This week?s article comes to us via a recent press releases from Boat US and provides insight to upcoming changes to Life Jacket Type code changes.
NEWS from BoatUS
Life Jacket Type Code Labels Go Away Step Toward Eliminating Confusion and Introduction of New Designs In an effort to be more consumer friendly and spur innovation, the US Coast Guard is dropping its Type I - IV labeling system.
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ANNAPOLIS, MD. September 30, 2014 – In a move that?s expected to benefit recreational boaters, on Oct. 22 the US Coast Guard will drop the current life jacket type code scheme? – Type I, II, III, IV and V – that has been used for years to label and differentiate the types of life jackets and their specific use. Chris Edmonston, BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety President and Chairman of the National Safe Boating Council, said, ?The boating safety community believes this move by the Coast Guard will help lead the way toward more comfortable and innovative life jacket designs, help boaters stay on the right side of the law, lower costs, and save lives.?
Explains Edmonston, ?This is positive news. This type coding was unique to the United States, tended to confuse boaters, limited choice and increased the cost of life jackets.? He says removing the type coding is a first step toward the adoption of new standards that will eventually simplify life jacket requirements for recreational boaters.
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?This move is expected to lead to the introduction of new life jacket designs, especially those made in other countries as US standards will be more ?harmonized,? initially Canada and eventually the European Union,? said Edmonston. ?Along with a wider variety, aligning our standards with those to our neighbor to the north and across the Atlantic will help reduce prices as manufacturers won?t have to make products unique to the US market.?
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However, Edmonston cautions boaters must still abide by the current standards when using older life jackets marked with the Type I-V labeling, as they will remain legal for use.