S-3985-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
Sponsored by Mike Crapo (R-ID)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law (46 U.S.C. § 12307) to explicitly allow state vessel-numbering authorities to require payment of state boating-related fees as a condition for issuing a vessel registration number. It would also permit states to collect those fees at the same time they collect other vessel-numbering fees. Allowable fee purposes would include search and rescue operations, boating safety measures, and aquatic invasive species control, and collected funds could only be spent on activities directly related to recreational boating, boater safety, boater access, waterway use, and aquatic invasive species mitigation.
Who benefits
State governments and their boating safety programs, which would gain a clearer legal basis to bundle and collect boating-related fees at the point of vessel registration. Search and rescue agencies funded by state boating programs. Boaters broadly, who may benefit from better-funded safety infrastructure, waterway access improvements, and reduced aquatic invasive species. Waterfront communities and commercial fishing operations that benefit from invasive species control. State wildlife and natural resources agencies administering aquatic invasive species programs.
Who is hurt
Recreational boat owners and operators who would face additional state fees at the time of vessel registration, increasing the cost of boating. Owners of multiple vessels would bear the fee multiple times. Lower-income recreational boaters for whom incremental fee increases may be more burdensome. Boat dealers and marina operators could see reduced demand if registration costs rise. States that currently collect these fees through separate processes may face administrative transition costs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that states currently lack unambiguous federal authority to bundle boating-related fees with vessel registration, creating administrative friction and inconsistent funding for critical programs like search and rescue and invasive species control. They contend that consolidating fee collection at the point of registration is more efficient for both boaters and state agencies, and that the bill's strict use restrictions ensure funds go directly to boating-related purposes rather than general state coffers — protecting boaters' interests while improving safety infrastructure.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill effectively federally endorses a new layer of state fees on recreational boaters without any cap, oversight mechanism, or accountability standard for how states set fee amounts — potentially enabling significant cost increases with no federal check. They contend that states already have broad authority to fund boating programs through their own legislative processes, and that embedding fee collection into the federal vessel-numbering system could create confusion about whether these are federal or state obligations, complicating boaters' ability to understand and contest charges.