Alaskan Sea-Duction
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- Jul 6, 2012
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- Alaskan Sea-Duction
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- 1988 M/Y Camargue YachtFisher
Never really understood the Jones Act and the need for it in todays world.
Guess now I will be biding my time before the Jones act is repealed
Thanks for the lesson. I understand it a little better. Question: Hasn't Labor Organizations (unions) been involved for a long time?The Jones Act requires all vessels engaged in coastwise shipping are required to be US built, crewed, and owned. In the event of a war, those vessels can be taken into government service.
The Jones Act is much more than cargo ships. Coastwise shipping is any vessel going in and out of the same US port or going between two US ports. Including tugs and barges on our waterways. The act was signed only 8 years after the Titanic sank. Besides having shipping for national emergencies, by requiring vessels to be US built, it ensures that we have shipyards, the skilled workers to build those ships, the steel mills and foundries to provide the materials for the ships. Along with cargo and passenger ships, the commercial fishing vessels in our waters must be US built, owned and crewed.
Some of the issues that led to the act was concern that some foreign vessels and crews were not up to US standards. If you look outside the US, some of the people and ships wanting into the US market have very poor safety and construction records. Asian ferries are in the news yearly, sinking and killing sometimes hundreds.
Maintaining US built and crewed ships is an emergency pool of people to become skilled trainers for crews needed for additional ships or additional shipyard workers in the event of a war. The Jones Act was never about protecting union jobs, but about preserving maritime skills.
Do you want foreign owned barges and tugs moving cargo on the Mississippi? Or maybe running the New York ferries? Without the Jones Act, it will go to the cheapest operator.
Building 30gw of offshore wind by 2030 remains to be seen.
Sounds reasonable to my uneducated Jones Act mind.Some of those goals of the Jones Act could likely be accomplished at this point with a new set of rules that are better adapted to the current state of the world. For example, they could require US ownership, but lighten up the requirement to be US built to allow commercial use by a US owner. As in, high preference to US built, but if you can show that you either cannot get what you want built in the US or the cost of a US build is more than X percent higher, a foreign build would be allowed.
Do you want foreign owned barges and tugs moving cargo on the Mississippi? Or maybe running the New York ferries? Without the Jones Act, it will go to the cheapest operator.
This ^^^^ Absolutely!Some of those goals of the Jones Act could likely be accomplished at this point with a new set of rules that are better adapted to the current state of the world.
But it is not, and it has not for many decades. In fact, at this point it is probably COSTING more U.S. jobs than it is creating.I'm in favor of the Jones Act. Protecting US taxpaying workers is a good thing to me.
And the air transportation cabotage and ownership laws will not be far behind.
Cruise ships are the immediate concern, maybe more. But an executive order could give them an exemption for the next few years, problem solved.
I doubt if either Canada or the USA will ever go into competition with the existing fleet using cheap labor, so there really is no conflict.
There are like 2 American flagged cruise ships that comply with the Jones act, that has absolutely nothing to do with the Jones act that has nothing to do with current discussions on it either. I can guarantee you that the entire US inshore industry will go on strike instantly if the Jones act is being tried to seriously be repealed. I know I would.
This ^^^^ Absolutely!
But it is not, and it has not for many decades. In fact, at this point it is probably COSTING more U.S. jobs than it is creating.
It is the 21st century, and whether we like it or not, we live in a global economy. Time to face up to that fact!
How do those two comply with the Jones Act, today?
I don’t understand the question but I can go more in depth if you need me too. There are very very few US flagged cruise ships, 2 on the Mississippi and a couple very small operations along the east coast all of them are very expensive to go on. If it’s us flagged it needs to be US built and US crewed. If it’s foreign flagged it does not pretty simple. There are plenty of foreign flagged cruise ships opperating in the United States that do not need to operate under Jones act rules, how you ask??? All they need to do to do to be able to leave out of a us port is not have the next port be inside the us. Why do you think there are no east coast cruises that stop in multiple east coast cities. They go from here to somewhere outside of the US so therefore do not need to be US flagged and get around the Jones act.
so basically, those are not part of the current discussion about getting foreign flagged ships approval to travel from Seattle to Alaska and back without first stopping BC.How do those two comply with the Jones Act, today?
I don’t understand the question but I can go more in depth if you need me too. There are very very few US flagged cruise ships, 2 on the Mississippi and a couple very small operations along the east coast all of them are very expensive to go on. If it’s us flagged it needs to be US built and US crewed. If it’s foreign flagged it does not pretty simple. There are plenty of foreign flagged cruise ships opperating in the United States that do not need to operate under Jones act rules, how you ask??? All they need to do to do to be able to leave out of a us port is not have the next port be inside the us. Why do you think there are no east coast cruises that stop in multiple east coast cities. They go from here to somewhere outside of the US so therefore do not need to be US flagged and get around the Jones act.
https://www.royalcaribbean.com/faq/questions/jones-act
Pretty much sums up they do not need to be us flagged to be a cruise ship even going port to port inside of the US. So I was partially wrong in that instance but still right since they do not fall under Jones act since they are not us flagged so therefore have no place in the discussion. Again us flagged cruise ships are such a small minority that they make no difference in the talks of wether the Jones act is still relevant for maintaining US mariner jobs.
"but lighten up the requirement to be US built to allow commercial use by a US owner."
"Offshore is cheaper" is how we got the problem of not being able to make our own medical supplies.
Why do you suspect that? Can you elaborate?
And this pretty well sums up the whole off-shore manufacturing dilemma. We want everything built here in the US. But at the same time we want things to be lower cost and more affordable. Given a choice between the two, lower cost/more affordable will always win.
Soo-Valley said:so basically, those are not part of the current discussion about getting foreign flagged ships approval to travel from Seattle to Alaska and back without first stopping BC.