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Chapter 4: The Legal Requirements of Boating
Unlawful Operation of a Vessel
Florida law states that it is unlawful to operate a vessel in a reckless or
dangerous manner. Specifically, the law designates the following dangerous
operating practices as illegal.
- Reckless or Careless Operation of a vessel or manipulation
of water skis, aquaplanes, or similar devices is the failure to exercise
the care necessary to prevent the endangerment of life, limb, or property
of any person. Some examples are:
- Boating in restricted areas without regard for other boaters or persons,
posted speeds and wake restrictions, diver-down flags, etc.
- Failing to follow the navigation rules
- Improper Speed is operating at speeds greater than posted
speeds and that are not reasonable and prudent based on boating traffic,
weather conditions, visibility, or other potential hazards. If no limits
are posted, you should operate a vessel so that it does not endanger others.
Vessel speed always should be maintained so that the vessel can be stopped
safely. Specifically, it is illegal to:
- Operate at a rate of speed that endangers the life or property of
any person.
- Operate at greater than "idle
speed, no wake" in a posted "no wake" zone.
- Exceeding Maximum Loading or Horsepower is the failure
of a vessel operator to ensure that their vessel is loaded safely and not
overpowered. Florida law prohibits a person from operating a monohull vessel
less than 20 feet in length while exceeding the maximum weight, persons,
or horsepower capacity as displayed on the capacity
plate installed by the vessel manufacturer.
- Riding on the Bow, Deck, or Gunwale is allowing passengers
to ride on the bow, gunwale, transom,
seat backs, seats on raised decks, or any other place where there may be
a chance of falling overboard.
Remember ...
- As an owner of a vessel, you may be responsible if you allow others to
operate your vessel in violation of Florida law.
- The operator is responsible for his or her vessel's wake and any damage
it may cause.
Manatee Protection Zones
The Florida Manatee Sanctuary Act establishes over 20 manatee protection vessel
speed zones on Florida waters. It is illegal to violate any of these posted
zones. In addition, it is illegal to harass, hunt, capture, or kill any marine
mammal, which includes manatees. You must obey these vessel speed zones.
- Vessel Exclusion Area: An area marked with a vertical
diamond shape with a cross in the center that indicates all vessels or certain
classes of vessels are excluded from the area.
- "Idle Speed, No Wake" Zone: A designated area
known to have a large number of manatees. You must not annoy, molest, harass,
disturb, collide with, injure, or harm manatees; and you must operate at
idle speed, which is at a speed no greater than that which will maintain
steerageway and headway.
- "Slow Speed, Minimum Wake" Zone: A designated
area where manatees are known to congregate. In a slow speed zone, vessel
operators must operate fully settled in the water and proceed at a reasonable
and prudent speed with little or no wake to avoid either intentionally or
negligently annoying, molesting, harassing, disturbing, colliding with, injuring,
or harming manatees.
- Maximum 25 MPH Speed Zone: A controlled area within which
a vessel's speed must not exceed 25 miles per hour. If at 25 mph your vessel's
bow rises and restricts visibility, or your vessel produces an excessive
wake endangering other vessels or natural resources, you must reduce your
speed further.
- Maximum 30 MPH Speed Zone: A controlled area within which
a vessel's speed must not exceed 30 miles per hour. If at 30 mph your vessel's
bow rises and restricts visibility, or your vessel produces an excessive
wake endangering other vessels or natural resources, you must reduce your
speed further.
- Maximum 35 MPH Speed Zone: A controlled area within which
a vessel's speed must not exceed 35 miles per hour. If at 35 mph your vessel's
bow rises and restricts visibility, or your vessel produces an excessive
wake endangering other vessels or natural resources, you must reduce your
speed further.

Manatees may be in many places. During most of the year, manatees may be found
in fresh or salt waters, preferring calmer rivers, estuaries, bays, and canals.
In the winter, manatees seek warmer waters and often congregate in the discharge
areas near power plants or natural warm water springs. Boaters should avoid
manatee habitats and use caution when traveling in known manatee travel corridors.
It is illegal to harass, hunt, capture, or kill any marine mammal, including
manatees. Any act that disrupts a manatee's normal behavior is punishable by
a fine of up to a $50,000, one-year imprisonment, or both. Read
more about protecting manatees and their habitat.
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