User fees ahoy for Canadian boaters as more take to the water - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 04:44 PM | Calgary | 6.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

User fees ahoy for Canadian boaters as more take to the water

The federal government is steaming ahead with plans for new user fees on recreational boat ownersat a time when more and more Canadians are choosingwater over land. This year has been "exceptionally busy due to COVID," says Transport Canada.

2020 'exceptionally busy' because of COVID-19, says Transport Canada

Transport Canada wants to require a pleasure craft licence for any vessel over sixmetres, regardless of engine size. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

The federal government is steaming ahead with plans to introduceuser fees forrecreational boat ownersat a time when more and more Canadians are choosingwater over land.

Transport Canada told a virtual meeting of the Canadian Marine Advisory Council that the number of Canadians who obtained a pleasure craft operators card this year increasedby 67 per cent.

As of Sept. 15,the departmenthad issued 237,810 operator cards compared to 142,000 in all of 2019.

This year has been "exceptionally busy due to COVID," Transport Canada said in documents prepared for last week'smeeting with industry representatives.

The department detailed its proposed fee changes during the meeting, includinga new $15fee beginning in 2022on all pleasure craft licencesand anew, undeterminedsurcharge to help pay for the removal of abandoned and wrecked vessels.

New fees are also planned for pleasure craft operators cards,but they will not impact the 4.4 million Canadians who already hold one.

The lifetime operators card is issued after a person passes a mandatory test that demonstrates basic watercraft competency.

The updatedfees would include an $8.50 "test materials" fee per certificate and a $5,000 fee charged to course providers every five years. The government doesn't currently collect money for testingor card replacements as those services are provided by private companies.

The operatorscarddiffers from a pleasure craft licence, which isused as identification for a vessel. There is currently no licence fee.

Changes to licences

The new $15 licence fee would apply to all pleasure craft with engines of more than 10 horsepower.

The requirement for a pleasure craft licence would also be expanded to include any vessel over sixmetres regardless of engine size, a move to include sailboats.

Transport Canada will end lifetimenon-renewable licences and reducethe licence renewal period to five years from 10.

The department wants to recover the $2 million it spends each year administering pleasure craft licences.

The proposed fee changes are reasonable, said Pat Nelder of Boating Atlantic, an industry association in Atlantic Canada.

But Nelder said she's skepticalthat requiring more vessels to have a licence would help Transport Canada identify owners of derelict boats.

"They want to make the licensing program more robust so that they know who's wrecking and abandoning boats, however, probably the boats that are abandoned would never be licensed anyway," she said.

"In order to support the work that they're doing, they feel that they should put a surcharge on that licensing fee. But so far, we haven't heard any more about the surcharge."

Abandoned, wrecked vessels

There are 1,481 "vessels of concern" in Canada, according to the coast guard's inventory of abandoned and wrecked vessels. The survey wasreleased at the advisory council meeting.

The majority of those vessels897 are in the Western region. There are367 in the Atlantic region, and 217 in the Central and Arctic region.

Canada has 1,481 'vessels of concern,' according to the coast guard's inventory of abandoned and wrecked vessels. The Canima is pictured here near Millbank Wharf in Miramichi, N.B., in 2016. (Leslie Clark/Facebook)

The survey saidthe owner is unknown for 83 per cent of the vessels.

Transport Canada said it's still exploring options for a surcharge that would help pay for the removal of those ships, with a more concrete proposal expected in several months.

It's looking at the model used in Washington state where recreational boat owners are charged an annual $3 fee.

If approved, the new surcharge wouldlikely be introduced in 2022 andmay be applied during the licence fee transaction.

Sean Best, a spokesperson for Transport Canada,saidthe department is also considering a "moderate regulatory charge" to bankroll a new fund dedicated to cleaning up wrecked vessels.

"The introduction of the new pleasure craft licence service fee may also coincide with the launch of a vessel remediation fund,"Best said in a statement.