Skip to main content

Impaired boater charged in cottage country lake

Share

Provincial police charged a 61-year-old man with impaired driving of boat on a lake in cottage country Sunday.

As the summer heat continues, police are out patrolling lakes and rivers across the province providing education and enforcement to keep people safe.

OPP boat docked at Cecebe Lake. July 28, 2024 (Ontario Provincial Police)

Officers from the Almaguin Highlands detachment were out on Lake Cecebe, near Magnetawan, around 4:30 p.m. July 28 when they stopped a boat for a routine inspection.

"Through investigation, a lone operator of the vessel was charged," OPP said in a news release Tuesday.

The Ryerson Township man was charged with impaired driving and having a blood alcohol concentration of 80 or more.

He is scheduled to appear in court in Sundridge at a later date.

"Unfortunately, we still have had, thus far, a couple fatalities on our waterways that we patrol," OPP Const. Phil Young told CTVNewsNorthernOntario.ca in a Zoom interview.

Consuming alcohol on a boat

Young said there are some circumstances where people can legally consume alcohol on a boat.

"We're not out there to ruin somebody's weekend or their day and cause them, you know, a hard time regarding this," he said.

"We get it, when you get back to shore, when you get back to your dock and you sit at your dock and you're not going anywhere and you're going to sit on your vessel and have a beer or a drink, so be it."

Three things need to happen to drink on a vessel:

  1. The boat must be tied up to a dock or shore or anchored somewhere
  2. Boat has a pump-out head for the black/wastewater
  3. Permanent cooking facilities

"What we are seeing more now are pontoon boats where the retailer has told them, 'well, all you need is a port-a-potty screwed onto the back of the boat or onto the front of the boat and a barbecue, or hibachi,'" Young said.

"So that doesn't fly. That's not the intention of the rules and the guidelines, according to Transport Canada."

Human waste must be disposed of properly and not just thrown into the water.

Cooking facilities need a stove, oven or microwave to be considered a permanent cooking facility.

While it may be okay to enjoy an alcoholic beverage after a day of boating, Young stresses public water safety.

"Please don't go out on that boat again after you've been consuming alcohol and or drugs too," he said.

Report impaired drivers

"If you suspect someone is driving while impaired by alcohol or drugs. It is important to call 911 to report it," OPP said.

Young said not a lot of people want to get involved when they see a suspected impaired driver, but to think of the risk of not reporting it.

"They see that happen and they think … 'I'll let somebody else call or it's not a big deal, I'm just going to go home, mind my own business," he said.

"But think of that as one of your loved ones out on the water or one of your children out fishing or out kayaking, or your grandparents, or you're somebody out on the water, enjoying the waterway."

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

The controversial plan to turn a desert green

Ties van der Hoeven's ambitions are nothing if not grand. The Dutch engineer wants to transform a huge stretch of inhospitable desert into green, fertile land teeming with wildlife.

Stay Connected