I had an interesting discussion surrounding this scenario below
(This IS NOT the subject of any actual protest). The boats were coming in under spinnaker into a leeward gate, but the spins made the picture too crowded so I don't have them shown.
Conditions: 6-8kts, slight chop.
- Yellow enters the zone clear ahead of Pink and Green.
- Pink and Green are overlapped when Green enters the zone
- Yellow drops her spin at #1 and slows considerably
- Green and Pink drop their spins between #2 and #3 and carry more speed into the mark than Yellow, who is very slow as she starts to round at position #4
- As Yellow rounds the mark, her stern swings out directly in front of Pink at position #4, putting Pink on a collision course with Yellow's stern and external rudder
- At position #4, Pink turns abruptly to avoid Yellow and hits Green firmly just forward of midship, there is no damage or injury.
- No protest was made. (two items below added after original post)
- Pink protests Green under 18 and Green protests Pink under 16.
Scenario #2 mod: At position #4, put Green 1/2 boat width further away from Pink. Does that change the ruling?
However, since no protest was made, incident closed.
Everyone sail to the bar.
Steve
Now with the protest, penalize green.
I’ll change the original post later but let’s assume that Pink protests Green under 18 and Green protests Pink under 16.
Scenario mod: At position #4, put Green 1/2 boat width further away from Pink. Does that change the ruling?
Green likely broke a rule because of one of the following four three interpretations:
Conditions: 6-8kts, slight chop.
(P)ink is required to give (Y)ellow mark-room.(rule 18.2b)
(G)reen is required to give Y mark-room (rule 18.2b)
G is required to keep clear of P (rule 11)
G is required to give P mark-room (rule 18.2b)
P is required to keep clear of Y (rule 11)
G is required to keep clear of Y (rule 11)
Rule 17 does not apply to Y or G. Can’t tell whether rule 17 applies to P with respect to G.
Then P and G need to take care that they comply with their obligations under rule 11 and rule 18.2b.
P keeps clear of Y and gives Y mark-room in accordance with rules 11 and 18.2b.
G does not keep clear of P. G breaks rule 11.
P, changing course does not give G room to keep clear. P breaks rule 16.1
P, sailing within the mark-room to which she is entitled, is exonerated for breaking rule 16.1 (rule 21).
G does not give P mark-room, being room to round the mark and to comply her obligations to Y. G breaks rule 18.2b.
It was not reasonably possible for P to avoid contact. P does not break rule 14.
Edit: Sorry, big slip-up
If P did not give G room to keep clear, with ample regardless of any room to windward, did not avoid contact when it was not reasonably possible to do sofor G to avoid contactt. G does not breaks rule 14.
Scenario mod: At position #4, put Green 1/2 boat width further away from Pink. Does that change the ruling?
So, this puts in question :
Ang
Both of the gate marks have a required side, regardless of which mark a boat rounds. In the diagram, boats must leave the left mark to starboard in order to pass through the gate. Likewise, they must leave the right mark to port.
While you are correct in saying there is not a requirement for both red and green to "go around" the left mark (they can round either the left or right mark), they still must leave each of the two marks on the same sides. Therefore, rule 18 does apply.
What would you say to the arguments that,
What questions would you like to ask?
Ang
Claudio
said
What would you say
Sorry, major slip-up. If P did not give G room to keep clear then it was not reasonably possible for G to avoid contact. G did not break rule 14.
to the arguments that,
Suppose we have Scenario 2, with half a boat length between P and G, my response would be that
The limitation on P is that, if she changes course she must give G room to keep clear. Certainly, if she started coming up earlier, she could have been doing so more gradually and thus giving G more room to respond.
.. and thus G not having enough room to avoid Y without hitting G P is on G?Sorry, don't follow the G's P's and Y's. G is not required to avoid Y: she is required to keep clear of Y, but G has ample room to windward to stay away from Y, and we have no evidence that G failed to keep clear of Y.
