[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 46, Volume 4]

[Revised as of October 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 46CFR125.160]



[Page 416-419]

 

                            TITLE 46_SHIPPING



                  (This book contains parts 90 to 139)

 

   CHAPTER I--COAST GUARD, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY (CONTINUED)

 

PART 125_GENERAL--Table of Contents

 

Sec.  125.160  Definitions.



    Each term defined elsewhere in this chapter for a particular class 

of vessel applies to this subchapter unless a different definition is 

given in this section. As used by this subchapter--

    Accommodations includes spaces such as at least the following:

    (1) A space used as a messroom.

    (2) A lounge.

    (3) A sitting area.

    (4) A recreation room.

    (5) Quarters.

    (6) A toilet space.

    (7) A shower room.

    Anniversary date means the day and the month of each year, which 

corresponds to the date of expiration of the Certificate of Inspection.

    Anti-exposure suit means a protective suit designed for use by 

rescue boat crews and marine evacuation system parties.

    Approval series means the first six digits of a number assigned by 

the Coast Guard to approved equipment. Where approval is based on a 

subpart of subchapter Q of this chapter, the approval series corresponds 

to the number of the subpart. A listing of approved equipment, including 

all of the approval series, is published periodically by the Coast Guard 

in Equipment Lists (COMDTINST M16714.3 series), available from the 

Superintendent of Documents.

    Approved means approved by the Commandant, unless otherwise defined.

    Bulkhead deck means the uppermost deck to which transverse 

watertight bulkheads and the watertight shell extend.

    Coast Guard District Commander or District Commander means an 

officer of the Coast Guard designated by the Commandant to command 

activities of the Coast Guard within a Coast Guard district described by 

33 CFR part 3, whose duties include the inspection, enforcement, and 

administration of laws for the safety and navigation of vessels. 

Coastwise refers to a route not more than 20 nautical miles offshore on 

any of the following waters:

    (1) Any ocean.

    (2) The Gulf of Mexico.

    (3) The Caribbean Sea.

    (4) The Gulf of Alaska.

    (5) The Bering Sea.



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    (6) Such other, similar waters as may be designated by the District 

Commander.

    Combustible liquid means the same as in subpart 30.10 of this 

chapter.

    Commandant means the Commandant of the Coast Guard or an authorized 

staff officer at Coast Guard headquarters designated by Sec.  1.01-05 of 

this chapter.

    Commanding Officer, Marine Safety Center, means an officer of the 

Coast Guard designated by the Commandant to command activities of the 

Coast Guard within the Marine Safety Center, whose duties include review 

of plans for commercial vessels to ensure compliance with applicable 

laws and standards.

    Crane means a revolving, gantry-mounted, or other type of fixed 

lifting device used for lifting or moving equipment or supplies. It does 

not include material handling equipment used for general ship's service, 

such as lifeboat davits, chain falls, come-alongs, or the like.

    Crew means all persons carried on board the OSV to provide 

navigation and maintenance of the OSV, its machinery, systems, and 

arrangements essential for propulsion and safe navigation or to provide 

services for other persons on board.

    Deadweight means, when measured in water of specific gravity 1.025, 

the difference in long tons between--

    (1) The displacement of the vessel on even trim at ``lightweight'' 

as defined by subpart F of part 170 of this chapter; and

    (2) The displacement of the vessel on even trim at the deepest load 

waterline.

    Embarkation ladder means the ladder provided at survival craft 

embarkation stations to permit safe access to survival craft after 

launching.

    Embarkation station means the place where a survival craft is 

boarded.

    Existing offshore supply vessel is one contracted for, or the keel 

of which was laid, before March 15, 1996.

    Flammable liquid means the same as in Sec.  30.10-22 of this 

chapter.

    Float-free launching means that method of launching a survival craft 

or lifesaving appliance whereby the craft or appliance is automatically 

released from a sinking vessel and is ready for use.

    Gas-free means free from dangerous concentrations of flammable or 

toxic gases.

    Hazardous material means the same as in Sec.  153.2 of this chapter.

    Immersion suit means a protective suit that reduces loss of body 

heat of a person wearing it in cold water.

    Inflatable appliance means an appliance that depends upon nonrigid, 

gas-filled chambers for buoyancy and that is normally kept uninflated 

until ready for use.

    Inflated appliance means an appliance that depends upon nonrigid, 

gas-filled chambers for buoyancy and that is kept inflated and ready for 

use at all times.

    International voyage means a voyage between a country to which the 

International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, 1974, as amended 

(SOLAS 74/83) applies and a port outside that country.

    Jacking system means any type of mechanical (including hydraulic) or 

electrical system used for elevating a liftboat.

