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/tritonnews | www.The-Triton.com | December 2016
MPT principal remembered as voice for crew, and industry
IT TAKES A TEAM
News
Regulatory updates Government officials talk customs, immigration and license rule changes. 6,8,9
Crew honored Veteran captains named Distinguished Crew, Captain of the Year.
By Dorie Cox Maritime laws and regulations confound many yachting professionals, but Amy Morley-Beavers guided three decades of mariners through their interpretations, both individually and industrywide. Her work focused on USCG, CFRs, MERPAC, and more, but her most important acronym was MPT. Mrs. Morley-Beavers died Nov. 5 of complications from heart surgery. She was 47. Many family, friends and colleagues describe Maritime Professional Training (MPT) in Ft. Lauderdale as a big part of her See Morley-Beavers, page 51
Hiring yacht crew challenges many captains From the Bridge Dorie Cox
Hiring crew is one of yachting's biggest challenges, according to some captains. They aim to pick the right candidates, but often misinformation and misconceptions mar the experience. Each month The Triton delves into an issue to share lessons learned. During the December Triton From the Bridge lunch, seven captains discussed hiring.
See HIRING, page 44
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Obituaries The crew of M/Y Party Girl, a 146-foot Christensen, kicked off the 57th Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show in early November with a smile. See more photos and our coverage from Triton Today PHOTO/TOM SERIO beginning on page 28.
Business moving post-election By Dorie Cox The U.S. election took place the day after the Fort Lauderdale International Boat Show this year. On the way to the show, people on Southeast 17th Street passed a “Trump Pence: Make America Great Again!” sign. Not a small yard sign, but a 16-by-6 foot semi-permanent one in front of a property owned by Resolve Marine near Port Everglades. Company President and CEO Joe Farrell Jr. erected that sign, and said he believes a Trump administration will help the marine industry when it begins to cut personal and business taxes. “Tax cuts loosen up money so yacht builders, marinas and marine businesses will pile that money back into expansion,” said Farrell, whose Ft. Lauderdale-based company does salvage, towing, underwater surveys and has a maritime academy with fire
training for crew. “If there’s more money in circulation, there’s money for more boats and more recreation. Everything changes.” President-elect Trump’s ideas are reminiscent of the leader who ran the country from 1981-1989, said Rob Parmentier, Marquis Larson Group’s president and CEO. “When you go back in time to the last administration where we saw that, it was Ronald Reagan,” he said. “We see that [tax cuts] put money back into the economy and that stimulates business and job growth. We had a prosperous eight years with less regulation, less taxes and unwanted bureaucracy. “Myself and my company don’t necessarily agree with everything Trump is, but we believe this is sincerely good for the boat business,” Parmentier said. “He will cut taxes in all brackets and for
See ELECTION, page 43
Industry also loses captain, chef, videographer. 4,5,50
Marina / Shipyard news
New yard, marina opens in Puerto Rico.
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Construction on new Dania Cut marina set to begin. 40
Events
Next Triton event
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Ft. Lauderdale boat show
Photo gallery Seminar news
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Checking the tide Surveys asking crew what they think about topics such as Ft. Lauderdale, crew space and “Below Deck”.
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