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NEWS
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August
18, 2004
Contact:
Brian Berry,
202-271-4781
Coalition
Files Petition with U.S. Department of the Interior;
“Bring Personal Watercraft Back to Biscayne National Park”
New Coalition Launches Campaign at Miami Press Conference
Miami,
FL — Personal watercraft manufacturers, national
recreation access organizations, South Florida business owners,
and a group of Miami residents and boating enthusiasts gathered
today at a press conference to announce the formation of a new coalition
that is launching a campaign to reintroduce personal watercraft
to Biscayne National Park. The coalition announced today it is filing
a formal petition with the U.S. Department of the Interior in an
effort to jumpstart the process of opening the park.
“There
is simply no reason to ban these vessels from Biscayne National
Park any longer – and that is why we have filed this petition
today,” said Jeff Ludwig, Regulatory Affairs Manager of the
Personal Watercraft Industry Association (PWIA). PWIA represents
the five manufacturers of personal watercraft. Ludwig was joined
by watercraft enthusiasts eager for re-entry into the park and local
business owners who have suffered lost revenues as a result of the
closure to PWC.
Biscayne
National Park, located in Miami south of Key Biscayne and north
of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, banned personal watercraft
use in 1998 administratively through a Superintendent’s Compendium.
The Compendium alleged that personal watercraft (PWC) adversely
impact the park’s environment. These allegations are unproven
and for six years, tens of thousands of boating families have been
unfairly banned from Biscayne National Park. All other types of
recreational and commercial boats – even large commercial
shipping vessels – are allowed on the park’s waters.
Only PWC are singled out in the ban.
Bringing
PWC back to Biscayne National Park involves a multi-step process
outlined by the National Park Service, beginning with a scientific
study called an environmental assessment. The assessment is then
followed by a formal rulemaking process. To date, 14 other national
parks have completed a site-specific environmental assessment and
every one of them has concluded that there is no reason to ban PWC
on waters that allow other types of motor boating. In the past two
years, six of those 14 parks have completed the rulemaking process
and today welcome families who own and enjoy personal watercraft.
The others are finishing the rulemaking process currently, and are
expected to re-open to PWC in the near term.
“There
is a precedent that we are confident will continue at Biscayne National
Park; every time personal watercraft have been put to an objective,
scientific test, they pass with flying colors,” Ludwig continued.
“This is because they are actually among the most environmentally
friendly boats on the water today. Modern PWC are 75 percent cleaner
and 70 percent quieter than those sold prior to 1998.”
In
2003 there were 8,479 registered PWC in Miami-Dade County, 7,607
in Broward and 1,643 in Monroe – a combined 17,729 in the
tri-county area. Statewide there were 106,356 registered PWC.
“It’s
hard to believe that a decision made by one person can impact so
many South Florida residents and small business owners,” stated
Chris Manthos, Executive Director of the American Watercraft Association
(AWA), a national association of PWC owners and dealerships. “Hopefully,
families who enjoy personal watercraft won’t have to wait
for equal treatment much longer. We’ve decided to bring this
issue to the superintendent’s front door step and you can
be assured, we’re not going anywhere until our environmental
assessment begins.”
The
press conference also featured remarks from the BlueRibbon Coalition,
a national recreation organization, two owners of local boat/PWC
dealerships, and Miami residents afflicted by the ban at Biscayne
National Park. The coalition, launched today as the “BOAT
Biscayne” coalition, is advocating that the park superintendent,
“Begin Our Assessment Today.” Original supporters of
the coalition include PWIA, AWA, BlueRibbon Coalition, Jet Ski of
Miami, Riva Motorsports, the Marine Industries Association of Florida,
the Florida Water Access Coalition and the Florida Marine Contractors
Association.
“We
already have more than 600 letters addressed to the superintendent
signed by concerned citizens,” said Jack Welch, President
of the BlueRibbon Coalition. “These are just a fraction of
what we expect will be thousands more. A lot of people care about
this issue, and not just people who own personal watercraft. Our
recreational choices and the places where we’re allowed to
recreate are being closed off arbitrarily and unfairly in some cases,
and this is one of them,” Welch said. “If we don’t
protest a truly unfair and unwarranted closure now, the day may
come when we can only look at National Parks from miles away and
through fences used to keep us all out. Sound scientific review
will prove that personal watercraft should be allowed at Biscayne,
and we are here to insist on such a review.”
The
coalition encourages everyone to visit www.boatbiscayne.com to take
action by sending a letter from our website to the park superintendent,
the U.S. Secretary of the Interior, Members of Congress, and their
state and local elected officials.
The
ban at Biscayne National Park is bad for business too. Dave Bamdas,
of Riva Motorsports, which has locations in Miami-Dade and Broward
counties, expressed his concern over the ban. “I estimate
that 90 percent of our customers used to ride at Biscayne National
Park before the ban,” Bamdas noted at the press conference,
“and now today there is so much uncertainty about where you
can and where you cannot ride, that it has taken a substantial toll
on my business.” Riva, owned by the Bamdas family, is the
largest personal watercraft dealership in the world and employees
roughly 100 local residents.
PWC
seat up to four people and are equipped with ample storage space,
and can tow a water skier or wake board. The typical buyer today
is around 40 years old. In 2002, the three-person models accounted
for more than 75 percent of total sales nationwide, which indicates
that people are purchasing PWC as a family-friendly alternative
to a larger, costlier power boat. PWC are easy to maneuver, maintain,
transport and store.
Danny
DiNicola of Miami was pleased when he heard that the coalition was
forming. “The ban treats me like a second class citizen. I
love being on the water, but just because I can’t afford a
$50,000 boat, somehow I’m not good enough for Biscayne National
Park,” he said. “Is that really the message that the
superintendent wants to send to thousands of local residents?”
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More
information can be found at:
BOAT
BISCAYNE (www.boatbiscayne.com)
American Watercraft Association
(www.awahq.org)
BlueRibbon Coalition (www.sharetrails.org)
Personal Watercraft Industry Association
(www.pwia.org)
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