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From: skimmer <skimmer_at_enter.net>
subject: [Paddlewise] Proposed new PFD use rules
Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2006 19:08:20 4
<FontFamily>Hi All, 
Please feel free to send me comments on this article. 
Thanks, 
Chuck Sutherland (skimmer_at_enter.net) 
----------------------------- 


(For Delaware Valley TSCA November 2006 newsletter) 

PFDs for PA Boaters (Proposed new rules)) 
By Chuck Sutherland 
(E-mail: skimmer_at_enter.net) 

Efforts are under way in the U.S. (PA, MA) and Canada to make PFD use 
mandatory for folks on the water in small boats. The public comment 
period for the proposed rule changes in PA will run from October 14, 
2006 to November 14, 2006. Rule making decisions will be made in January
2007 and will take effect upon publication in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.


There are two possible options currently on the table. In the lesser 
case, boaters in watercraft under 16 ft and all canoes and kayaks will 
be required to wear PFDs at all times on the water in the cold months of
the year (October through May). Alternatively, the PA Fish and Boat 
Commission may vote to require year-round PFD use by such boaters (see 
item #188 at www.fish.state.pa.us/reg398.ht 
m). 

Statistics and dissent 

In spite of years of effort in the U.S. and Canada, state and federal 
agencies have been unable to convince the general boating public that 
wearing PFDs on the water is a good idea. At present, PFD use by the 
adult boating public remains low (21% Canada, ~ 13% in the U.S.). In the
U.S., when they are on the water, many adults wont wear PFDs even to 
set a good example for children in their boats. In this way, they are 
training the next generation of boaters to carry on their distain for 
the use of PFDs. 

Some US statistics indicate that 7 of 10 boating fatalities occur with 
boats under 20 ft in length. Drowning is the most common cause of death 
in such accidents, and in nearly 85% of all boating-related drownings 
the victims were not wearing PFDs. Alcohol was involved in about a third
of those cases and 9 of 10 victims were male. Most drownings occurred 
within 10 feet of shore or safety. Also, the largest percentage of 
deaths, relative to the number of boats on the water, occurred during 
the Off Season when the water was cold. 

Drowning occurs in an average of 20 seconds for children and in less 
than a minute for adults. Extensive data on these matters indicate that 
swimming ability does not correlate strongly with survival in the water.
This may be because panic-induced or cold-induced gasping (inhaling 
water) precludes swimming even if the victim briefly returns to the 
surface. To rephrase that, without a PFD and regardless of their known 
swimming ability, some victims do not return to the surface after 
accidental entry into the water. 
 
Arguments against PFD use include confidence in ones swimming ability, 
lack of comfort or mobility in a PFD, and fear of the wimp factor. 
PFDs are considered too hot in summer weather. Boaters dont need 
PFDs because they are staying near shore, they are expert boaters, they
have had one or more boating courses, they are with other boaters, and 
the captain isnt wearing a PFD. I believe that statistics, no matter 
how dramatic they are, will never convince the U.S. boating public to 
routinely use PFDs no matter what conditions are encountered out on the 
water. For information on PFD use, carry out a Google search [pfd use 
U.S. Canada]. 

A recent sad case 

On September 19, 2006, at Avon Beach on Cape Hatteras, NC, a 35-yr-old 
man borrowed a Sit-on-Top, SOT kayak (short, stable boat with a large 
outside cockpit) from a neighbor and went out to do a little surfing. He
capsized on the first wave about 50 yards offshore. His friends said, 
He was thrown from the boat.  They saw him holding onto the boat and 
went down to the beach to help him. When they got there, they saw the 
kayak, but the victim could not be found (information provided by 
District Ranger John McCutcheon, Cape Hatteras National Seashore). 

The wave height was 3-4 feet, water temperature 71 o F, air temperature 
78 o F, and wind offshore (SSW) at up to 13 knots. Visibility was clear 
to the horizon. The victim was a novice paddler, a weak swimmer, was 
dressed in knee-length shorts and was not wearing a PFD. He had had some
alcohol during the day before going out. His body was recovered several 
days later. It is a fact that wind and/or waves can strip a kayak from a
swimmers grasp in the blink of an eye. 

