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United Kingdom Statutory Instruments


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STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS


2005 No. 2286

MERCHANT SHIPPING

SAFETY

The Merchant Shipping (Bridge Visibility) (Small Passenger Ships) Regulations 2005

  Made 15th August 2005 
  Laid before Parliament 16th August 2005 
  Coming into force 6th September 2005 

The Secretary of State for Transport, after consulting the persons referred to in section 86(4) of the Merchant Shipping Act 1995[1], in exercise of the powers conferred upon him by section 85(1)(a) and (b), (3) and (5) to (7) and section 86(1) of that Act[2], hereby make the following Regulations:

Citation and commencement
     1. These Regulations may be cited as the Merchant Shipping (Bridge Visibility) (Small Passenger Ships) Regulations 2005 and shall come into force on 6th September 2005.

Interpretation
    
2. In these Regulations –

Application
    
3. —(1) Subject to paragraph (3), these Regulations apply in tidal waters to passenger ships of Classes IV, V, VI and VI(A) of less than 45 metres in length.

    (2) For the purposes of paragraph (1) –

    (3) These Regulations do not apply to a ship to which regulation 22 of Chapter V of the annex to the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, 1974[3] as amended in accordance with its Protocol of 1988[4] and the resolution of the Maritime Safety Committee of the International Maritime Organisation published by the IMO as Resolution MSC.99(73) of December 2000 is applied by regulation 5 of the Merchant Shipping (Safety of Navigation) Regulations 2002[5].

Visibility from the Bridge
     4. —(1) The steering position of a new ship shall be situated above all decked superstructures other than the wheelhouse (if any) in which it is situated.

    (2) Subject to regulations 6 and 7, the steering position of a ship shall be so sited and any wheelhouse shall be so constructed –

    (3) For the purposes of paragraph (2) –

Sight lines
    
5. —(1) In determining whether the requirements of regulation 4 are met, the helmsman shall be assumed to have a height of eye of 1675 mm above the deck at the steering position.

    (2) Where a sight line, required to be clear to meet the requirements of regulation 4, passes through an after facing window, that window shall be of not less than 450 mm depth (height) centred at 1675 mm above the deck at the steering position.

    (3) No sight line shall pass through any enclosed passenger deck.

    (4) In new ships, and where practicable in existing ships, any sight line which passes over an open passenger deck shall be such that it would pass over the heads of any passengers occupying seats on that deck.

    (5) Should the activities of standing passengers on an open passenger deck cause a serious obstruction to visibility from the steering position, a dedicated lookout must be provided in accordance with regulation 6(2) in such a manner as to overcome the effects of such obstruction.

Dedicated lookout
    
6. —(1) Where an existing ship –

those requirements shall not apply to the ship if a dedicated lookout is provided at all times when the ship is under way.

    (2) The dedicated lookout shall –

    (3) The dedicated lookout may be in the wheelhouse, but if positioned outside the wheelhouse and remote from the helmsman he shall be provided with a wired telephone communication link to the helmsman.

Other lookout arrangements
    
7. The requirements of regulations 4 and 6 do not apply to a ship which is operated with bridge manning levels which include a helmsman and an officer of the watch, if –

Windows
    
8. —(1) Vertical framing between all windows in the wheelhouse of a ship shall be kept to a minimum and shall not be installed immediately forward of the steering position or positions.

    (2) The height of the lower edge of the forward facing windows of the wheelhouse shall be as low as practicable.

    (3) The upper edge of the forward facing windows of the wheelhouse shall be high enough to allow a person at the steering position with height of eye of 1800 mm a clear forward view to at least 10 degrees above the horizontal at height of eye level.

    (4) On a new ship the wheelhouse windows shall be inclined from the vertical plane, top out, at an angle of not less than 10 degrees and not more than 25 degrees, except in the way of access doors to the wheelhouse.

    (5) Neither polarised nor tinted glass shall be used in any wheelhouse window.