    Launching appliance or launching arrangement means the method or 

devices for transferring a survival craft or rescue boat from its stowed 

position to the water. For a launching arrangement using a davit, the 

term includes the davit, winch, and falls.

    Length, relative to a vessel, means the length listed on the 

vessel's certificate of documentation or the ``registered length'' as 

defined by Sec.  69.53 of this chapter.

    Lifejacket means a flotation device approved as a life preserver or 

lifejacket.

    Liftboat means an OSV with movable legs capable of raising its hull 

above the surface of the sea.

    Major conversion means a conversion of a vessel that, as determined 

by the Commandant--

    (1) Substantially changes the dimensions or carrying capacity of the 

vessel;

    (2) Changes the type of vessel;

    (3) Substantially prolongs the life of the vessel; or

    (4) Otherwise so changes the vessel that it is essentially a new 

vessel.



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    Marine evacuation system means an appliance designed to rapidly 

transfer large numbers of persons from an embarkation station by means 

of a passage to a floating platform for subsequent embarkation into 

associated survival craft, or directly into associated survival craft.

    Marine inspector means any person authorized by the Officer in 

Charge, Marine Inspection (OCMI), to perform duties concerning the 

inspection, enforcement, and administration of laws for the safety and 

navigation of vessels.

    Muster station means the place where the crew and offshore workers 

assemble before boarding a survival craft.

    New offshore supply vessel is one--

    (1) Contracted for, or the keel of which was laid, on or after March 

15, 1996; or

    (2) Which underwent a major conversion that was initiated on or 

after March 15, 1996.

    Novel lifesaving appliance or arrangement means one that has new 

features not fully covered by the provisions of this part but that 

provides an equal or higher standard of safety.

    Noxious liquid substance or NLS means the same as in Sec.  153.2 of 

this chapter.

    Ocean refers to a route more than 20 nautical miles offshore on any 

of the following waters:

    (1) Any ocean.

    (2) The Gulf of Mexico.

    (3) The Caribbean Sea.

    (4) The Gulf of Alaska.

    (5) The Bering Sea.

    (6) Such other, similar waters as may be designated by the District 

Commander.

    OCMI means the same as Officer in Charge, Marine Inspection.

    Officer in Charge, Marine Inspection means any person of the Coast 

Guard so designated by the Commandant, to be in charge of an inspection 

zone for the performance of duties concerning the inspection, 

enforcement, and administration of laws for the safety and navigation of 

vessels.

    Offshore supply vessel means a vessel that--

    (1) Is propelled by machinery other than steam;

    (2) Does not meet the definition of a passenger-carrying vessel in 

46 U.S.C. 2101(22) or 46 U.S.C. 2101(35);

    (3) Is more than 15 but less than 500 gross tons (as measured under 

the Standard, Dual, or Simplified Measurement System under part 69, 

subpart C, D, or E, of this chapter) or is less than 6,000 gross tons 

(as measured under the Convention Measurement System under part 69, 

subpart B, of this chapter); and

    (4) Regularly carries goods, supplies, individuals in addition to 

the crew, or equipment in support of exploration, exploitation, or 

production of offshore mineral or energy resources.

    Offshore worker means an individual carried aboard an OSV and 

employed in a phase of exploration, exploitation, or production of 

offshore mineral or energy resources served by the vessel; but it does 

not include the master or a member of the crew engaged in the business 

of the vessel, who has contributed no consideration for carriage aboard 

and is paid for services aboard.

    OSV means the same as offshore supply vessel.

    Quarters means any space where sleeping accommodations are provided.

    Rescue boat means a boat designed to rescue persons in distress and 

to marshal survival craft.

    Restricted service means service in areas within 12 hours of a 

harbor of safe refuge or in areas where a liftboat may be jacked up to 

meet the 100-knot-wind severe-storm criteria of Sec.  174.255(c) of this 

chapter.

    Seagoing condition means the operating condition of the OSV with the 

personnel, equipment, fluids, and ballast necessary for safe operation 

on the waters where the OSV operates.

    Survival craft means a craft capable of sustaining the lives of 

persons in distress from the time of abandoning the OSV on which the 

persons were originally carried. The term includes lifeboats, liferafts, 

buoyant apparatus, and lifefloats, but does not include rescue boats.

    Underwater survey means the examination of the vessel's underwater 

hull including all through-hull fittings and



[[Page 419]]



appurtenances, while the vessel is afloat.



[CGD 82-004 and CGD 86-074, 62 FR 49321, Sept. 19, 1997, as amended by 

USCG 1999-4976, 65 FR 6505, Feb. 9, 2000; USCG-2000-6858, 67 FR 21082, 

Apr. 29, 2002]