Those of us that have experience in providing kayak instruction know 
that novices may panic the first time they capsize no matter how much 
confidence they display before going over. We therefore stand beside 
them the first few times they capsize (perform the wet exit) to make 
sure they do not drown due to a panic-driven gasp. One such inhalation 
of water is enough to drown someone in a minute or two (no wet-exit 
required with an SOT). When they capsize in rough water, trained 
paddlers have learned to instantly stop breathing, to then compose 
themselves and finally either roll the boat up or bail out and swim. 

Cold water immersion 

As water temperature falls, another factor enters the picture. Boaters 
dressed in street clothes, who are suddenly immersed in cold water, 
experience a reflex (involuntary) gasping response. Without a PFD, the 
victim inhales water during the moment their momentum drives them under 
the surface. As in the Cape Hatteras case, they are also often seen 
briefly at the surface before disappearing from sight. Even nearby 
boaters can not respond quickly enough to save or even reach such 
victims. The gasping response, along with immediate increases in heart 
rate and blood pressure, is called cold shock. 

Boaters in the general boating population routinely refuse to wear PFDs 
or any type of wetsuit when they are out on cold water even though many 
PFDs and wetsuits etc. on the market today are entirely comfortable, 
moderately priced and long lasting. Well, its October as I write this. 
The cold season is upon us. There are no programs out there for the 
general public to train them for cold water boating. Safe Boating Week 
wont roll around until the end of May 2007 when boaters will again 
reject and forget the information provided to them.  They are swimmers 
and summertime means warm water boating! 

Conclusions 

In the U.S., Canada and many other countries, there is wide spread 
stubborn resistance to wearing PFDs on all manner of small boats 
throughout the year. This is the case even though there can be no 
justifiable argument on any grounds for at least wearing them when out 
on cold water. The Cape Hatteras case demonstrates that surprise- or 
panic-induced gasping can also result in rapid drowning in warm 
air/water conditions. I believe that routine wearing of PFDs should be 
seen as a sign that the boater is determined to not drown due to an 
incident that should be barely a trivial bother! The common observation 
that He died doing something he loved! is utter nonsense! 

Apart from our poor understanding of responses to sudden accidental 
immersion in either warm or cold water, there is a total failure in the 
general boating public to fully grasp a most fundamental attribute of 
boating accidents. Accidents dont provide Fair Warning! Instead, they 
deliver a monumental sucker punch when our backs are turned. Despite all
manor of training, we can not control when accidents are going to occur.
If we are not able to promptly save ourselves, our job is to survive at 
the surface long enough to be rescued. Boaters are told to wear PFDs 
because they are hard to put on once you are in the water. No! More 
often, once you are over the side, it is too late! Folks dont go back 
for PFDs. As do kayakers capsizing suddenly in rapids, we must stop 
breathing, collect our wits, and then fight to survive. The accident may
not be your fault! Failure to prepare yourself ahead of time is your 
fault! It looks like new rules governing PFD use by small boat operators
are on their way. 
 
References: 

PFD use studies 
http://www.wearalifejacket.com/ 
http://ip.bmjjournals.com/cgi/ 
content/full/4/3/203 
More: under Google Search enter [pfd use U.S. Canada] 

Cold water boating 
http://www.tc.gc.ca/marinesafe 
ty/TP/Tp13822/menu.htm 
http://www.enter.net/~skimmer/ 
coldwater.html 
http://www.AtlanticKayakTours. 
com (go to Expert Center: Coldwater Safety) 
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From: Gary J. MacDonald <garyj_at_rogers.com>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Proposed new PFD use rules
Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2006 21:04:07 -0400
Before commenting:
Is this supposed to be an advocacy piece or an analytical piece?

