CG Seeks Participants for Straits of Mackinac PAWSA Workshop

May 24, 2019

The U.S. Coast Guard is soliciting for members of the public to participate in a Ports and Waterways Safety Assessment (PAWSA) workshop for the Straits of Mackinac that will take place in St. Ignace, Michigan, July 24 and 25.

A longstanding and proven Coast Guard process for formal public study, a PAWSA is a joint effort involving waterway users, stakeholders, and agencies to focus on identifying major waterway safety hazards, estimating risk levels, and evaluating risk mitigation measures. The Coast Guard has sponsored and led more than 60 PAWSA studies nationwide since 1999.

Participants will convene for a structured workshop with facilitated sessions aimed to ensure the environmental protection and safe navigation in the Straits of Mackinac. The Coast Guard will announce the workshop location at a later date.

The Coast Guard will select participants based on their waterway expertise and to create a broad cross-section of Straits of Mackinac waterways users and stakeholders.

Members of the public who wish to serve as participants in the workshop should provide their name, contact information, connection to the waterway, experience, and related skills to Lt. Sean Murphy at [email protected], Coast Guard Sector Sault Ste Marie.

Logistics News

Morocco’s Marsa Maroc to Acquire 45% Stake in Spain’s Boluda Maritime Terminals

Morocco’s Marsa Maroc to Acquire 45% Stake in Spain’s Boluda Maritime Terminals

Applied Acoustics Deploys Pyxis INS + USBL System for SEP Hydrographic

Applied Acoustics Deploys Pyxis INS + USBL System for SEP Hydrographic

800-Ton Goliath Crane Takes Shape in Port of Chioggia

800-Ton Goliath Crane Takes Shape in Port of Chioggia

Renewable Propane Delivers Clean Energy Without the Wait

Renewable Propane Delivers Clean Energy Without the Wait

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

ROI-Global coal exports post rare decline in 2025 on China cuts: Maguire
Spirit Airlines receives bankruptcy funding of $100 Million
Shipping data shows that tankers have made a U-turn after the US seized Venezuelan oil cargo.