On August 10, 1971, President Richard M. Nixon (pictured below) signed the Federal Boat Safety Act (FBSA), establishing a cooperative federal-state effort to improve the safety of recreational boating. In the history of our 70 years in publication, this might be the most important legislative development we’ve seen. Why? According to one old-timer, boatbuilding before that was, “like the Wild West.”
In the 1960s, boating as a recreational activity exploded as builders started making inexpensive fiberglass boats that were easy to produce and, for boat owners, easier to maintain. As more people took to the water, the number of boating-related accidents significantly escalated. At the same time, car-safety advocates such as Ralph Nader began pushing for better safety standards in the auto industry, as highlighted by Nader’s famous 1965 book,…
