It's over 70 years old, a thin magenta-colored line appearing on over 50
different navigational charts covering the Atlantic Coast and Gulf, snaking
along the route of the Intracoastal Waterway. Now, thanks to NOAA's Office of
Coast Survey and a public-private partnership with Active Captain, an
interactive cruising guidebook, NOAA will be updating the "magenta line" on all
of its newly-issued navigational charts to help keep boaters in safe waters.
Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS) submitted
comments on the proposal to NOAA, who had initially proposed removing the
line entirely. However, responding to BoatUS' and other boaters' comments, NOAA
will tap into users of Active Captain to update the route in an on-going effort
that will benefit the boating community.
"Some boaters had assumed
the magenta line, which was last updated in 1935, was a precise route through
safe waters," said BoatUS Government Affairs Senior Program Coordinator David
Kennedy. "However, over time the forces of nature made the line inaccurate as
shoals shifted and underwater topography changed, leading some boats into
shallows, over dangerous obstructions, or even into land. We thank NOAA
for a change of course in keeping the magenta line, listening to boaters and
coming up with a creative public-private partnership that recognizes the value
of this important guide to navigation."
The magenta
line appears in charts covering all Intracoastal waters, and is essentially
two distinct routes along the eastern US and Gulf Coasts totaling about 3,000
miles in length. Said Captain Shep Smith, chief of NOAA's Coast Survey's Marine
Chart Division, "Today's decision to reinstate the magenta line is not a quick
fix. It will take at least three years to fix problems that were 70 years in the
making."
Boaters may contribute to
the updating effort by joining Active Captain at www.activecaptain.com.
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