas goes up to $5 by summer's end, I think we'll see a lot more performance boats lazing around than speeding around. And what if oil keeps going up, what about next summer? We might see many of those fast boats parked at the side of the road with "For Sale" signs, or on trailers towed by the repo man. Moral of the story: Unless a miracle occurs in the world of oil, I think the lake's most frequent offending boats are cruising on borrowed time (and probably borrowed money, too.) One could argue that the owners are rich, but take a look at the financial news articles that say even the rich are now cutting back on their spending. By the time a permanent speed limit bill gets passed, sailboats, canoes, and kayaks might well be the dominant vessels on Winni as fuel prices kill the whole issue. |
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#4 | |
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![]() http://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums/...&postcount=361 http://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums/...&postcount=285
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#5 |
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Here is a link to the 2006 NH Boating Stats provided by Woodsy
http://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums/...ead.php?t=4283 Let's break it down shall we? 15 Falls in boat or PWC 11 Skiing/Wakeboard mishaps 10 Collisions at less than 10mph 8 Collisions with fixed object 6 While paddling 6 Explosions/fire 4 Collision with submerged object/grounding 3 Drownings jumping off boats/falls 3 Sunk vessels 2 Drownings by sinking 2 Capsized 2 Collisions at less than 30 but more than 20 mph 1 Collision at less than 20 but more than 10 mph 1 Accident caused by wake 1 Accident due to hull failure 1 Ejection at less than 30 mph I think I got them all. So certainly some of these accidents were caused by Capt Bonehead, but the vast majority were not. According to the NH Stats, two speed related accidents were on Lake Winnipesaukee. Both listed as Falls, both on PWCs. One listed as traveling at 50, the other as "excessive speed" There were two other speed releated accidents in NH in 2006, one on Ossipee listed as an ejection/sinking at 70 mph and the other on Phillips Pond a hull failure at 50 mph. So tell us again why HB847 is needed on Lake Winnipesaukee??? Paddlers do NOT have to take a boating safety course or pass a certificiate test something that I believe someone mentioned is being reviewed by NASBLA because of the dramatic increase in kayak sales and accidents nationwide! Yet they are the 5th leading cause of accidents in NH in 2006! Last edited by Airwaves; 05-22-2008 at 06:07 PM. Reason: separated speed related accidents |
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#6 |
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Read the end of paragraph 4 where accident is defined. Deaths and drownings count toward those figures. I can think of several off the top of my head in the last 2 years alone. There was the drowning off Rattlesnake and the one in Saunders Bay 2 summers ago. There was the man who fell of the MT Washington on the Halloween cruise. These are all part of these statistics and they have nothing to do with speed. Thats just 3 I can think of and I know there were many more drownings in kayaks and canoes over the last several years.
Excessive speed could be 5 mph around some of the town docks. All excessive speed means is that it was too fast for the situation. It does not mean it was 45 mph or higher. These statistics must be put in perspective. |
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We will soon have a speed limit, everything is good.
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Sandy is going to Concord to be at the signing ceremony.
The level of denial shown in this forum is almost beyond imagination! Why have NH boating accidents gone up 16% while Vermont's went down 83% during the same period. Do people fall down in Vermont? Do people fall overboard in Vermont? Do people kayak in Vermont? Have the boaters born before 1957 caused all the accidents in New Hampshire? Because they are the only ones that didn't need safe boating certificates last summer. When I read the comparison with Vermont it makes me wonder what they are doing right, and what we are doing wrong. When the opposition reads it they wonder, "how can we explain this away"! |
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#9 | |
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#10 | |
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The sad thing is, that I am willing to bet the 2006 stats will be used to show how the speed limit works. Somehow, those 6 paddling accidents will have been prevented by a speed limit. |
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#11 | |
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Islander: To the best of my knowledge there is not speed limit in the lakes of VT. Taken from the VT safe boating web site "Speed Limits: Within 200 feet of shore, dock, swim area, person in water and other vessels or anchorage, speed must be less than 5 miles per hour and must not create a wake." If this is the case then I guess you just made the agrument for not having the speed limit. After all they don't have a speed limit but accidents dropped off. |
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#12 | |
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#13 | |
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VtSteve - In what way am I acting like a politician? By posting a relevant article? I guess I don't understand your point. |
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#14 | |
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Last edited by Airwaves; 05-22-2008 at 08:41 PM. Reason: spelling |
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Thanks for some reason the link was not working for me. I did google it and found it.
