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SOURCE
U.S. Department of Transportation, U.S. Coast Guard, Boating Statistics, 2003, Washington, DC: 2004
DEFINITION
NOTES: An accident is listed under one category only, with fatal being the highest priority, followed by nonfatal injury, followed by property damage. For example, if two vessels are in an accident resulting in a fatality and a nonfatal injury, the accident is counted as a fatal accident involving two vessels.
These data do not include: 1) accidents involving only slight injury not requiring medical treatment beyond first-aid; 2) accidents involving property damage of less than $2,000; 3) accidents not caused or contributed to by a vessel, its equipment, or its appendages; 4) accidents where a person died or was injured from natural causes while aboard a vessel; 5) accidents in which the boat was used solely as a platform for other activities, such as swimming or skin diving. Such cases are not included because the victims freely left the safety of a boat. However, the data do include accidents involving people in the water who are struck by their boat or another boat; and 6) accidents involving damage, injury, or death on a docked or moored boat resulting from storms, unusual tidal, sea, or swell conditions, or when a vessel got underway in those conditions in an attempt to rescue persons put in peril. Per capita figures expressed per 100,000 population.
Transportation Statistics > Recreational Boating Accidents > Fatalities (per capita) (most recent) by state
Showing latest available data.
| Rank |
States
|
Amount
(top to bottom)
|
| #1 | Alaska: | 3.164 per 100,000 people | |
| #2 | Louisiana: | 0.884 per 100,000 people | |
| #3 | South Carolina: | 0.705 per 100,000 people | |
| #4 | District of Columbia: | 0.545 per 100,000 people | |
| #5 | Maine: | 0.53 per 100,000 people | |
| #6 | South Dakota: | 0.516 per 100,000 people | |
| #7 | Oregon: | 0.494 per 100,000 people | |
| #8 | Idaho: | 0.49 per 100,000 people | |
| #9 | North Dakota: | 0.471 per 100,000 people | |
| #10 | New Hampshire: | 0.458 per 100,000 people | |
| #11 | Montana: | 0.428 per 100,000 people | |
| #12 | Oklahoma: | 0.395 per 100,000 people | |
| #13 | Wyoming: | 0.393 per 100,000 people | |
| #14 | Nevada: | 0.373 per 100,000 people | |
| #15 | Rhode Island: | 0.372 per 100,000 people | |
| #16 | Wisconsin: | 0.361 per 100,000 people | |
| #17 | Florida: | 0.36 per 100,000 people | |
| #18 | Minnesota: | 0.331 per 100,000 people | |
| #19 | Alabama: | 0.329 per 100,000 people | |
| #20 | Missouri: | 0.293 per 100,000 people | |
| #21 | Michigan: | 0.287 per 100,000 people | |
| #22 | Tennessee: | 0.285 per 100,000 people | |
| #23 | Nebraska: | 0.284 per 100,000 people | |
| #24 | Mississippi: | 0.274 per 100,000 people | |
| #25 | Virginia: | 0.264 per 100,000 people | |
| #26 | Washington: | 0.254 per 100,000 people | |
| #27 | Utah: | 0.243 per 100,000 people | |
| #28 | Maryland: | 0.232 per 100,000 people | |
| #29 | Arkansas: | 0.216 per 100,000 people | |
| #30 | Kentucky: | 0.216 per 100,000 people | |
| #31 | North Carolina: | 0.207 per 100,000 people | |
| #32 | New Jersey: | 0.195 per 100,000 people | |
| #33 | New York: | 0.177 per 100,000 people | |
| #34 | California: | 0.169 per 100,000 people | |
| #35 | Ohio: | 0.166 per 100,000 people | |
| #36 | West Virginia: | 0.165 per 100,000 people | |
| #37 | Vermont: | 0.161 per 100,000 people | |
| #38 | Texas: | 0.157 per 100,000 people | |
| #39 | Colorado: | 0.15 per 100,000 people | |
| #40 | Georgia: | 0.143 per 100,000 people | |
| #41 | Massachusetts: | 0.125 per 100,000 people | |
| #42 | Delaware: | 0.119 per 100,000 people | |
| #43 | Arizona: | 0.118 per 100,000 people | |
| #44 | Indiana: | 0.112 per 100,000 people | |
| #45 | Kansas: | 0.109 per 100,000 people | |
| #46 | New Mexico: | 0.104 per 100,000 people | |
| #47 | Illinois: | 0.102 per 100,000 people | |
| #48 | Pennsylvania: | 0.088 per 100,000 people | |
| #49 | Connecticut: | 0.085 per 100,000 people | |
| #50 | Iowa: | 0 per 100,000 people | |
| #51 | Hawaii: | 0 per 100,000 people | |
| |
Weighted average: |
0.3 per 100,000 people |
|
DEFINITION: NOTES: An accident is listed under one category only, with fatal being the highest priority, followed by nonfatal injury, followed by property damage. For example, if two vessels are in an accident resulting in a fatality and a nonfatal injury, the accident is counted as a fatal accident involving two vessels.
These data do not include: 1) accidents involving only slight injury not requiring medical treatment beyond first-aid; 2) accidents involving property damage of less than $2,000; 3) accidents not caused or contributed to by a vessel, its equipment, or its appendages; 4) accidents where a person died or was injured from natural causes while aboard a vessel; 5) accidents in which the boat was used solely as a platform for other activities, such as swimming or skin diving. Such cases are not included because the victims freely left the safety of a boat. However, the data do include accidents involving people in the water who are struck by their boat or another boat; and 6) accidents involving damage, injury, or death on a docked or moored boat resulting from storms, unusual tidal, sea, or swell conditions, or when a vessel got underway in those conditions in an attempt to rescue persons put in peril. Per capita figures expressed per 100,000 population.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Transportation, U.S. Coast Guard, Boating Statistics, 2003, Washington, DC: 2004
See also
Related links:
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