Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS)
Chairman and Founder Richard Schwartz has announced his retirement from
a 47-year run as the leader of the half-million-member boating
association, effective July 1, 2013. He passes the torch of the nation's
#1 boat-owners advocate to BoatUS President Margaret Bonds Podlich and
other key leadership staff. He will remain Chairman of the BoatUS Board
of Directors as well as Chairman of the BoatUS National Advisory
Council.
The
creation of the nation's largest and most influential recreational
boating organization all began with a day on the water back in the early
1960's. Schwartz was invited aboard a friend's boat, and, soon after
departing the dock, the vessel's owner was given a ticket for improper
engine compartment ventilation - which Schwartz viewed as clearly unfair
as the owner had no responsibility for the boat's construction. A
Princeton and Yale Law School graduate and young anti-trust attorney at
the time, Schwartz asked his boating friends if there was anyone
fighting for their interests - and the answer was no.
With
that incident, BoatUS was born with a mission of "service, savings and
representation." Just a few years later, Schwartz's Capitol Hill
testimony resulted in the watershed Federal Boat Safety Act of 1971
which gave the US Coast Guard the power to hold manufacturers
accountable for certain safety standards - including engine compartment
ventilation - and created the US Coast Guard Office of Boating Safety,
saving countless lives.
With
grace, grit and determination, Schwartz went head-first after the
problems affecting recreational boaters, often persuasively leading the
opposition to draw its own like-minded conclusion, and sometimes taking a
more direct approach with testimony laced with his characteristic,
"That's outrageous!"
Schwartz
was the first to fight for legislation on behalf of boaters, and his
efforts at shaping national boating policy helped secure passage of the
Recreational Boating Safety and Facilities Improvement Act of 1979 -
also known as the Biaggi Bill - which affirmed that taxes and fees paid
by boaters should support boating programs. He later was a vocal
opponent to user fees and the highly unpopular luxury tax (1992) and the
diesel fuel tax (1997), both of which were repealed. In 1984, Schwartz
was widely credited in leading the passage of the federal Wallop/Breaux
Trust Fund Amendment, today part of the Sport Fish Restoration and Boating Trust Fund that now returns over $650 million annually to federal and state boating and fishing programs.
Taking
advantage of America's post-war boom in recreational boating, Schwartz
led an organization that was an early pioneer in discount marine
retailing, starting with a single product - a floating flashlight -
eventually opening a nationwide chain of 62 BoatUS retail stores. He
also made BoatUS a major influence on the national boating safety stage
with the development of the 501(c)3 nonprofit BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water,
which runs innovative programs ranging from the free Online Boating
Safety Course to the only nationwide Life Jacket Loaner Program for Kids
and EPIRB rental programs. When Congress directed the US Coast Guard to
stop providing routine on-the-water assistance in the 1980's, Schwartz
created the largest on-the-water towing service in the nation, the red
boats of BoatUS Towing Services.
Schwartz
created the only Consumer Protection Bureau for boaters to seek redress
with manufacturers, suppliers or businesses as well as a Dispute
Mediation Program. BoatUS Reports, the association's early member
newsletter, eventually grew to become BoatUS Magazine, the largest
boating magazine in the country with over half a million circulation.
The
BoatUS Marine Insurance program, started in 1967, offered the first
recreational boat policy in clear, understandable language rather than
the unintelligible, centuries-old, commercial ship language from Lloyd's
of London. Schwartz wrote a primer on what a boat policy should have in
plain English, which today has been adopted industry-wide.
Long before there was publicly available data on the causes of insurance claims, BoatUS developed the only recreational boat Damage
Avoidance program and publication to help BoatUS members avoid claims
and injuries, Seaworthy. BoatUS insurance programs now total over $8
billion in hull value.
Ironically,
in the early years Schwartz didn't own a boat. However, his current
fleet of watercraft including a favored 22-foot Chris Craft rumble seat
runabout and 42-foot catamaran deck boat for family runs to the local
crab shack are the center of family life.
Schwartz
helped found and then later served on the National Safe Boating Council
and has received a wide range of awards, including: the Council's Hall
of Fame Award (1995); the National Association of State Boating Law
Administrators' Annual Award (1983) and Lifetime Achievement Award
(1999); the US Coast Guard's Distinguished Public Service Commendation
(2000); the US Power Squadron's Raymond A. Finlay Sea Scout Service
Award (2005); and the National Marine Manufacturers Association's
Charles S. Chapman Award (2006). In 2007 he was the national spokesman
for the US Coast Guard's Auxiliary Vessel Safety Check program and was
also awarded Honorary Commodore status.
Said
the 83-year-old Schwartz, "We've become the largest boat owners
organization in the US and fought major boating battles along the way,
making life better, and safer for boaters and all the while creating the
services that make the boating experience better. Boating should be a
pleasure - not a hassle. I am proud to have led this organization and
even prouder of our staff who deliver the BoatUS service everyday."
"Richard changed the game for boaters at a time when no one was looking out for them," said BoatUS President Margaret Bonds Podlich. "He proved that boaters, who come from all walks of life and enjoy being on the water so many different ways, could unite to solve their challenges. It is an all-inclusive approach to recreational boating issues that got results and this philosophy will remain the core of BoatUS. There are so many of us who have benefited from his range of work and expertise."
Source BoatUS
"Richard changed the game for boaters at a time when no one was looking out for them," said BoatUS President Margaret Bonds Podlich. "He proved that boaters, who come from all walks of life and enjoy being on the water so many different ways, could unite to solve their challenges. It is an all-inclusive approach to recreational boating issues that got results and this philosophy will remain the core of BoatUS. There are so many of us who have benefited from his range of work and expertise."
Source BoatUS
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