There is so many different ways to look at this date however. For example: "according to the U.S. Coast Guard, which defines such incidents as those incurring $2,000 or more in damage, when there has been an injury that requires care beyond first aid, or when there has been an death or a disappearance leading to a presumption of drowning." Since boats are getting more expensive it also stands to reason that they are more expensive to fix. 2000 dollars does not get you very far for repairs these days... It also lists the most common causes for accidents as " such as inexperience, inattention and excessive speed". Is that the order that they are most caused? Was inexperience the largest cause of accidents? |
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#16 | |
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The bottom line is the article was written via press release. No background or research was apparently conducted by the author into the NH accident statistics or what they actually represent and that is a shame because once again the non-boating public is going to perceive NH as a dangerous place to boat and have a good time. Something Winnfabs is no doubt proud of! |
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#17 | |
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I read the statistics, maybe you did as well. Your comment was that the numbers were yet another reason we needed the speed limits. Yet, absolutely nothing in the data would lead anyone to that conclusion. Politicians do that, spinning forever the unspinnable. Your statement was BS, and not backed up by the article you posted, nor any of the data. Sounds like most of the arguments made. |
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#18 | |
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Gee, I think most people can see that a speed limit just might cut down on "excessive speed". I think it is clear that one of the major reasons to enact a speed limit is to reduce the number of accidents involving excessive speed. You call that spin? |
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#19 | |
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I notice you aren't addressing the 6 accidents involving paddle powered vessels. Last edited by Airwaves; 05-22-2008 at 10:56 PM. Reason: spelling |
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#21 | |
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The data I presented was for the entire state of New Hampshire not just Lake Winnipesaukee, so you didn't bother to read it, heh? You claim 47 accidents on Lake Winnipesaukee in 2006 involving speed? Please document your claim and define "speed". For these discussions I define "speed" as the proposed limits to YOUR law, 45/25. I only show 2 accidents on Lake Winnipesaukee and 4 in the entire state that come close to that definition using New Hampshire statistics, none involving another vessel or a GFBL boat. On Lake Winnipesaukee one PWC at 50 MPH and the other PWC at "Excessive Speed"..."Excessive Speed"...the definition that many supporters of HB847 claims does not exist...and it involved a turn so it was probably less than 45 mph. Your move. Last edited by Airwaves; 05-23-2008 at 01:06 AM. Reason: showing both "speeding" accidents were PWCs |
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#22 | |
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There were a couple of GF accidents here last summer, involving less than brilliant behavior. All of my issues were with the Captain Bonehead types in smaller craft at much lesser speed. Most of the GFBL skippers here are very experienced and far more cautious than the typical trailer boater dumping his boat in for a day of hoots and giggles. This year the USCG and BP will be beefed up for the border security, so I don't expect the locals will be benefitting from increased funding. The police boat is slipped just a few docks from my boat, and I'll bet I'm on the water far more than he. But I do use my radio, and you all should assist them as well. |
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#23 |
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Of the states where accidents declined which one has a speed limit?
If they do not what are they doing that we are not doing. Do they have better enforcement of existing rules? I applaud Bear Islander for posting this. Thank you for opening a valid discussion point. |
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#24 | |
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Do you agree that your post was spin? If not, why not?
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So if I pass the Band Stand in Alton Bay at 5 MPH and strike another boat or dock that is excessive speed! Gee I was under 45MPH but still it is excessive speed since it is a NO WAKE ZONE. How make of the excessive speed incidents happened at over 45MPH or 25 MPH for that matter?
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I havent made up my mind about the speed lmit issue but I know the term "excessive speed" is not the same as "going fast." Seven mph in a No-Wake Zone would be listed as "excessive speed" if there were an accident or citation.
Remember you are talking to your peers, here. We know what these terms mean since they have been discussed ad nauseum already. The panic factor only works for the general population who dont follow a specialty issue like this and will believe whatever they hear first. |
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More boats = more incidents.
