Interior secretary announces $14 million in boating grants
U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke has announced $14 million in Boating Infrastructure Grants (BIG), which support water-related outdoor recreation and tourism by improving facilities for large transient recreational boats across the country.
Zinke also announced a $60 million cooperative agreement with the Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation to help retain and recruit recreational anglers and boaters of all ages.
Nearly $10 million will be awarded competitively for ten projects in seven states under the BIG Tier II subprogram. The service will also release $4 million to fund 33 projects in 23 states, commonwealths and territories under the BIG Tier I subprogram. States and their partners will provide more than $16 million in non-federal matching funds toward these projects. These grants are awarded on an annual basis.
Funding for the BIG program comes from the Sport Fish Restoration and Boating Trust Fund. Since its inception in 2000, the BIG program has awarded $194 million to projects for large transient recreational boats, including the construction of more than 5,000 berths for boaters across most states and U.S. territories.
BIG funds support a wide variety of infrastructure features that add to the safety and enjoyment of America’s waters. These features include restrooms, bulkheads, day docks, dinghy docks, transient slips, mooring buoys, floating docks and fixed piers, dockside water supplies, marine fueling stations, and navigational aids such as channel markers.
I think that boaters need an online auction bidding process that offfers open and live competitive itemized
Bidding for insurance claims and maintenance and refit projects . Also Marine surveyors need to be state licensed and offer to take courses and better accountability and take exams each year. In all 50 states any one with a heart beat and a business card can say they are a marine surveyor and need to be held accountable and subject to audits and stop fraud and inside deals that favor those who are called marine surveyors