GaryJ

skimmer wrote:
> <FontFamily>Hi All, 
> Please feel free to send me comments on this article. 
> Thanks, 
> Chuck Sutherland (skimmer_at_enter.net) 
> ----------------------------- 
> 
> 
> (For Delaware Valley TSCA November 2006 newsletter) 
> 
> PFDs for PA Boaters (Proposed new rules)) 
> By Chuck Sutherland 
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From: skimmer <skimmer_at_enter.net>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Proposed new PFD use rules
Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2006 21:17:44 4
Hi Gary,
I am just explaining why we are where we are. I am interested to 
see what folks think about the proposal. To this point, nothing has 
worked to get boaters to wear PFDs. I have provided the website 
and dates for folks to send public comment to PA Fish and Boat.
Their comments will not ever be made public by PA Fand B, 
however. It will be shouting into a vaccuum.

Thanks,
Chuck Sutherland
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From: kiayker <kiayker_at_sbcglobal.net>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Proposed new PFD use rules
Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2006 20:09:24 -0700
   The reason that it has not been made mandatory for all sea kayakers to
wear a pfd is quite simply the fact that there is no real evidence to
suggest the actual effectiveness of said device. I have neither the time nor
inclination to search for the statistics right now, but from what I recall
the numero uno cause of recreational boater fatalities is actually lack of
experience. As far as the sport of sea kayaking is concerned, it has been my
understanding that as many paddlers have died with their pfd's on as
without, which does not do a lot to support the argument in favor of pfd's.
Once again, the discerning difference between the two groups seems to be
more related to experience then to equipment.
   So while novices would most benefit from wearing a pfd, they are,
unfortunately the group most likely to shun them. To impose a law on those
of us who have the years of experience to know our limitations and paddle
accordingly in order to attempt to force a group who would most likely
ignore it into mandatory compliance is simply a folly. For the experienced
paddler the pfd is just another piece of equipment for which the individual
should have the option to use, OR NOT TO USE! There is nothing magical about
the pfd in the typical sea kayaking scenario. Board and body surfers don't
wear them, paddlecraft surfers generally don't wear then, paddlers of surf
ski's and outriggers generally don't wear them, and none of these groups
have a disapproiate amount of fatalities as a result.

Scott
So.Cal.
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From: Doug Lloyd <douglloyd_at_shaw.ca>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Proposed new PFD use rules
Date: Sat, 14 Oct 2006 21:20:38 -0700
PFD's save lives. Good judgment, though, saves more lives.

And when someone does drown, then sinks, then pops up later as a floater, 
well...there's nothing that says dead quite like the sight of a floater, eh? 
Focus on that puffed-up vision for a bit.

DL (whistling to the tune of 'Corpse on the water'...)




> If the three strikes rule is applied they could only be arrested and 
> imprisoned after dieing the third time.
>
> Gordin
>
> At 02:14 PM 10/13/06, Michael Daly wrote:
>>Craig Jungers wrote:
>>
>>>The mechanics of this would not be complicated: anyone who dies would be
>>>arrested immediately and fined or imprisoned (especially if it's a repeat
>>>offense).
>>
>>This will drastically increase overcrowding in prisons.  Just throw them 
>>in a hole in the ground, I say!
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From: kiayker <kiayker_at_sbcglobal.net>
subject: Re: [Paddlewise] Proposed new PFD use rules
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2006 08:23:28 -0700
>>PFD's save lives.


So do helmets.


>>While a pfd won't prevent all drownings, it will certainly prevent a lot
more than occur now.


Maybe. But there also exists the possibility that wearing a pfd could
actually increase one's risk. Whether or not you believe in the theory of
risk homeostasis I can state for a fact that I will take greater risks when
I feel safer, such as paddling with a group or when I'm clad in my rock
garden stuff - pfd, helmet and gloves and such. Pfd's make swimming more
difficult and prevent one from being able to dive under waves. And then
there are all of those people who have died while sea kayaking despite
having their pfd's on.

Scott
So.Cal.

"There is an easy solution to every human problem - neat, plausible and
wrong!" H.L.Menken
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