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Četvrtak, 14 studenoga, 2024

Legal Definition of a Mooring Buoy

`marina` means a boat rental or berth facility consisting of a jetty, jetty slides, wharves, mooring structures or a combination thereof for securing ships. (a) Aids to navigation shall be installed on land or on marine terrain to assist the mariner in determining his or her position or safe course. They can mark the boundaries of navigable canals or warn of hazards or obstacles to navigation. The main components of the American aids to navigation system are beacons and buoys. 2. A structure referred to in paragraph 1 of this definition with temporary pages of flexible material having a minimum aperture factor of five per cent if all of the following conditions are met: The purpose of this Chapter is to amend, supplement and, where appropriate, replace the Regulation and the previous legal references. The previous regulation referred to in this document shall be deemed to apply to any anchorage, structure or other material that requires authorization under this Chapter but that may be grandfathered or constitutes a non-conforming use, provided that such structure has not been modified, moved, extended or altered and has been duly registered or approved and remains in full compliance with this previous Regulation. The purpose of this chapter is to promote and improve: (1) The day sign of a buoy is the colour and shape of the buoy and, where applicable, the upper mark. Any buoy placed in State waters for anchoring or mooring boats may be of any feasible size or shape, but must be at least eight inches above the waterline. No anchor buoy shall be more than 24 inches in diameter circular or more than 24 inches wide if another shape is present.

No anchor buoys shall be placed in public waters if they obstruct access to public or private property or present a danger to navigation. No anchor buoy or anchor buoy may be placed in or on state water except by a government agency or with a permit from the county sheriff. Each of these buoys must be white in colour and surrounded by a visible blue stripe at least one inch wide. Moore buoys must have a total of at least 16 square inches of white reflectivity, a portion of which must be visible from each direction. Anchor buoys, when lit, shall have a flashing white light. 1. Berths, jetties, docks or floats do not significantly impede navigation. Any berth, anchor, buoy, jetty, boat shelter, wharf, marina or other structure placed or used in navigable waters in violation of this Chapter constitutes a nuisance under the City Code of the City of East Troy and may be removed in accordance with the procedures set forth in Wisconsin Stat.

§ 30.13 (5m) or any other applicable law. (Order 2011-11 § 7. Code 2008 § 12.02(13)) (i) The position of buoys shown on nautical charts is approximate only because of the practical limitations of positioning and maintaining buoys and their sinkers at specific geographical locations. 6. A licence may be revoked if the berth is used or contravenes the provisions referred to herein or the spirit and purpose of this Chapter or if it is enlarged, altered or moved. 4. Once a permit has been granted, no subsequent permit is required unless the berth or number is changed or expanded. Moore buoys, including temporary rigging buoys, are limited to temporary use.

No use may exceed five consecutive days and requires a permit that cannot be renewed more than four times per calendar year. (§ 12.02(7) of the 2008 Code) `mooring anchor` means an anchor or any weight intended to rest on the bed or to be buried in the bed of navigable waters, intended to be attached to a mooring buoy by a chain, cable, rope or other mechanism, and intended to remain permanently or seasonally in place; (c) Buoys are floating aids to navigation widely used in U.S. waters. They are anchored to the seabed by sinks with chains or other moorings of different lengths. (iii) Pillared peatlands have a broad cylindrical base supporting a narrower superstructure. They can be topped with colorful shapes called topmarks. Chapter 30 is hereby adopted and incorporated to the fullest extent permitted by law to permit the City of Eastern Troy to exercise its principal or concurrent jurisdiction over the navigable waters of the City of Eastern Troy. To the extent permitted by this Chapter, this Chapter is intended to supplement and create supplemental regulations as they currently exist or may be modified by amendments to the laws of Wisconsin, the Administrative Code or other legal regulations of the State of Wisconsin.