new safety standards for duck boats

Source: United States Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo)

Congress has passed legislation that requires duck boat operators to abide by stricter safety regulations, four years after a sinking on Table Rock Lake in southwest Missouri killed 17 people.

The bill, repeatedly proposed by Missouri lawmakers, has previously failed to pass through both chambers. It finally found a path last week through the National Defense Authorization Act, the annual spending bill for the military and Department of Defense.

Under the legislation, which has passed through both the House and Senate and is awaiting a signature from President Joe Biden, duck boats must follow recommendations set by the National Transportation Safety Board — including mandated use of life jackets, increased buoyancy standards and the removal of boat canopies that make it difficult for passengers to escape if they sink. The duck boat that sank on Table Rock Lake had an overtop canopy, and state troopers found that no one aboard was wearing a life jacket.

Duck boats would also be required to have ballast tanks to avoid sinking in the case of floods, as well as bilge pumps to drain water from a flooding boat.

Though he criticized the spending bill as a whole, Missouri’s U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley touted the inclusion of the duck boat legislation as a victory “after 3+ years of work.”

“One of my top priorities in the U.S. Senate has been to pass critical duck boat safety reforms — it’s a promise I made to Missourians in 2018,” U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley said in a statement provided to the News-Leader. “I’m delighted to see my bill finally passed through the full Congress and is headed to the President’s desk. We must act now to prevent another tragedy like we saw at Table Rock Lake.”

More:‘Like I’ve never seen before’: A moment-by-moment account of the tragic duck boat sinking

After failure to act in 1999, lawmakers address safety concerns four years post-Branson

In 1999, 13 people died in Arkansas after a similar tragedy — a duck boat sinking in Lake Hamilton, near the town of Hot Springs. In the years to follow, Congress failed to pass any legislation amping up safety regulations, despite recommendations from the National Transportation Safety Board.