NDOW to conduct statewide boating under the influence enforcement

NDOW to conduct statewide boating  under the influence enforcement

NDOW to conduct statewide boating under the influence enforcement

WINNEMUCCA - Game wardens with the Nevada Department of Wildlife will be targeting boaters operating under the influence this weekend in waters across Nevada as part of a nationally coordinated enforcement effort dubbed "Operation Dry Water."

Operation Dry Water is an effort to coordinate increased patrols, investigations, and operating under the influence check points. Events will take place at waterways across the state, including Lakes Lahontan, Mead, Tahoe, Mohave, Topaz and South Fork Reservoir.

"Nevada has already seen one fatal accident that was alcohol related, in addition to a high profile OUI arrest in Southern Nevada, and we want to take a moment to remind boaters of the real dangers - and penalties - of OUI," said Capt. David Pfiffner, Nevada's Boating Law administrator. "We say it many times, drunken boating is dangerous. People who operate under the influence are just as likely to kill an innocent bystander as him or herself, so stay sober while on the water."

As part of the effort, NDOW will be moving extra officers from other parts of the state to focus on busy recreational waters, such as Lakes Mead and Mohave.

"We want to move our officers to the trouble spots," said Pfiffner. "We know where people are operating under the influence and we will be saturating those areas."

Alcohol can impair a boater's judgment, balance, vision, and reaction time. It can increase fatigue and susceptibility to the effects of cold-water immersion. Sun, wind, noise, vibration, and motion, "stressors" common to the boating environment, intensify the side effects of alcohol, drugs, and some prescription medications, according to Pfiffner.

United States Coast Guard statistics from 2008 reveal that 17 percent of all boat accident fatalities were a direct result of alcohol or drug use.



[[In-content Ad]]