Rigger Mortice
N/A
the ethical aspects of charitable status and the incumbent responsibilities which they may or may not entail.
What ethical aspects?
the ethical aspects of charitable status and the incumbent responsibilities which they may or may not entail.
I wonder how much it would cost to get rescued if neither organisation existed?
List of Charges
Towing
10 miles = 2,000
20 miles = 5,000
Extra charges
Call out in a Force 6 + 3,000
Call out in a Force 8 + 7,000
Recovery of people
Use of Lifeboat 5,000 per person rescued
Use of Helicopter 15,000 per hour
(insert £ or € depending what side of the Channel you are)
This all sounds a very academic exercise in navel gazing; as individuals, or even a tiny group, we will not be able to make a change in the management or financial structure of the RNLI.
What ethical aspects?
"may not" then.
Apparently you are not reading my posts. #486
This just isn't true and I think you know it. The free reserves are less than £100m. They bearly cover a years running. The figure you quote includes such items as the launch houses etc, none of which, whilst an asset, generates cash to cover the costs of a launch.
Just out of interest, the RNLI achieve a 10 minute launch on average and reach 93% of all casualties within 10miles. We will have to agree to differ over the flimsy French boats.
I did, is a RIB which you suggest is the French substitute for carriage launch a suitable vessel for all weather rescues in the North Sea.
Apparently you are avoiding the question.
Also I do not see in post 486 a contradiction the suggestion that most actuall finacial supporters of the RNLI, at least here, are reasonably happy with the RNLI, or did I miss something in that rather busy post
Maybe maybe not but the SNSM doesn't operate in the N. Sea. What you haven't answered is how long does it take the Shannon on its carriage to cover the 1 mile to the water's edge? It looked pretty slow to me. If I were foundering on an offshore sandbank I wouldn't turn my nose up at a large RIB that could get there (apparently - and let me stress that) in a fraction of the time.
As for your second point : I dispute the notion "most". I would say "some".
Um, I'll counter that with another (obvious) question - how long does it take the SNSM's rib to cover the same mile?
What happens if it isn't a leisure boat with 2 crew that's on the sandbank but a fishing boat with a crew of 8?
Maybe maybe not but the SNSM doesn't operate in the N. Sea. What you haven't answered is how long does it take the Shannon on its carriage to cover the 1 mile to the water's edge? It looked pretty slow to me. If I were foundering on an offshore sandbank I wouldn't turn my nose up at a large RIB that could get there (apparently - and let me stress that) in a fraction of the time.
As for your second point : I dispute the notion "most". I would say "some".
It's pulled behind an ordinary farmyard type tractor. Not a caterpillar.
If you compare it with the same sized RNLI equivalent there is a survivor capacity of 20.
Any specific donation is an instruction from the donor or, more normally, the Executors to the RNLI. If you pay a deposit on a boat, say, that money goes into an escrow account. Same applies here. The other point you make is does the RNLI have a pot of money for future capex? I don't see any unallocated sums of money; it would be surprising if there were. I would presume that the RNLI will have a pretty constant stream of cash going out all the time to committed expenditure in the course of construction.I don't think that is quite right.
You're correct about the "free" reserves but the balance of the reserves is still money, some of which is committed because of the way it was donated (legacies etc) and some being money which has been put to one side for future capital expenditure .....boats and launch houses. It's still money though, it's not yet assets in the form of buildings etc.
Or maybe I've missunderstood your comment?
The point I wish to make again is that the OP's assertion that the RNLI has £570m of cash available is utter nonsense.
Agreed.
I just cannot understand why some boaters seem to so so keen to discredit the RNLI. I simply cannot understand it.
So broadly similar on both counts, then (unless of course you want to tow the casualty).
I have no idea what speed the RNLI caterpillar is capable of, but I do know a tractor pulling a heavy trailer over a soft, rough beach won't be particularly fast either.
Any specific donation is an instruction from the donor or, more normally, the Executors to the RNLI. If you pay a deposit on a boat, say, that money goes into an escrow account. Same applies here. The other point you make is does the RNLI have a pot of money for future capex? I don't see any unallocated sums of money; it would be surprising if there were. I would presume that the RNLI will have a pretty constant stream of cash going out all the time to committed expenditure in the course of construction.
The point I wish to make again is that the OP's assertion that the RNLI has £570m of cash available is utter nonsense.
They do not like being told to put a lifjacket on. Mind you the SNSM have a similar campaign.
In reality it is a bit like asking why people support Ed Milliband or Mit Romney, some people just think like that.
So the RNLI should ignore the North Sea, come on I would have thought you could do better than that. However fast or slow the lauch system is it is a lot faster than the tide and the SNSM does have tide bound all weather boats in some harbours, I have seen them.
As others have agreed the RIB is not suitable for many casualties and I would have thought that even you would have accepted a RIB is not a fair substitute for an all weather boat, if not why does the SNSM save a lot of money by having an all RIB fleet. Many carriage launch stations do actually have co-located RIBs to cover the very circumstance you mention, also carriage launched.
I must admit that I do fail to see why you seem to insist that carriage lauched all weather bots are not required and can be easily replaced by tide bound coverted pilot boats.
The object of the thread which I have repeated several times is the suggestion that concertation between the services might bring about economies of scale to the advantage of everybody. The SNSM might get better boats (perhaps) and the RNLI might learn something about asset management.