For those of you who haven't met me I am a Kiteboarder who works for the City of San Diego as a Lifeguard. I am happy to report that there were very few, if any, kiteboarder involved incidents this summer season in the San Diego City limits. Which is a good thing because the sport is growing so fast that our water usage areas have become more and more crowded. Anytime there is an accident of any kind, or a complaint there is some type of an investigation as to how things could be changed to make our waters more safe. So, the less incidents we kiteboarders are involved in the better, because that means we are operating safely as a user group therefore avoiding more regulations, and/or being shut down all together.
Unfortunately there was one complaint that I know of from a sailor on Sail Bay stating... "that a kiter cut him off and they almost got in an accident"... " and isn't that sport to dangerous to be doing on a crowded sail bay day anyways?" Well, the sailor must of had some pull because it caused a knee jerk reaction of the on duty Harbor Supervisor to shut down kiteboarding activity on Sailbay at Riviera Shores. For the past few months on duty lifeguards patrolling Mission Bay were told by their supervisors that if they see kiteboarders on Sailbay to shut them down. That the sport is to dangerous because when the kiteboarders get lifted into the air, they have no control, and then when they fall all those lines in the water create a navigational hazard. Therefore it is illegal because it is reckless and negligent operation of a vessel, (which is the same law used if a jetski catches air and looses control because they are out of the water they have no steering.) If the kitboarders don't shut down when asked to do so then it is refussal to comply with a peace officer.
I thought at the time that this one incident with the sailor was a rare occasion. Maybe it was a really busy day and the kiteboarder had a bad attitude when approached or something like that, but that was not the case. I kept waiting week after week for things to cool down, because most of the time incidents like this one come up and it's back to business as normal later, with everyone using the water and no one fighting over usage. Much like Tourmo and the battle between surfers that comes up every once in a while. The problem was it wasn't going away easily and now this new rule that someone made up was becoming a reality. It appeared as though we were going to possibly loose one more kiting spot here in SD.
Finally after much conversation, I am stoked to hear today that upper management in the Lifeguard Service decided that kiteboarding is still ok on Sailbay, but not on days which are super impacted by sailors. So, that's where it stands now. It is legal but we need to be careful not to loose another spot.
The interesting thing to note about this story is that a few kiteboarders were told it was illegal on Sailbay. After that decisions were being made for our user group by individuals that don't even kiteboard! I feel the only way to protect spots like this here in SD is to reform the association we once had. When issues like this arise we, kiteboarders should be on the forefront of keeping spots safe and making changes that will benefit our user group. That is how surfers, sailors, kayakers, rowers...etc protect their interests here in the city. By not being organized as one unit, if any one of these water use associations wanted to shut us down, it wouldn't be to difficult because they already have an organized group of people to represent there better interests. I consider this case this summer at Sail Bay a warning of what could come. I am open to all suggestions, I just want to see preservation of our current sailing areas we enjoy.
Jeff
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