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Introduced Version House Bill 2804 History

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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted


H. B. 2804


(By Delegate Staton, Canterbury, Keener,

Craig, Stephens, Fox and Swartzmiller)


[Introduced March 8, 2001; referred to the

Committee on the Judiciary.]



A BILL to amend chapter twenty of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, by adding thereto a new article, designated article three-c, relating to the regulation of personal watercrafts; restricting the age of operation of personal watercrafts; requiring certain flotation and safety devices on personal watercrafts; restricting the hours of personal watercraft use; prohibiting certain reckless activities; providing for certain educational requirements to operate personal watercrafts; setting guidelines for towing water skiers and other towables; regulating liveries regarding personal watercrafts; providing for exemptions from educational and regulatory requirements; and establishing penalties.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That chapter twenty of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended by adding thereto a new article, designated article three-c, to read as follows:
CHAPTER 20. NATURAL RESOURCES
ARTICLE 3C. PERSONAL WATERCRAFT OPERATIONS ACT
§20-3C-1. Short Title.
This act may be cited as the Personal Watercraft Operations Act.
§20-3C-2. Definitions.
As used in this article:
(a) The term "personal watercraft" means a small vessel of less than sixteen feet in length which uses an inboard motor powering a water jet pump as its primary source of motive power and which is designed to be operated by a person sitting, standing, or kneeling on the vessel, rather than the conventional manner of sitting or standing inside the vessel.
(b) The term "specialty prop-craft" means a vessel which is similar in appearance and operation to a personal watercraft but which is powered by an outboard motor or propeller driven motor.
§20-3C-3. Regulation of Personal Watercraft.
(a) No person under the age of sixteen may operate a personal watercraft on the waters of this state;
Provided , That a person between the ages of twelve and sixteen may operate a personal watercraft if a person eighteen years or older is aboard the personal watercraft.
(b) A person may not operate a personal watercraft unless each person on board or being towed behind is wearing a type I, type II, type III, or type V personal flotation device approved by the United States Coast Guard. Inflatable personal flotation devices do not meet the requirements of this section.
(c) A person operating a personal watercraft equipped by the manufacturer with a lanyard-type engine cutoff switch must attach such lanyard to his or her person, clothing, or personal flotation device as a appropriate for the specific vessel.
(d) A person may not operate a personal watercraft at anytime between the hours of sunset and sunrise. However, an agent or employee of a fire rescue, emergency rescue unit, or law enforcement division is exempt from this subsection while performing his or her official duties.
(e) A personal watercraft must at all times be operated in a reasonable and prudent manner. Maneuvers which unreasonably or unnecessarily endanger life, limb, or property constitutes reckless operation of a vessel and includes, but is not limited to:
(1) Weaving through congested traffic;
(2) Jumping the wake of another vessel unreasonably or unnecessarily close to such other vessel or when visibility around such other vessel is obstructed or restricted;
(3) Becoming airborne or completely leaving the water while crossing the wake of another vessel within one-hundred feet of the vessel creating the wake;
(4) Operating at a greater than slow or no-wake speed within one-hundred feet of an anchored or moored vessel, shoreline, dock, pier, swim float, marked swim areas, swimmers, surfers, persons engaged in angling, or any manually powered vessel;
(5) Operating contrary to navigation rules including following too closely to another vessel, including another personal watercraft. For the purpose of this subdivision, "following too closely" is construed as a proceeding in the same direction and operating at a speed in excess of tem miles per hour within one-hundred feet to the rear or fifty feet to the side of another vessel which is underway, unless said vessels are operating in a narrow channel, in which case personal watercraft may operate at the speed and flow of the other vessel traffic within the channel.
§20-3C-4. Educational Requirements.
(a) No person born after January 1, 1986, may operate on the waters of this state a personal watercraft powered by a motor of ten Horse Power or greater: Provided, That the operator has successfully completed either a safe boater course approved by the National Association of State Boating Law Administrators and the state, or a proficiency examination that tests the knowledge of information included in the curriculum of such a course, and has received a certificate as evidence of successful completion of the course or examination.
(b) If a non-resident of the state is operating a personal watercraft within the waters of this state, the operator would be subject to the rules and regulations of this section for education certification. If the non-resident holds in his or her possession proof that he or she has completed within the state of residence, an education course or equivalency test that meets or exceeds the requirements of this section, such proof satisfies the requirement.
(c) Any operator, resident or non-resident, is required to have available proof of completion of such course on board the personal watercraft while operating on the waters of this state.
§20-3C-5. Towing water skiers and towables.
(a) No person may operate a personal watercraft towing another person on water skis or other towables unless the personal watercraft has, on board, in addition to the operator, a rear-facing observer, who monitors the progress of the person or persons being towed. This rear-facing observer must be at least twelve years of age.
(b) No person may operate a personal water craft towing another person on water skis or other towables unless the total number of persons operating, observing and being towed does not exceed the specified number of passengers as identified by the manufacturer as the maximum safe load for the vessel.
§20-3C-6. Regulation of liveries.
(a) A livery may not lease, hire, or rent a personal watercraft to or for operation by any person under eighteen years of age.
(b) A livery must carry liability insurance in the amount of one million dollars.
(c) Livery operators must administer boating safety instruction in compliance with department established rules and guidelines to all operators of rental vessels not having a valid safe boating certificate and valid identification.
(d) In addition, the livery must supply to the operator or operators in print, prior to rental:
(1) The operational characteristics of personal watercraft;
(2) The boating regulations peculiar to the area of rental including but not limited to no-entry zones, no-wake zones, channel routes and water hazards, and tidal flow; and
(3) The common courtesies of operating a vessel on the water and the effect on wildlife, the environment, and other water users.
§20-3C-7. Exemptions.
(a) The provisions of sections four and five do not apply to a performer engaged in a professional exhibition or a person engaging in an officially sanctioned regatta, race, marine parade, tournament, exhibition, or water safety demonstration.
(b) The provisions of sections four and five do not apply to a personal who holds a valid master's, mate's, or operator's license issued by the United States Coast Guard.
§20-3C-8. Regulation of specialty prop-craft.
The provisions of sections four, five and six apply to specialty prop-craft.
§20-3C-9. Revision of Code of State Rules.
Pursuant to the power established by subdivision thirty, section seven, article one of this chapter and section one, article one, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code, the Director of the Division of Natural Resources shall adopt rules which effectuate the contents of sections one through eight of this article; and adopt additional rules to supplement the provisions set forth by this article which it may deem appropriate.
§20-3C-10. Penalties.

Any person violating any of the provisions of this article is subject to the penalties set forth in section nine, article seven of this chapter.


NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to establish operation and safety restrictions, educational requirements, and livery regulations governing the use of personal watercrafts.

Article three-c is new; therefore, strike-throughs and underscoring have been omitted.

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