Maybe someone can compare boat sales with those stats. Not to mention how many people see the local marina ads and the behavior in those ads, drop 18 grand, and there you have it!- Instant captain bonehead!!! ![]() |
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#28 | |
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Here's the report the story was based on: http://www.pwia.org/news/article/193.aspx I don't think there's any correlation between speed limits and the statistics in the article. Islander, Bear Islander and any other speed limit supporters, Do you you REALLY believe this +16% increase in NH boating accidents proves there's a need for a speed limit on Winnipesaukee? |
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#29 |
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Cindy Kebbee ???? New Hampshire Business Review???????
Give me a break, imagine if the anti-speed limit crowd had tried this, we'd be listening to every conspiracy theory there is, we'd be accused of being present on the grassy knoll. Too bad we didn't think of this first, we could have made the headline: "0.078 % of boats involved in some sort of reportable accident" but wait, the stats include boats that don't need to be registered which if you included those in the number of vessels would easily cut the number in half. I wonder what the comparable number is for cars, I bet it's at least 10X that number. I wonder if I looked hard enough if I'd find that "reporter's" name on a SL petition????????? |
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#30 | |
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Again...define excessive speed? What's that...you can't? Why not? Perhaps because excessive speed has absolutely nothing to do with high speeds, and you know it. 10 mph in a NWZ = excessive speed. 40 mph in the broads on a windy or stormy day = excessive speed |
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#31 | |
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When you break down the actual data behind the statistics, as was done above, you see that "speed" is not a primary (or even secondary or tertiary, etc.) factor in these accidents. Yet you continue to prattle on about how a speed limit will somehow make the the lake safer and better. Throughout ALL of these speed limit threads you have presented nothing beyond pure emotion and hype to back up your claims. |
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#32 |
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When the speed limit proposal was first put into effect I was not in favor of it but after reading and listening to all that goes on about it, and then actually watching some of the antics on the lake such as the capt bonehead in a cigerette boat that decided to see how fast he could go and turn around which ended up I believe sinking his craft (which is about as dumb as the guy in the Ford Explorora driving on the ice to see how thickl it was) I changed my mind. I would like to see the statistics on the number of tickets issued last summer to those who did not do headway speed when within 150', I do not believe that they enforce that law, so what makes anyone think that they will or can enforce a speed limit?
As operators of a boat, any boat, kayak, canoe, sail we must take responsibility for our actions or lack thereof. Someone made a comment on here about the people born before 1957, There were accidents then but as on the roads there were less boats, and people were more courtess than they are today. We actually had lake launches on the lake. New boating season, lets all get out on the lake, have fun but please be safe drive as if your life depended on it. It does! |
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#33 | |
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The increase does PROVE that SOMETHING needs to be done. Especially when most states have seen their accident rates decrease during the same period. Exactly what needs to be done is open to opinion and interpretation. In my opinion a speed limit is the most viable answer that does not require huge funding and/or many years to get rolling. Blaming the statistics on people falling in boats or counting the number of accidents over a given speed is not solving the problem. A serious look at what is different in those states is more to the point. I will go one step further and ask if this states "live free or die" and "no limits" attitude is part of the problem? We know that lakes in other states are being more heavily regulated as time goes on. Is New Hampshire behind the curve? Is that why are numbers are going the wrong way? Difficult questions. The easy answer is to throw the statistics in the trash and scream NO LIMITS! |
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#34 |
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Bear Islander not to be a nag but do you or anyone for that matter have any info with regard to speed limits in these other states?
I'm curious especially with regard to the states where accidents declined. I'd be interested as to what caused this decline. Was it better enforcement or newly enacted sped limits. |
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#35 | |
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However it is not a simple as just asking if a state has a speed limit or not. If HB847 passes New Hampshire will still not have a speed limit. There could be other regulations that have a similar effect. Horsepower limits, maximum speed limits or length limits have much the same effect. And the prohibitions could be by state, local or lake by lake. And obviously there could be factors that have nothing to do with speed. However ignoring the problem will not make it any better. A speed limit is something we can try right now. Without a lot of money. That is why it has my support. |
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#37 |
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Once again the total of something obscures the valuable information that comprises it.
