(1) Any ordinance
submitted pursuant to Section
327.46(1)(c),
F.S., and in compliance with Chapter 68D-21, F.A.C., is subject to review and
approval by the Commission.
(2) An
ordinance establishing either an "idle speed, no wake" or a "slow speed,
minimum wake" boating restricted area will be approved for areas not more than
300 feet from a confluence (intersection) of water bodies presenting a blind
corner, a bend in a narrow channel or fairway, or such other area if an
intervening obstruction to visibility may obscure other vessels or other users
of the waterway.
(a) A blind corner is
presented where an intervening obstruction to visibility prevents the operator
of a vessel on one of the water bodies from seeing a vessel on the other water
body at a distance of 300 feet or less from the confluence.
(b) A bend or other intervening obstruction
to visibility in a narrow channel, fairway, or other similar water body within
the meaning of Inland Navigation Rule 9 (33 U.S.C. §
2009) as
adopted by Section
327.33, F.S., is presented where
a decision sight distance of less than 300 feet exists and prevents the
operator of a vessel from seeing other vessels or other users of the
waterway.
(3) An
ordinance establishing an "idle speed, no wake" or "slow speed, minimum wake"
boating restricted area will be approved to close the gap with a "slow speed,
minimum wake" zone where there are two or more existing or newly created
boating restricted areas that are separated by 500' or less, such that
acceleration of vessels between the areas is unsafe or presents risk of
collision.
(4) An ordinance
establishing a "slow speed, minimum wake" boating-restricted area or numerical
speed limit boating-restricted area if the area is:
(a) Subject to hazardous water levels or
currents if:
1. The boating-restricted area
established in the ordinance is active and enforceable only when the water
levels are at or above flood stage on a river gauge operated or reported by the
National Weather Service's River Forecast Center (
http://www.srh.noaa.gov/serfc/) or
at the equivalent level on a river gauge operated or reported by the United
States Geological Survey's National Water Information System (
http://waterdata.usgs.gov/fl/nwis/rt)
and the specific gauge and flood stage water level is specified in the
ordinance.
2. A navigation chart
published by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National
Ocean Service identifies the area as being subject to hazardous tides or
currents.
3. Creditable data
demonstrate that the area is subject to water levels or currents that endanger
vessels operating in the area or the occupants of such vessels.
(b) Containing a documented
navigational hazard of a nature that vessel operation in its vicinity at speed
in excess of slow speed, minimum wake endangers the vessel or its occupants.
Navigational hazards are presumed to exist within the marked boundaries of
mooring fields as permitted by Section
327.40, F.S.
(c) Subject to unsafe levels of vessel
traffic congestion, seasonally or year-round, such that:
1. The traffic density including
concentration of fishing vessels or any other vessels would require that
vessels slacken speed under Inland Navigation Rule 6(a)(ii) (33 U.S.C. §
2006) as adopted by Section
327.33, F.S., or
2. It presents a significant risk of
collision or a significant threat to boating safety.
3. Unsafe levels of vessel traffic
congestion, a significant risk of collision, or a significant threat to boating
safety may be demonstrated by:
a. Accident
reports - The following reports of boating accidents are acceptable if prepared
contemporaneously with the boating accident being reported and if such reports
reflect law enforcement's determination that vessel traffic congestion or the
speed, wake, or operation of a vessel involved in the accident was a primary
contributing factor in the accident:
(II) A law enforcement
agency's official offense or incident report prepared and signed by an officer
authorized under Section
327.70, F.S., to enforce the
provisions of Chapters 327 and 328, F.S.
