The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this article,
shall have the meaning described to them, except where the context
clearly indicates a different meaning.
ABANDONED VESSEL
A vessel in which the owner is unable to be determined or
fails to respond to attempts to be identified.
ADRIFT
Not being underway and not being made fast to a stationary
object.
AGROUND
Stuck on the bottom of a body of water, not being underway
or adrift.
ANCHORAGE AREA
Areas specifically designed and/or authorized for anchoring
of vessels.
ANCHORING
To secure a vessel temporarily to the bottom of a water body
by dropping an anchor or other ground tackle from a vessel.
ASSISTANT HARBORMASTER
A duly appointed person recommended by the Harbormaster and
appointed by the Mayor who works under the direction of the Harbormaster.
BERTH
Any space wherein a vessel is confined by wet slip, float,
mooring, or other type of docking facility.
BOAT LAUNCHING RAMP
Any man-made or natural facility used for the launching or
retrieval of boats.
BOATYARD
A facility whose function is the construction, repair, or
maintenance of vessels, which may include provisions for vessel storage
and docking while awaiting service.
CHANNEL
Any water area reserved for the unobstructed movement of
vessels; or a navigable route for passage of vessels established by
customary use or under the authority of federal, state or municipal
law.
COMMERCIAL MOORING
Any mooring the owner of which does not keep his own personal
boat attached thereto.
CONDEMN
The act of officially notifying an owner of a mooring that
the mooring tackle is either unsafe, improperly placed at its location
or fails to meet Fall River mooring rules and regulations and cannot
be used until corrected.
ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE RESOURCE AREA
Any area specifically defined by the Department of Coastal
Resources in conjunction with the Shellfish Department or Shellfish
Warden of a city or town. The locations of all such areas shall be
designated using acceptable scientific criteria. The areas shall be
described in writing and defined by using GPS and/or other acceptable
method and receive final approval and be filed with the Harbormaster.
FLOAT
A floating dock held in place by mooring tackle.
HARBORMASTER
A person duly appointed by the Mayor as Harbormaster.
HAZARD
Any object located within navigation channels, obstructing
launch ramps or swimming areas, striking adjacent vessels or adjacent
mooring tackle, or damaging a resource area such as salt marsh or
eelgrass beds.
IMPOUND
The act of seizing a vessel and bringing it to a secure location
or facility for violations, unpaid fines or for immediate safety concerns
to prevent possible damage to other property.
LENGTH
The straight-line measurement of the overall length from
foremost part of a vessel to the aftmost part of the vessel, measured
parallel to the center line, exclusive of bow sprints, bumpkins, rudders,
outboard motor brackets and similar fittings and attachments.
MARINA
A berthing area with docking facilities under common ownership
or control and with berths for 10 or more vessels, including commercial
marinas and boat basins. A marina may be an independent facility or
may be associated with a boatyard.
MOOR
To permanently secure a vessel to a fixed object such as
a bollard, pier, dock or mooring.
MOORING
A permanently secured anchor system to moor a vessel within
a water body duly permitted by the City and registered to the applicant.
MOORING AREA
An area designated in these regulations where a mooring can
be placed and for which no restrictions have been issued.
MOORING BUOY
A white float with a two-inch horizontal blue line and designation
number marking the ownership and location of a mooring system as well
as keeping the top chain of the mooring tackle at the water surface
for vessel attachment.
MOORING PLAN
A diagram of each particular waterfront area set up by the
City to show where the Harbormaster may allow seasonal moorings to
be placed. The actual mooring location of each mooring shall be determined
by the Harbormaster.
MOORING TACKLE
The anchor(s), bottom chain, top chain, shackles, swivels
and pendants used to secure a vessel.
NO-DISCHARGE COMPLIANCE STICKER
A numbered and dated sticker placed on a vessel docked, anchored
or moored in Fall River waters indicating that the vessel has been
inspected and is in compliance with the no-discharge zone (area) rules
and regulations.
NO-DISCHARGE ZONE (AREA)
Bodies of water designated by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM) to which an application has
been submitted and approved by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) where the discharge of all boat sewage, whether treated
or not, is prohibited.
