Can we get in troble looking at the pics of our watery friends . Or thinking about looking at them . It seem to be getting silly as it goes on & on & on .
Well it's a very good question and why I asked the obvious-
Are we expected to regularly ring up our friendly lawyer to catch up with the latest before we venture out or post incriminating evidence perhaps?
Now owning a regd motor vehicle or holding an appropriate drivers licence, we all know (or should know) our respective legal obligations, no matter when we first obtained our licence. That's because when new Legislation is enacted like seat belts, .05 .08 alchohol limits, red light cameras, towing limits, etc, there's a public info campaign and leaflets sent around with your licence and rego renewal and read it and get up to pace or else. Ignorance of the Law is no excuse.
Same with boaties licences and presumably aircraft licences when that 2010 Marine Mammal Legislation comes into force. What? You're a typical 28 yr old that got your first boat licence 11 yrs ago and don't read newspapers or watch the nightly news and you simply threw the blurb in the bin and grumbled about the cost of the new licence? The boat licence Handbook has now grown to nearly 150 pages and you bought a jetski 12 months ago and now you're a $100k or 2 yrs jail waiting to happen, should you get it wrong within 300M of a whale that you've never encountered in that Gulf before. 2 pods of dolphins and a seal on the journey before that but no matter if it's incidental contact and you don't 'interact' with them like when you're surfing over the West Coast with 60 or 70 dolphins.
Aircraft owners, boat owners, PWC owners (jetskis and waverunners), whale watching businesses, etc, all have to know the intricacies of that MM Law the moment it's enacted but there's more. Surfers, kayakers, canoeists,swimmers, scuba divers with or without submersibles and persons on land you'll notice and what exactly should they know? Well just like boaties, etc they're allowed to come across MMs accidentally or incidentally like that seal pup at Bribie Is, but then they must know exactly their legal responsibilities or else! That's the bit that upset some of you when I pointed out some Law could be broken here and rightly so. I didn't make that Law and Regulations remember. Now can you see why the usual suspects want to annually licence everything you do 4WD chums?
OK so I quoted the Law re the seal pup on land but what about a 'person who is in control of a vessel' ie boat or jetski who has incidental contact with a MM. Well after you've established the definition applies to you, you simply look to see if it applies before going through the intricacies of your responsibilities and getting out the tape measure. Well here it is in black and white letter Law-
Part 2—Interaction with marine mammals
Division 1—Vessels
6—Interpretation
In this Division, a reference to a person who is in control of a vessel includes a
reference to a swimmer who is using a submersible or other vessel.
7—Application of Division
This Division only applies in relation to a vessel if the observing of marine mammals
or swimming near marine mammals is the purpose, or 1 of the purposes, for which the
vessel is being used.
You got that? Assuming you weren't deliberately approaching within those prescribed limits for the purpose of observing, the moment you get out the camera or mobile phone to take some pics, which is the most natural reaction, then guess what....?