CG Warning
Coast Guard cautions boaters concerning "Mayday" radio checksALAMEDA, Calif. – The U.S. Coast Guard is strongly urging boaters to refrain from using the internationally recognized distress call "mayday" for any purpose other than emergency calls for assistance. "We’ve recently received several separate mayday calls that were transmitted in a methodical manner and without a sense of urgency, which indicated that some mariners are assuming this is an acceptable way to test radio signals. Nothing could be further from the truth," said Cmdr. David Swatland, the Eleventh Coast Guard District’s chief of search and rescue. "Not only is it against the law to transmit a false mayday, but these false distress calls can place the lives of other mariners in peril because they detract from our ability to respond to actual emergencies."The Coast Guard monitors VHF-FM radio channel 16 for distress calls, but current direction finding equipment makes it difficult to pinpoint the origin of all calls. As part of a project known as Rescue-21, the Coast Guard is performing a nation-wide replacement of its current distress monitoring equipment. Once the project is completed in 2006, the Coast Guard will be able to pinpoint the origin of all distress calls to within plus-or-minus 2-degrees."Most boaters are responsible and level-headed, and they understand the consequences of transmitting false distress calls," said Vice Adm. Terry Cross, commander of the Coast Guard’s Pacific Area. "There appear to be some boaters who incorrectly assume that it is okay to use the word ‘mayday’ to get the Coast Guard’s attention in non-emergency situations, such as performing radio signal checks. We want these misguided boaters to be aware that this is wrong, and that if they interfere with legitimate search and rescue cases they may place the lives of others in jeopardy and open themselves up to prosecution and stiff penalties." Knowingly and willfully transmitting a false distress call is a felony offense and is punishable by up to six years in prison, a $250,000 fine and restitution to the Coast Guard for all costs incurred responding to the distress. The maximum civil penalty is $5,000.The Coast Guard conducts approximately 40,000 search-and-rescue cases annually, saving approximately 4,000 people and assisting approximately 50,000 others.-USCG-