(this argument reflecting the idea G only has to give P room she is calling for
'calling', 'hailing', or 'yelling' are absolutely irrelevant to whether a boat is required to give room and have no effect on the meaning of the definition of room in the sense of the amount of space that is required to be given.
at the moment and G doesn't have to foresee
nothing in rule 18 about only being required to give room if it is 'foreseeable'. The only get ouf of gaol card for a boat required to give mark-room is rule 18.2f, and that only applies to a boat that obtained an inside overlap from clear astern or by tacking to windward and is unable to give mark-room: does not apply to G here.
the room that G would have to provide assuming Y's stern swing and P's avoiding move?).
Why are we suddenly talking about Y's stern-kick? As long as she's sailing within the mark-room to which she is entitled (which she obviously is), she can wave her stern wherever she llikes and the outside boats have to give her mark-room to do so.
What questions would you like to ask?
Depends on the narrative provided by the parties in their evidence, but would include distances, how fast/hard boats changed course, when boats changed course and stopped changing course, characteristics of boats etc etc.
I don't want to cause trouble but I am still unsure if rule 18 applies between the red/green pair in this particular situation for rounding the left mark. Here are my thoughts:
What would you say to the arguement(s) that ... (2) G's close proximity is P's fault in that P should have been forcing G up further and earlier around #3? .. and thus G P not having enough room to avoid Y without hitting G P G is on G P? (this argument reflecting the idea G only has to give P room she is calling for at the moment and G doesn't have to foresee the room that G would have to provide P assuming Y's stern swing and P's avoiding move?).
I don't think it changes John's analysis .. so I don't think need to repost .. just wanted to correct it.
Thanks for all the detailed replies John. - Ang
PS .. Daniel .. take a look at Case . It touches a lot of your questions. - Ang
PS PS .. also take a look at Case
At position 3, P and G are required to keep clear of Y and therefore Y is an obstruction to both boats. Rule 18 applies between all three boats. Because Y is not overlapped with each of P and G, rule 19 applies and G must give room to P under rule 19.2(b). P is keeping clear of Y. When Y changes course to round the mark, P must manoeuvre promptly in order to continue to keep clear of Y. Because there is contact between P and G, G has not given P room as required by 19.2(b).
Right of Way rules and other limitation rules are always independent of rule 17.
For example, a leeward overlapped boat can break rule 17, but the windward boat can also break rule 11: breach of rule 17 does not compel the windward boat to fail to keep clear (although a breach of rule 16.1 might) and the breach of rule 17 does not exonerate the breach of rule 11.
So the proper way to think of 18.4 at the leeward marks is that 18.4 applies to single marks and not at gates. Its application at single leeward marks is what prevents a leeward, inside ROW boat that would normally gybe around the mark .. from sailing an overlapped, outside, keep-clear boat far away from the mark.
Since the 2nd sentence turns-off 18.4 at gates, the requirement that the ROW "shall sail not further from the mark than needed to sail that course" is gone, freeing that boat to sail past the mark she is near and head to the other mark of the gate. So with all that, here are my responses more properly worded applying (and not applying) 18.4 where appropriate with additional commentary. (Thanks John).
Daniel ..
PS .. Daniel .. take a look at Case 75. It touches a lot of your questions & also take a look at Case 114
Yellow is an obstruction to Pink and Green.
Any objections to that conclusion? - Ang
PS: US Appeal 36 seems applicable
John Eilers
There is a difference between this scenario and US Appeal 36. Throughout this scenario, both P and G are required to keep clear of Y. P becomes overlapped with Y when Y gybes onto starboard tack (position 4). Rule 10 applies and requires P to keep clear of Y. Therefore Y is always an obstruction and rule 19 does not cease to apply when P becomes overlapped with Y.
G has not given P the room to manoeuvre to keep clear of Y and G breaks rule 19.2(b).
Because P has not been given room, it is not reasonably possible for P to avoid contact with G while avoiding Y. P does not break rule 14.
Angelo,
Now go back and strike out each of the dot points for which, if Pat Healy was marking a decision writing exam, he would deduct marks because they were irrelevant to the conclusion.
PS .. that said, though you might think some observations are "irrelevant", please do point out those which you find are incorrect.