Numbers for 2002 2004 2006 Capsizing 6 4 9 CO2 x 0 0 Collision Fixed object 11 2 9 Collision floating object 3 0 1 Collision vessel 17 11 8 Departed vessel x 0 2 Ejected from vessel x 1 2 Falls within boat 4 5 6 falls on PWC x 1 7 Falls overboard 3 0 0 Fire fuel 0 0 1 Fire other 0 0 4 Flooding/swamping 2 0 0 grounding 0 3 2 not reported x 0 0 other 1 0 2 sinking 0 0 2 skier mishap 18 1 22 struck by boat 2 2 0 struck by motor 1 2 0 struck submerged object 0 3 2 Total accidents 68 35 79 (Please pardon the compression of the numbers in the table.) Observations: The major contributors to increased accidents in 2006 are capsizing, falls on PWCs, fires, and skier mishaps. The number of collisions with other vessels and being struck by a boat or motor is declining significantly. The best year for accidents, 2004, was because there were few (2) collisions with fixed objects (Was that the year they took all the rocks out of the lake and bubble wrapped the islands? I forget?), and only 1 skier mishap was reported (Can you believe that? 18 to 1 to 22?) The fear of high speed boats is that they will HIT other boats. Boat collisions are half of what they were in 2002. Capsizing is much more common for smaller boats and 2006 was one of the flood years when some "adventurers" unsuccessfully tried going into flood swollen rivers. It happened again this spring on the Merrimack. Falls on PWCs might be speed related but it's not too hard to get banged up if you hit waves or wake wrong or turn too sharply. I find it quite a reach to attribute fires and skier mishaps to high boat speed and if you want to limit skier speeds to "protect" them then we can start banning snow skiing, mountain hiking, ice climbing, and a bunch of other activities. Where's the speed limit beef? If we want fewer accidents lets ban water skiing, require outrigger pontoons on all canoes and kayaks, and bubble wrap all docks. That should cut the accident numbers in half. ![]() |
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#38 | |
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However it all revolves around the premise that going fast is just as safe as going slow. An obvious lie! The Coast Guard considers excessive speed as a major factor in boating accidents, but what do they know! Where's the Beef? Ask the USCG! The oppositions inability to see the problem is the reason why we won! |
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#39 | |
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"We" have pointed out that the rules being broken are already in place, it's the Marine Patrol that is not in place. Skip pointed out that we shouldn't expect more funding for them, he's probably correct. Not once in the above example, with the Facts being presented in raw form and summary form, did you address them. The Facts clearly point to the majority of problems being attributed to things other than what the speed limits address. I've not seen one report, EVER, anywhere, that points to the primary, or even a Significant portion of accidents being caused by speeding over 45mph. The above data suggests something entirely different than what you suggest. Your failing to address enforcement of existing laws and regulations pretty much proves that you have only one agenda. The 2007 data will be out next year I suppose. What then? Just for good, solid backup support. " Observations: The major contributors to increased accidents in 2006 are capsizing, falls on PWCs, fires, and skier mishaps. The number of collisions with other vessels and being struck by a boat or motor is declining significantly. The best year for accidents, 2004, was because there were few (2) collisions with fixed objects (Was that the year they took all the rocks out of the lake and bubble wrapped the islands? I forget?), and only 1 skier mishap was reported (Can you believe that? 18 to 1 to 22?) The fear of high speed boats is that they will HIT other boats. Boat collisions are half of what they were in 2002. Capsizing is much more common for smaller boats and 2006 was one of the flood years when some "adventurers" unsuccessfully tried going into flood swollen rivers. It happened again this spring on the Merrimack. Falls on PWCs might be speed related but it's not too hard to get banged up if you hit waves or wake wrong or turn too sharply. I find it quite a reach to attribute fires and skier mishaps to high boat speed and if you want to limit skier speeds to "protect" them then we can start banning snow skiing, mountain hiking, ice climbing, and a bunch of other activities. Where's the speed limit beef? If we want fewer accidents lets ban water skiing, require outrigger pontoons on all canoes and kayaks, and bubble wrap all docks. That should cut the accident numbers in half. " |
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In a circumstance where any speed over 60 mph is "excessive" a 45 mph speed limit may prevent a tragedy. Or allow the Marine Patrol to get things under control. Or even prevent the offending boat from being on the lake in the first place. If the speed limit reduces congestion or makes Capt. Bonehead go elsewhere, then once again, a tragedy may be averted. The only down side to a speed limit is that you will not be able to travel at insane speeds. Wait a minute.... That's not a downside! |
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#43 | |
