U.S. Coast Guard Propeller Accident StatisticsA Guide for Reporters and Other Media Representatives |
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For example, right now (mid 2008) many publications are reporting USCG 2007 U.S. recreational boat
propeller accident statistics as 80 propeller accidents which resulted in 75 injuries and 7 deaths,
when the USCG actually reports there were 176 accidents resulting in 166 injuries and 24 deaths. Over
twice as many people were injured and over three times as many people were killed as is being
indicated in many publications. These errors result from writers not properly understanding the USCG
accident statistics tables.
If you publish the low numbers by error, your readers may underestimate their risk of propeller
injury, take feel no action to protect themselves, and be injured or killed as a result. If you have
published the incorrect information, please read the explanation below and issue a correction.
This page is part of the Propeller Guard Information Center.
Newspapers, magazines, and boating industry publications often error and significantly under report
U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) propeller accident statistics.
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The USCG accumulates boating accident reports in their Boating Accident Reporting Database (called BARD). They accept submissions from states for some period of time after the end of the year, then they close that year's database. Safety professionals and industry representatives use the actual database, while the media usually relies on the annual summary published by the USCG titled, "Recreational Boating Statistics". 2007's annual summary can be viewed on the USCG web site. |
Boating accidents typically occur as sequence of events, such as:
The Coast Guard logs these events in sequence as Event 1, Event 2, and Event 3. The annual Recreational Boating Statistics publication indicates the number of accidents of a specific type occurring as Event 1, Event 2, Event 3, and the total number of those accidents. Typically, most propeller accidents occur as Event 2. People fall overboard and are then "struck by motor/propeller".
For many years this USCG has identified the sequence of events as Event 1, Event 2, and Event 3. Their 2007 annual summary now refers to these three events as Primary Event, Secondary Event, and Tertiary Event.
Please note the actual Coast Guard description of propeller accidents is "Struck by Motor/Propeller" as it is sometimes difficult to tell if a person was hit by the drive or by the propeller or by both. Injury statistics are the number of people who required treatment beyond first aid.
When reporting total annual U.S. propeller accident, injury and death statistics, PLEASE report the total of the three events, not Event 1 data.
Also please note that if you are reporting USCG propeller accident, injury and death data for a specific state, the same is true. Many reporters are only writing Event 1 data. See the example below.
If you do not believe us, please study the tables below. If you are a journalist and still do not believe us please contact the U.S. Coast Guard Office of Boating Safety. Their phone number and email addresses are not easily available, if you contact us we will provide them to you.
Highlighted pages from the USCG 2007 Recreational Boating Statistics publication below point out the various event and total statistics.
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Page 32 of USCG 2007 Recreational Boating StatisticsEVENT 1 Accident Table - this is Event 1 data only! Many writers think this table represents all propeller accidents, deaths and injuries and mistakenly report there were 80 propeller accidents, 75 propeller injuries, and 7 propeller deaths in 2007. |
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Page 33 of USCG 2007 Recreational Boating Statistics2007 EVENT 1 data in 5 Year Summary Table - this is Event 1 data only! Once again, many writers think this table represents all propeller accidents, deaths and injuries and mistakenly report there were 80 propeller accidents, 75 propeller injuries, and 7 propeller deaths in 2007. |
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Page 36 of USCG 2007 Recreational Boating Statistics
2007 EVENT 1, EVENT 2, EVENT 3 data plus Total Number of Accidents Plus total Deaths and Injuries. |
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Page 57 of USCG 2007 Recreational Boating Statistics2007 EVENT 1 data for individual states. New Jersey is marked as an example. This is EVENT 1 data only! Many writers think this table represents all propeller accidents in their state in 2007. It does NOT, it only represents EVENT 1 accidents. Note the title of the table clearly states there are the "Number of Accidents by PRIMARY ACCIDENT Type" (Event 1 type). To obtain the total number of reported accidents, injuries, and deaths for a specific state due to "Struck by Motor/Propeller" someone will need to access the actual BARD database OR check with your state reporting agency.
We did the State of New Jersey as an Example:The table above shows no (0) Event 1 propeller accidents but gives no indication of the number of Event 2 or Event 3 accidents. We searched the actual BARD database for Event 1, Event 2, and Event 3 "Struck by Motor/Propeller" accidents and found one Event 2 non fatal accident (BARD # 2007-NJ-0047 that occurred 21 July 2007 on Delaware Bay). Then we searched our own database of media reported propeller accidents. We found the accident above, PLUS we found a 2 August 2007 propeller accident near Long Beach Island in which a man was ejected from a boat and killed by the propeller of the circling boat. We went back to the BARD database and found this accident (BARD # 2007-NJ-0071) listed as a fatal accident, BUT none of the Event types listed "Struck by Motor/Propeller". That particular accident only had an entry for Event 1 and that was listed as Ejected from boat. We then searched the BARD deceased database table and found the gentleman listed as deceased. The deceased table has a separate column for listing as being a propeller injury. That column was marked, meaning this man was struck by the propeller even though it is not labeled as such over in the Events area. Bottom line is there were one injury and one fatality as a result of being struck by the motor or propeller in New Jersey in 2007 per the USCG BARD database. If you have published the wrong numbers, please correct your state data so your citizens are aware of their risk per the USCG data. Again, if no one believes us,
We appreciate reporters covering boating safety news and encourage them to correct any errors they make in reporting USCG propeller accident statistics.
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See our 2007 Media Reported Propeller Accidents page. Each red "D" represents a U.S. fatality.
If you are a journalist and still do not believe us, please contact us and we will put you in contact with the U.S. Coast Guard Office of Boating Safety and they will explain the statistics to you.
Please print/post a correction if you have posted a story incorrectly interpreting the USCG propeller accident statistics so this error does not perpetuate itself. Thank you.
The USCG does the best they can, but they have to rely on states to capture the data and send it in. It just flat does not happen all the time. A few years ago the USCG openly said they thought only about 10 percent of all boating accidents were reported. They did say more severe accidents are more likely to be reported and they think almost all fatalities are reported. Boating industry representatives say they think most propeller accidents would be severe and thus they are almost all reported, but we disagree.

