Press Release Sample
Two
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Scott Croft, 703-461-2864, SCroft@BoatUS.com
January 29, 2004
MARYLAND’S $50 BOAT SLIP
TAX SHOULD BE SCUTTLED
BoatU.S., the nation’s largest organization of recreational
boaters, strongly criticized a proposal by Maryland Governor
Robert Ehrlich to levy a yearly $50 fee on all marina boat
slips throughout the state and urged its 35,000 Maryland
members to contact their state senators and delegates immediately
to let them know of their opposition to the proposal. One
out of six boat owners in Maryland is a BoatU.S. member
and as many as one of every two slip holders belongs to
BoatU.S.
“This is a new tax, not a ‘user fee’.” said
BoatU.S. President Jim Ellis, a resident of Arnold, Maryland.
The purported purpose of Governor Ehrlich’s so-called “user
fee” is to raise money to protect Maryland’s
wetlands. “While restoring wetlands is a worthy undertaking
that every Maryland resident should support,” said
Ellis, “vessels large enough to be kept in marina
slips receive no special benefits from wetlands, so we
fail to understand why slip holders are being singled out
to pay for this program.”
“This new tax proposal adds insult to injury,” said
Ellis, pointing out that the state already collects millions
of dollars each year from boaters in marine fuel taxes
but diverts 70% of these funds to non-boating purposes.
“It doesn’t seem fair to ask recreational
boaters to pay more when most of the money they’re
already paying isn’t being used to benefit boating,” said
Ellis, noting that recreational boaters also pay millions
each year to the state in sales and use taxes as well as
boat registration and launch ramp fees.
Maryland boaters can go to BoatUS.com/gov and click on
the State News Alert section for a sample letter on the
issue and a listing of their state legislators.
BoatU.S. – Boat Owners Association of The United
States – is the nation’s leading advocate for
recreational boaters and provides its 550,000 members with
a wide array of consumer services.
Table of Contents