PHOENIX – Arizona boating fatalities are the highest in five years, and officials say the economy may be a factor.
With 10 deaths so far this year, the Arizona Game and Fish Department is reminding boaters to wear life jackets, take boater education classes and check that equipment is working properly.
Of the deaths, six were drownings, three of which involved people who weren’t wearing life jackets, and four resulted from accidents. The last year with as many fatalities was 2006, when 14 people died on Arizona waterways.
Kevin Bergersen, the department’s boating law administrator, said that while recreational boating is down with the economy more people are using canoes and kayaks that require paddling.
Four of the 10 fatalities this year involved people using paddle–powered craft, he said.
“There’s a paddling increase because it’s affordable and you can buy a paddle craft for the whole family,” Bergersen said.
Lt. Alan Nelson, supervisor of La Paz County Sheriff Department’s Marine Enforcement Unit, said there’s been a decrease in law enforcement patrols on the water due to budget cuts. In La Paz County, he said, that’s meant a loss of two of his unit’s five officers.
“County sheriff departments don’t have the personnel to place out on the waterways,” Nelson said. “We try to do the best we can with limited manpower and funding.”
Ed Huntsman, boating safety education administrator for Game and Fish, said boater safety training can make a big difference.
Arizona is one of seven states that don’t require boaters to complete safety training, with less than 1 percent taking a course annually, he said.
“Nationally, 70 to 80 percent of people involved in boating accidents have never had a formal class,” he said.
Alongside regular boater safety classes, Game and Fish plans to begin offering a new safety course for paddlers in January, Huntsman said.
Bergersen said education is the key to safer waters.
“Boaters should always take a boater education class and always wear a life jacket,” he said. “An informed boater is a safe boater.”
Anna Consie is a reporter for Cronkite News Service.











Arizona Willie posted at 11:02 am on Mon, Nov 7, 2011.
Never never never take a boat out on the lakes around Phoenix on the weekend. Unless you want to make your suicide look like an accident.
I used to keep a boat on Canyon Lake then moved it to Saguaro when a spot opened up.
Saguaro is worse than Canyon but that isn't exactly praise.
The Sheriff has a LARGE lake patrol ... check out the boats and the boathouses at Saguaro and the Sheriff's station.
But you will rarely see a lake patrol officer actually out on the lake. Usually only for a day or two after a fatality and one holidays ( sometimes ).
But you can usually find 4 or 5 of them at the restaurant at Saguaro lake around noon time.
People think the posted speed limits etc. are jokes. None of the rules for safe boating are followed very well. You could say they are ignored and you wouldn't be far wrong.
You can't relax an enjoy yourself, especially on Saguaro, cause you have to have your head on a swivel constantly.
Ski boats have no regard for fishing boats. Some seem to use them as markers for a race course and come as close as they can.
I came to the conclusion the marinas don't want the Lake Patrol to patrol because it would chase off drunken customers.