    (6) An adequate portion of the forward facing windows serving the helmsman shall be able to be maintained in a clear condition during conditions of spray and precipitation.

Exemptions
    
9. —(1) The Secretary of State may grant exemptions from all or any of the provisions of these Regulations (as may be specified in the exemption) for individual cases or classes of case on such terms (if any) as he may specify if he is satisfied that –

    (2) The Secretary of State may, on giving reasonable notice, alter or cancel any exemption granted under paragraph (1).

    (3) An exemption, and an alteration or cancellation of an exemption, shall be given in writing and shall specify the date on which it takes effect and the conditions (if any) on which it is given.

Penalties
    
10. —(1) If a ship to which these Regulations apply proceeds, or attempts to proceed, on any voyage without complying with the requirements of these Regulations, the owner and master shall each be guilty of an offence and liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale.

    (2) Where a ship is managed by a person other than its owner (whether on behalf of the owner or some other person or on his own behalf) the reference in paragraph (1) to the owner shall be construed as including a reference to that person.

Detention
    
11. In any case where a ship does not comply with the requirements of these Regulations, the ship shall be liable to be detained, and section 284(1) to (6) and (8) of the Merchant Shipping Act 1995[6] (which relates to detention of a ship) shall have effect in relation to that ship as if for "this Act", wherever it appears, there were substituted "the Merchant Shipping (Bridge Visibility) (Small Passenger Ships) Regulations 2005".



Signed by authority of the Secretary of State for Transport


Derek Twigg
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State Department for Transport

15th August 2005



EXPLANATORY NOTE

(This note is not part of the Regulations)


These Regulations apply to passenger ships under 45 metres in length which are engaged in voyages as described in regulation 3(1). The Regulations implement the recommendations of the Marine Accident Investigation Branch on bridge visibility on passenger ships set out in their Report into the loss of "the Marchioness". The provision contained in these Regulations was previously contained in the Merchant Shipping (Passenger Ships of Classes IV, V, VI and VI(A) (Bridge Visibility) Regulations 1992 (S.I. 1992/2357), which were repealed by the Merchant Shipping (Safety of Navigation) Regulations 2002 (S.I. 2002/1473) ("the 2002 Regulations"). The 2002 Regulations make provision for bridge visibility for ships of 45 metres in length and above in accordance with the requirements of the SOLAS Convention, but do not make provision for ships below that length.

These Regulations require ships to be so constructed that the helmsman has good visibility over an arc of 360 degrees of the horizontal plane. Where existing ships cannot fully meet the requirements for all round visibility a dedicated lookout must be posted to cover the area which is obscured from the steering position. Provision is made in the Regulations for exemptions, penalties and detention.

A full Regulatory Impact Assessment has been prepared and copies can be obtained from the Maritime and Coastguard Agency, Spring Place, 105 Commercial Road, Southampton, SO15 1EG. A copy has been placed in the Library of each House of Parliament..

Merchant Shipping Notices can be read or downloaded from the Maritime and Coastguard Agency website (
www.mcga.gov.uk). Printed copies can be obtained from Mail Marketing (Scotland) Ltd, Unit 6 Bloomsgrove Industrial Estate, Norton Street, Nottingham, NG7 3JG.

Copies of the SOLAS Convention, and its Protocols and amendments, and of IMO resolutions, may be obtained from the IMO at 4 Albert Embankment, London SE1 7SR.


Notes:

[1] 1995 c.21.back

[2] Sections 85 and 86 were amended by the Merchant Shipping and Maritime Security Act 1997 (c.28), section 8.back

[3] Cmnd 7874.back

[4] Cm 4420.back

[5] S.I. 2002/1473.back

[6] Section 284 was amended by the Merchant Shipping and Maritime Security Act 1997 (c.28), Schedule 1 paragraph 5.back



ISBN 0 11 073250 2


 © Crown copyright 2005

Prepared 22 August 2005


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