This was, and still has the potential, to be a very interesting, timely and necessary thread as long as it does not descend into personal attacks. Don's position is logical and intuitive, which alone does not make it right. It does, however, make it worthy of a direct answer. I believe his argument is as follows:
1. Copper is a large component of anti-fouling paints.
2. In ablatives in particular, it is designed to slough off by the action of water passing over the painted hull surface.
3. The friction [or chemical reaction is there is one] required to do this at a few knots is not very great.
4. If paints are designed so it does not take much to separate the copper from the hull, then scraping on the hull with just about any object will releast more copper much faster than sailing.
5. Hull cleaning involves scraping of some kind.
6. Hull cleaning therefore puts more copper into the water at a faster rate than would occur without cleaning.
That simple syllogism certainly deserves some response. It does not necessarily end the discourse because human behavior is also a factor. For example, it is necessarily true that boat owners who have their hulls cleaned end up repainting more often than those who don't? Is there an inverse or direct relationship between hull cleaning and the amount of time spent sailing? Is there a tendency for sedentary boats to be cleaned more often than those who rely on sailing to accomplish the same thing? If so, so these tend to balance. If it turns out that cleaning does increase the copper deposit, is it necessarily true that some restrictions will be bad for boaters? Is it possible that a study of the effectiveness and duration of a hull cleaning would do us all some good insofar as we may be overcleaning?
One final note. It is unlikely that there will ever be agreement between those who see every action taken by government as a conspiracy of some kind to abridge their pursuit of happiness, and those who see most government action as necessary stewardship over things individuals can't or won't regulate by themselves. This is a perfect example of the latter. I love my boat. I want the best for her. If the best means a paint laden with copper, that's what I use despite the guilt it engenders because I know the stuff is harmful to the environment. And no, I don't even try to indulge the idea that my little 31 foot source of joy and happiness does not by itself despoil San Diego Bay. I'm not happy when the government calls me on my acts of selfishness by regulating copper content. But I also know that if they didn't do it, my children would end with a lifeless body of water asking why no one did anything before. Which is not to say that all regulation is good. Just that this an important issue. And like most regulation, it will tread on someone's source of income. At the turn of the century American genius found ways to utilize the worlds resources. Perhaps today the focus of our genius will be on how to make these processes less destructive. I don't think the discussion can end by simply saying that haul outs for hull cleaning is too expensive. Perhaps we need to force the entire bottom paint industry, paint manufacturers, painters, scrapers and us end users, to make it a matter of survival to figure out how to inexpensively recover the copper scraped off our hulls.