• US Sailing Home |
  • Join US Sailing |
  • Sitemap |
  • Donate |
  • Media |
  • Calendar |
  • Store |
  • Contact Us |
Sign Up Facebook Twitter LinkedIn YouTube RSS Feed
login

 

  • Membership
  • College
  • Racing
  • Olympics
  • Rules & Officials
  • Offshore
  • Training
  • Adaptive Sailing
  • About Us
  • Championships
About Us
All Videos
e-USSailing
Latest News
Mobile Applications
Our Sponsors
Sailor of the Week
Special Events
Speaker Series Program
News Index
2011 Road Show
Webinar Series
US Sailing's Rolex Miami OCR Day Three Report
 > US SAILING Media > Latest News > 2012 > US Sailing Issues Statement on Dinghy Capsize Report

US Sailing Issues Statement on Dinghy Capsize Report



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Jake Fish
US Sailing Communications Manager
jakefish@ussailing.org
401.683.0800 x614

US Sailing Issues Statement on Dinghy Capsize Report

PORTSMOUTH, R.I. (September 21, 2012) - In response to a 2011 fatal sailing accident in Annapolis, Md., members of US Sailing recently conducted three days of intensive on-water tests of dinghy safety methods and equipment. Held in California and New York, the tests evaluated ways to recover people in the water and right dinghies from capsize and inversion.  Sailor entrapment and the causes were also addressed.

The tests were organized by Chuck Hawley (Santa Cruz, Calif.), Chair of US Sailing’s Safety-at-Sea Committee, and Timmy Larr (Oyster Bay, N.Y.), member of US Sailing's Training Committee National Faculty. They were assisted by John Rousmaniere (New York, N.Y.), author of the U.S. Sailing report on the Annapolis accident and Safety-at-Sea Seminar moderator. Hawley, Larr, Rousmaniere and the 25 other volunteers participated as individuals, not in their official capacities.

An illustrated report of these tests, written by John Rousmaniere, is available here. The report describes and evaluates each of the methods and equipment that were tested, and offers recommendations for policies, rules, and further testing.

Among the questions answered in the tests were:
What is the best way to rescue entrapped sailors? 
What is the minimum weight for bringing a 420 back from a turtle?
How helpful is it to add buoyancy to the top of the mast?
Which boat-righting methods work with different types of powerboats?
How do we handle disabled or helpless sailors?

The tests and the report were welcomed by Gary Jobson (Annapolis, Md.), President of US Sailing, who said, “The volunteers who undertook these rigorous tests deserve our thanks. Anything we can learn that advances our understanding of the causes and solutions of sailing accidents is important.”

Richard Jepsen (Berkeley, Calif.), Chair of US Sailing’s Training Committee said, “This is a very professional report. These trials came up with compelling, repeatable findings, while also presenting questions that the Training Committee will address in its own trials, whose results we will report.”

Jepsen added that the tests, the report, and plans for future action will be discussed at the Training Committee meetings at the US Sailing’s Annual Meeting in San Francisco on November 1-3, 2012.

Click here for US Sailing’s Dinghy Capsize Report.

About US Sailing
The United States Sailing Association (US Sailing), the national governing body for sailing, provides leadership, integrity, and growth for the sport in the United States. Founded in 1897 and headquartered in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, US Sailing is a 501(c) (3) non-profit organization. US Sailing offers training and education programs for instructors and race officials, supports a wide range of sailing organizations and communities, issues offshore rating certificates, and provides administration and oversight of competitive sailing across the country, including National Championships and the US Sailing Team Sperry Top-Sider. For more information, please visit www.ussailing.org.








US Sailing is a 501(c) 3 organization. 2010©, United States Sailing Association . Privacy policy .


Membership
Join or Renew
Individual & Family
Organizations
Corporate
College
Benefits
Insurance
FAQs

Media
Sailor of the Week
Videos
eUS Sailing
News

Donations
Ways to Give
Give Online
Annual Report
US Sailing Foundation
Race Officialships

Tools
Contact Us
Member Services
My US Sailing
Member Lookup
Store

Offshore
IRC
ORR
PHRF
Portsmouth Yardstick
Safety at Sea
Sail Numbers
Offshore News
Certified Measurers
Committees & Councils

Officials
Judge
Race Officers
Umpires
SOARS
Race Officialships

Rules
RRS 2009-2012
Prescriptions
Appeals
Simplified SI's
Committee

Racing
Championships
Junior Olympics
One Design
Windsurfing
Multihull
Adaptive Sailing
High School Sailing
College Sailing
Team Racing
Match Racing

Olympics
US Sailing Team 
Development Team
Youth World Team
Media
Support & Sponsorship

Training
Getting Started
Instructors and Teaching
Where to Sail
Course Calendar
Online Learning
Program Management

About Us
History
Careers
Awards
Bylaws
Directory
Financials
Annual Meetings
US Sailing Foundation
Sailor Athlete Council