NO-WAKE ZONE
An area where a vessel may not operate in a manner so as
to cause a wake or in excess of idle speed of six miles per hour,
whether marked or unmarked at bridges, mooring areas, boat ramps and
swimming areas.
OTHER OBJECTS
Any floating object, including but not limited to a mooring
ball, buoy, raft, pontoon, float, floating dock or storage cars for
marine products secured by anchors or moorings.
OWNERSHIP OF MOORING SITE
The land beneath the tidal waters of the City is owned by
the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and is held for public trust as
part of the public domain; therefore, all mooring permits are of a
temporary nature, and no person has a property right in any mooring
location without an express grant by the commonwealth or an express
act by the Legislature.
PENNANT
A line or chain by which a vessel is made fast to a mooring.
PERSON
An individual, partnership, copartnership, joint venture,
trust, trustee, firm, corporation, association, or entity.
PIER
Any structure built out from land into the water for use
as a landing place.
PRIVATE MOORING
A mooring for the owner's personal boat. The owner must own
50% or greater of the boat which would be placed on the mooring. The
owner must provide documentation to the Harbormaster to ensure true
ownership and residential address.
PRIVATE RECREATIONAL BOATING FACILITY
A facility for berthing recreational vessels at which all
berths and accessory uses thereto are not available for patronage
by the general public or where use of any such berth is available
on a long-term basis. Such berths shall not include a berth reserved
for the operator of said facility.
QUALIFIED DIVER
A person who has received written approval to inspect moorings
from the Harbormaster. The Harbormaster's office shall maintain a
list of qualified divers. Any person who desires to be on the qualified
diver list must submit the request in writing, stating qualifications
and proof of liability insurance, to the Harbormaster for approval.
RELOCATION OF A MOORING
The physical moving of the ground tackle to another location
designated by the Harbormaster.
RIGHT-OF-WAY
An unobstructed path or corridor from a public thoroughfare
or facility leading to or along the waters of the City and shoreline
areas below the mean high water (MHW) mark.
SECURE LOCATION OR FACILITY
A secure mooring, trailer or dock, or a marina where the
Harbormaster may store an impounded, stray or abandoned vessel until
legally claimed by the owner.
SPECIAL MOORING PERMIT
A permit issued to an organized marina, sailing club or organization
or yacht club in which special conditions apply, such as owning all
of the moorings in a zone.
STRAY VESSEL
A vessel which has traveled along a route that was not originally
intended, or to move outside or away from a limited area.
VESSEL
Every description of watercraft and power boats, other than
seaplanes, used or capable of being used as a means of transportation
on the water, whether or not powered with propulsion machinery.
WAKE
The disturbed wave of water that a vessel leaves astern as
it passes by a particular point.
Generally, a vessel may anchor on its own in the coastal waters
and harbor area of the City, except in federal navigation channels,
navigation fairways, mooring fields, swimming areas, rights-of-way
and egress areas and launching ramps, for a period not to exceed 24
hours, or at the discretion of the Harbormaster. No vessel anchored
under such conditions shall be left unattended. Owners and operators
of such vessel may go ashore but must be available to tend to the
vessel in the event of heavy weather. It shall be the owner's and
operator's responsibility to remain clear of all moored vessels and
other structures.
All fees shall be paid as provided in the fee schedule in Chapter
A110, Fee Schedule, of the City Code, with the exception of the Battleship Cove Sailing Program, which shall be exempted from all mooring permit fees.
Nothing in the above regulations shall be construed as conflicting
with any state statute or the Code of Massachusetts Regulations.
[Added 4-19-2016 by Ord.
No. 2016-12]
All boats using the waters of Fall River for more than 14 days
per calendar year (cumulative) are required to display a Fall River
waterway permit. The Harbormaster will, upon request from the owner
and verification that no excise taxes are due on the vessel, provide
a decal at no charge. Such decal shall be affixed approximately 18
inches from the stem and four inches from the gunnel, on the starboard
side. These decals shall be displayed so as to be clearly visible
for inspection by the Harbormaster. Failure to display a current Fall
River waterway permit decal shall be a violation of this article and
subject to a fine of $50 per day.