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However, most captain boneheads are not in your target boats. They are in PWC's, little bowriders, some are big cruisers that are doing 15mph producing an enormous wake near small craft. There are hot dogs doing whatever speed, weaving, making sharp turns, not paying attention. These are the targets, or should be. As for your comment about "The only down side to a speed limit is that you will not be able to travel at insane speeds". Most every report, if not all, do not list this as a problem. You might believe it's a problem regardless of the lack of accidents. But that's your issue, not most people. The Perception is a problem with many, the reality is that it just isn't. I don't even believe that the comment above will be of any use, since it's been stated many times by BI that the MP isn't enforcing the NWZ now. I know where you're coming from, and I sympathize with your feelings. I want a pleasant experience out there as much as anyone. I've witnessed first hand, as have others, stupid boaters doing stupid things. They will keep doing stupid things as long as they are allowed to. If you have no more GFBL boats on the lake, I'm sure you'd love it. But the real problems will remain. |
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#44 | |
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The Marine Patrol visit the NWZ on a regular basis and do many boat stops. They have even tied up at my dock to be less conspicuous while they wait. At least 99% of the boats obey the rules. I don't see how this has any relation to a speed limit. |
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#45 | |
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The camp issues seem to be fairly easy to address also, which I know is another beef over there. You once addressed big wake problems with a horsepower limit. I had no idea what this did to reduce wake sizes, but I learn something new everyday. I think what's happened is you've mentioned so many things that tick you off, and usually end with speed limit support comments, perhaps I get them all confused. Last edited by VtSteve; 05-24-2008 at 07:44 PM. Reason: Hit return too fast |
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Again I ask, ISLANDER, YOU CLAIM Quote:
I have shown you my statistics, my references and my links. All you do is say NO NO NO. Prove it! |
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#50 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: In the Beautiful Lakes Region of course!
Posts: 130
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Can someone please verify what year it was (rather recently as I recall) that NH law changed in regard to the reporting requirments for accidents? Didn't that change the dollar amount of what was considered reportable or not (for accidents involving damage, not necessarily injury)? |
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#51 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 115
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Check with someone with a 2005 NH Boater's Guide. For accidents in 2004, a failure to report an accident under $500 within ten days was a misdemeanor.
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#52 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 15
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there is still no evidence of accidents linked to speed during the day. and when i say speed i mean 45 mph or over. prove me wrong I'd like to know about it
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#53 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Laconia NH
Posts: 5,570
Thanks: 3,206
Thanked 1,101 Times in 793 Posts
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__________________
Someday may never be an actual day. |
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#54 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Hopkinton NH
Posts: 395
Thanks: 88
Thanked 80 Times in 46 Posts
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![]() If that's the case, maybe they should be taxed, not just on their "land" property but now, on the "water" property also. Imagine that, 71 square miles of untapped property tax revenue!! THAT should solve our school funding problem!! ![]()
__________________
Cancer SUCKS! ![]() |
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#55 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 1,177
Thanks: 664
Thanked 943 Times in 368 Posts
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#56 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Gilford Islander
Posts: 55
Thanks: 0
Thanked 2 Times in 1 Post
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#57 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Hopkinton NH
Posts: 395
Thanks: 88
Thanked 80 Times in 46 Posts
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__________________
Cancer SUCKS! ![]() |
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#58 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 3,486
Thanks: 221
Thanked 810 Times in 486 Posts
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The whole taxation bit is another issue already debated. My taxes are ridiculous and for what??? I get to dump my trash at Glendale and MAY be supported by the fire boat if in fact it could make it to me before my log home burned flat. I don't use the schools and all roads leading to my slip are state maintained. What do I pay $9k in taxes a year for, for a seasonal property??? |
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#59 | |
Senior Member
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