05/10/2008
from the Kennebec Journal
Sacrifices that still shine
Thomas speaker urges change in business climate
UNIVERSITY OF MAINE AT AUGUSTA: Many welcome talk about campus housing
WALL ST. NIGHTMARE CONTINUES
Citing imploding economy, Mitchell endorses Obama
Town forms co-op for fuel
COLLEGE FOOTBALL NOTES: Colby, Amherst look to run first
Tigers host rival Raiders for Homecoming
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Kennebec Journal
from the Morning Sentinel
Many welcome talk of campus housing at UMA
WATERVILLE Mitchell: Obama right man for hard economic times
Thomas speaker urges change in business climate
MARKETS CONTINUE FREE-FALL
Maine Gold Star honors veterans
All invited to 'the amazing back yard' Friends of Unity Wetlands welcome children
COLLEGE FOOTBALL NOTES: Colby, Amherst look to run first
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL: Winslow, Gardiner know what's coming
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Morning Sentinel
Well, fans of relative peace and safety, the law says that only personal watercraft may be banned, but other kinds of motorboats cannot.
Which is precisely the beef a Camden man had with the law. In 2005, Mark Haskell took his Sea Doo personal watercraft out on a lake where it and others like it had been banned, to protest the fact that the state allowed local residents to discriminate against his type of craft. He ended up in court arguing that it was unfair to ban personal watercraft while letting other motorized craft buzz around freely on lakes and ponds.
We disagree, and we're glad to see that the judges on the state's Supreme Judicial Court upheld the law.
Personal watercraft do share something with other motorized vessels -- they all go on the water and use engines to power them around.
But there the resemblance ends.
While there are some obnoxious motorboaters -- more and more of them, it seems -- they still are far outnumbered in the nuisance realm by wild, crazy and very noisy personal watercraft operators doing figure eights just when you've decided to take your afternoon swim.
Ask the paddlers, the anglers and the homeowners looking for a quiet afternoon on their dock what they think about personal watercraft and you'll likely get a bunch of answers unprintable in a family newspaper.
There are nice personal watercraft operators, to be sure. We know at least one. But the Legislature passed a law in 2005 allowing towns to ban such operators on the state's great ponds, and we're glad to see that law is legally defensible. May it stay on the books for a long time.




Reader comments
Click here to view or add reader comments