And "A" ahead, "B" behind?
Yea .. they are rarely a perfect match . .but I thought it was still a useful Appeal to read and think about nonetheless in this context.
said Created: Today 01:50 Sorry, I couldn't disagree more.
The relational abbreviations and labels shown in the casebook are an arcane hangover from the days of black and white printing.
They are not, in fact, widely known or understood.
They are highly confusing when boats change position in relation to one another as a scenario develops.
Simple colour coding is far preferable.
If you are desperate for black and white reproduction, you can at least use Black,, White and Grey, as is done in the TR Call Book.
said Created: Today 01:30 No problems with the correctness as far as I can see, but I do commend you to the exercise of deleting the irrelevant steps. It's a good technique for writing decisions.
Great to hear. It was a valuable exercise for me. I agree doing the decision and having it critiqued would be a good experience as well. Will definitely do. - Ang
PRACTICE PROTEST DECISION FOR A HYPOTHETICAL SCENARIO BELOW. NOT AN ACTUAL PROTEST.
Party Protesting: Spin Keel - Pink Parties Being Protested: Spin Keel - GreenPARTIES AND WITNESSES
VALIDITY
Objection to Jury: No Within Time Limit: Within Time Limit Incident Identified: Yes Proper Hail: Protest hailed Red Flag Displayed: Yes DECISION: Protest ValidFACTS FOUND
Conditions: Wind 6-8kts, slight chop
Diagram: Diagram not endorsed
CONCLUSIONS AND RULES THAT APPLY
PS Note: #1-#6 were written under the mistaken notion that all rules that apply to a situation should be listed and reconciled as either broken or not. Based upon input later in this thread, these details are generally deemed extraneous and thus is not recommended and is even dissuaded from being listed in a Conclusion. Personally (just my opinion, but I'm not the one scoring the test!), I think #4-#6 are useful in understanding the conclusions and are concise (so I'm putting them in purple). I agree 100% that #1-#3 are the most superfluous as #4-#5 state the same info. - AG-
DECISION
Dammit, no, i'm not going to fall for that. This is an exercise for you.
Try these 'rules of thumb'.
Only state conclusions:
So, if this was a "real world" decision, I wouldn't have been as verbose. Certainly #1-#5 could be left off. That said, I have been told on more than one occasion that if a decision is being "scored" or "evaluated" that you might "loose points" if you don't list each rule that applies between the boats involved .. and then show how each of those rule obligations are resolved. That is the reason I put in #1-#5.
I put in #6 as I felt 19.1(b)'s application needed some support before declaring Yellow an obstruction while 18 applied.
So, yea, if that is actually not good guidance (that you should address and resolve each rule that might apply), then #1-#6 could be removed.
Yep .. I used Decision Wordings as the starting point for many of the lines.
OK .. so .. this IS NOT a real protest .. so I'll open it up to anyone else who would like to comment/correct/agree/disagree with my FF's/Conclusions/Decision .. or even how individual lines are stated.
Ang
So, for the above decision, I would say that conclusions #1 through #6 are "stating the negative." And #11 and #12 are stating the negative but are the weasel words we use for RRS 14. I would think that a concise conclusion would have only #7 through #12. And yes, I do recommend using the Suggested Wording as it really does make you think it terms of rules broken and limit your conclusion. There are some edge cases missing from the Suggested Wording, but you'll know it when it happens. Otherwise, if you're writing conclusions that are not in the Suggested Wording, you're probably not being concise enough.
I wonder if anyone on the forum who scores tests might weigh-in whether or not, in the context of taking cert-tests, its better to list all the rules that apply and resolve each one (like I did for #1-#6) or be more concise and only list the ones which are broken? .. or worse as John Allan implied that some scorers might find the information "irrelevant" and risk actually marking-you-down for their presence?
Not in general practice mind you, but in the test taking context.
Ang
I think there might be a problem with what people understand by the phrases 'applicable rules' or 'rules that apply' which itself stems from the Protest Form heading 'CONCLUSIONS AND RULES THAT APPLY'.
