Schwarzenegger Signs Teaksurfing Bill
Thursday, September 30, 2004
Log News Service - Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a bill Sept. 17 that will attempt to stop the practice of “teak surfing,” “platform dragging,” or “bodysurfing” behind a motorized vessel.
Assembly Member Paul Koretz, D-West Hollywood, said his bill - Assembly Bill 2222 - will protect boaters and their passengers from a “hidden killer” - carbon monoxide in the boats’ exhaust.
His legislation, which takes effect Jan. 1, 2005, makes it an infraction punishable by a $100 fine to operate a motorized vessel while someone is teak surfing, platform dragging, or bodysurfing behind the vessel or running the engine at idle while an individual is occupying or holding onto the swim platform, swim deck, swim step, or swim ladder at the rear of the vessel.
The prohibition would not apply when an individual is assisting with the docking or departure of the vessel or while exiting or entering the vessel.
There have been three boating deaths involving Californians since 2000 that have been attributed to breathing carbon monoxide, an odorless, colorless, tasteless gas that can kill quickly.
Two of the victims were youths who were bodysurfing behind motorboats. The third was a 62-year-old man who was overcome while swimming near a boat in Lake Shasta.
“Each of these senseless, tragic deaths was preventable,” Koretz said. “Boaters must become aware that they should never be near the back of the boat when the engine is running, not even for a minute.”
KoretzÂ’ legislation will also require that after May 1, 2005, two warning stickers about the dangers of breathing carbon monoxide be placed on all new or used motorized vessels sold in California - a small sticker, placed where it is visible to the person operating the vessel, and a larger sticker on the exterior of the stern or transom of the vessel.
The law will require the Department of Motor Vehicles to insert a Department of Boating and Waterways informational brochure about the dangers of carbon-monoxide poisoning and boats and the two warning stickers into the registration-renewal materials it mails to vessel owners for two consecutive two-year registration cycles.
Another provision in the law will require all state-sponsored boating-safety courses and all boating-safety courses that require state approval by Boating and Waterways to incorporate information about the dangers of being overcome by carbon-monoxide poisoning at the stern of a motorized vessel and how to prevent that poisoning.
Teresa Stark, KoretzÂ’s chief of staff, said Koretz viewed the bill more as an educational tool than as a way to punish boaters for engaging in a dangerous activity.
“We don’t anticipate a lot of citations will be given out,” she said. “We want law enforcement to be able to stop people when they see people doing this and explain to them that it could kill them or their kids.”
A report from The Associated Press was used in this story.
Teriffic, does anyone really believe spending hundreds of thousands on these friggin lame stickers is really going to stop dummies, that should probably be thinned from the heard anyway, from teak surfing? :hammerhea
Note: Notice the article said 3 have died in the last 4 years. For christ sake, more people die slipping in the f'ing shower.