(III) Medical records, including EMS and
medical examiner reports, if they document death or injuries as a result of a
boating accident and specify the nature and location of the boating
accident;
b. Uniform
boating citations issued on citation forms supplied by the Commission as
provided in Section 327.74, F.S., or written
warnings if the violation alleged in the citation or warning is related to the
cited vessel's speed, wake, or operation. Citations and written warnings
unrelated to vessel speed, wake, or operation will not be considered, nor will
verbal warnings. In no event will citations or written warnings issued for
violations of Chapter 328, or Sections
327.50,
327.53,
327.54,
327.65,
327.66, F.S., be
considered.
c. A vessel traffic
study demonstrating that vessel traffic congestion or the speed, wake, or
operation of vessels in the area create unsafe levels of vessel traffic
congestion, a significant risk of collision, or a significant threat to boating
safety. The conclusions of the study, as determined by the Boating and
Waterways Section, must be based upon sufficient facts or data, be the product
of reliable principles and methods, and apply the principles and methods
reliably to the facts or data considered. In assessing the creditability of a
vessel traffic study, the following factors (as applicable) shall be among
those considered:
(I) Whether the study's
methodology can be or has been tested (i.e., whether the study's methodology
can be challenged in some objective sense, or whether it is instead simply a
subjective, conclusory approach that cannot reasonably be assessed for
reliability),
(II) Whether the
study's methodology has been subject to peer review and publication,
(III) The known or potential rate of error of
the study's methodology,
(IV) The
existence and maintenance of standards and controls; and,
(V) Whether the methodology has been
generally accepted in the scientific community.
Vessel traffic studies must identify the number of vessels
transiting the proposed boating restricted area each hour for no less than six
hours out of each twenty-four-hour period documented and provided to the
Commission. When this minimum threshold is met, the area will be evaluated
taking all other relevant factors into consideration, including width of the
waterway, vessel types using the waterway, navigational hazards, and other
conditions specific to the proposed boating restricted area.
d. Other creditable data. For the
purposes of this subparagraph, "other creditable data" means facts or data that
are of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the fields of boating
safety, maritime safety, navigation safety, ports and waterways safety
assessments, or vessel traffic management, as contemplated in Section
90.704, F.S.
4. When relying upon vessel
traffic studies for reviews under this rule, video surveillance made during a
vessel traffic study may be submitted with a corresponding log documenting
number of vessels, vessel types, examples of careless or reckless operation of
vessels, navigation rule violations, actions taken to avoid collisions, unsafe
vessel speeds, near misses of navigational hazards by vessels, or any other
specific criteria the applicant wants considered, along with relevant video
time stamps for each item. Without such a corresponding log documenting the
specific identified issues, video surveillance will not be considered. Video
surveillance which has been altered or edited will not be considered.
(d) An area that could have been
established as an idle speed, no wake boating-restricted area under Section
327.46 (1)(b)1., F.S., provided
the applicant demonstrates by competent substantial evidence how the specific
regulation will adequately solve public safety concerns in the area.
(5) An ordinance establishing a
vessel exclusion zone (an area from which all vessels or certain classes of
vessels are excluded) will be approved if the area is reserved exclusively:
(a) As a canoe trail or otherwise limits
vessel propulsion if the applicant demonstrates by competent substantial
evidence how the restriction is necessary to protect public safety pursuant to
Section 327.46, F.S. if imposition of the restriction will not unreasonably or
unnecessarily endanger navigation or interfere with the use of a navigation
channel that is lawfully marked with lateral aids to navigation.
(b) For a particular specified activity
(e.g.: sailing instruction, marine research, water skiing, personal watercraft
use, sailboard use, etc.) if the applicant demonstrates by competent
substantial evidence how certain classes of vessels (including all vessels if
appropriate under the prevailing circumstances) endanger or are likely to
endanger those participating in the specified activity and that exclusion of
the specified vessels is necessary to adequately protect the safety of those
participating in the specified activity.
Notes
Fla. Admin.
Code Ann. R. 68D-21.004
Rulemaking Authority
327.04,
327.302,
327.46 FS. Law Implemented
327.302,
327.46
FS.
New 10-6-10,
Amended by
Florida
Register Volume 47, Number 110, June 8, 2021 effective
6/24/2021, Amended
by
Florida
Register Volume 50, Number 168, August 27, 2024 effective
9/10/2024.
New 10-6-10, Amended
6-24-21.