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Imagery Available: Coast Guard officials urge Pacific Northwest mariners to secure vessels ahead of fall weather

September 30, 2015

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An unmanned, adrift vessel floats in Puget Sound north of Port Angeles, Wash., March 16, 2015.

Until the Coast Guard can confirm the safe location of the owner of an adrift vessel, crews treat it as a sign of distress and launch a search to find the missing operator.

Courtesy photo.

Maps of the greater Puget Sound area illustrate the number of unmanned, adrift vessels reported to the Coast Guard from Oct. 1, 2013, to Sept. 30, 2014. More than 60 cases have been reported so far in 2015, costing Coast Guard crews over $800,000 in search efforts. U.S. Coast Guard images by Sector Puget Sound.

SEATTLE — Coast Guard officials are urging vessel and paddlecraft owners to properly secure and label their craft in anticipation of fall storms.

Coast Guard crews treat every unmanned and adrift vessel as a search and rescue case and immediately launch a search for people potentially in distress.

In 2014, Coast Guard search-and-rescue controllers received 91 reports of unmanned, adrift vessels in Puget Sound and the Strait of Juan de Fuca, initiating hundreds of hours of searches. In the majority of cases, officials were unable to locate or contact an owner for the vessel.

“When an unmanned and adrift vessel is reported, we assume the missing operator is in distress and we are duty-bound to respond,” said Capt. Joe Raymond, commander of Coast Guard Sector Puget Sound in Seattle and Captain of the Port. “These types of false alerts divert resources from actual emergencies and can possibly cause our responders to become complacent. So far, we have spent more than $800,000 this year searching on over 60 separate reports of adrift vessels in the greater Puget Sound area.”

Officials are asking all mariners to securely tie their vessels and paddlecraft to their docks or bring them further inland where they can’t easily drift into open water.

Additionally, Coast Guard crews encourage all paddlecraft owners to write their name and phone number or driver’s license number on their kayak, canoe, paddleboard or other craft. In the event that the vessel is lost, crews can use that information to contact the owner and avoid launching an unnecessary search. Members of the public can obtain free Paddle Smart stickers for this purpose at the locations listed here.

If the owner of a vessel is unable to be located after a reasonable amount of time, Coast Guard crews are forced to destroy the vessel or turn it over to the state for disposal.

A mariner who believes his vessel has drifted into open water is encouraged to report it by calling the Coast Guard 13th District Command Center at 206-220-7001. 

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