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Boaters Must Have Their Pleasure Craft Operator's Card
The Daily Observer
Local boaters are being given the word they must have their Pleasure
Craft Operators Card in hand or face the consequences.
As of Sept. 15, anyone operating an electric or gas-powered motorized boat of any
sort will need to have the card ready to produce when asked, or they will be fined
a minimum of $250 plus $55 in court costs.
Constable Dan Park, the lead marine operator for the Upper Ottawa Valley OPP, said
these new regulations have been well-known for a decade, coming from changes to
federal shipping laws in April 1999.
Gradually, these amendments have been applied to recreation boaters since 2002 and
as of Tuesday everyone will be required to comply with them.
"Everybody has to have the pleasure craft operator card now," he said, and like
a driver's licence, it must be kept on their person.
"There are a lot of people who think they have 24 hours to produce it and that isn't
true."
Const. Park said those who are out on the water without the pleasure craft operators
card are facing "a very good chance they will be charged."
After a decade-long phase-in period, all Canadian boaters need to have their Pleasure
Craft Operator Card, commonly referred to as a
boating licence, or they risk expensive fines.
Anyone operating a powered watercraft recreation-ally in the country must have the
card.
Approximately three million boaters have taken their Boater Exam®
already and have it, but it is estimated some 10 million boaters still need it.
Const. Park said everyone he has spoken to over the summer are aware of the need
to possess the card, so he is hopeful most residents will have obtained it by now.
The Daily Observer