Read in full I take that heading to mean Conclusions and rules that apply to those conclusions.
It is evidently absurd to recite all the rules that apply throughout a scenario: rule 1.2, rule 43, rule 46 etc etc etc.
In the full heading on the Protest Form, 'rules that apply' is unobjectionable, but maybe in other contexts 'relevant' or 'pertinent' would be better words.
So, before you can start referring to 'rules that apply' you have to have reached your conclusions, and you are not going to consider and conclude about every rule that wasn't broken.
As to marks deductions for irrelevant material, as a candidate, I can definitely confirm that it happens .
I can't imagine that any examination in decision-writing would require inclusion of material that should not be included in a 'live' decision. There's a difference between a description/analysis exercise and a decision-writing test.
Would anybody care to add/delete/discuss the list I previously provided
Only state conclusions:
In the context of not wanting to list rules-not-broken, how would you ID this conclusion of no-rule-broken such that it won't be deemed extraneous? (btw .. maybe "extraneous" is a better descriptor of these unneeded no-rule-broken conclusions, rather than "irrelevant"?). Something like ... ?
"[Boat A] met its obligations [to Boat B]/[under RRS #] and thus did not break [RRS #], as [Boat B/C] alleged in the [protest-filing/hearing]"
It's important to remember that I wrote that Decision pretending it was going to be scored for certification, so it has been VERY useful to get the criticism and input that has been provided. It's valuable to understand what the standard is and it is no use to anyone (racers, judges, JIT's) for the standard to be a mystery or misunderstood, so I'm coming to the defense of the critique as it's what I asked for.
That said, I don't know if there has ever been a PC's decision overturned under appeal because superfluous (a better word than even "extraneous" I tihnk) no-rule-broken conclusions were included in the written copy of the decision, but it's not the proper or desired form.
Also, consider your circumstance and your audience as well. A written decision, especially at a local club-level event, is usually only provided upon request. If you find yourself on a PC and you quickly write-up something like I did in the room and use that to walk the parties though the decision, I don't think many here would poo-poo that, especially if this is a rare teaching moment for the parties.
On the other hand, if one of the parties asks for a written copy of the decision, especially if they are making sounds that they are going to appeal, then I think most here would suggest that the more concise approach is the desired form. - Ang
said Created: Today 12:48
In the context of not wanting to list rules-not-broken, how would you ID this conclusion of no-rule-broken such that it won't be deemed extraneous? (btw .. maybe "extraneous" is a better descriptor of these unneeded no-rule-broken conclusions, rather than "irrelevant"?). Something like ... ?
"[Boat A] met its obligations [to Boat B]/[under RRS #] and thus did not break [RRS #], as [Boat B/C] alleged in the [protest-filing/hearing]"
In an IJ exam, conclusions based on the above criterion would probably be considered superfluous and lose you marks. At events where you have an International Jury, competitors are expected to know the rules and, to an extent' to be able to 'read between the lines'.
However, at club level, If a party raises an issue about a rule, by number, by name, or by implication, then I think they deserve a direct, explicit answer.. That could very well save you an appeal.
I really would welcome any further discussion from others about this particular criterion and reasoning.
said Created: Today 14:28 A protest committee's written decision is a formal document recording and announcing the facts found, conclusions and decision of the protest committee (rule 65). It is not a 'learning tool'.
'Learning tools', in the form of the numerous rules commentary books, Cases and Appeals, and internet resources like this one are readily available.
Angelo Guarino
said Created: Today 16:10
...
That said, I don't know if there has ever been a PC's decision overturned under appeal because superfluous (a better word than even "extraneous" I tihnk) no-rule-broken conclusions were included in the written copy of the decision, but it's not the proper or desired form.
Neither have I, but the more you write in a decision, the more chance you have of making a mistake, which, even if irrelevant to the outcome, might encourage a party to appeal.
Also, consider your circumstance and your audience as well. A written decision, especially at a local club-level event, is usually only provided upon request.
I suggest that this is a really bad practice. Where I come from we invariably write the decision in full, usually on a laptop, before inviting the parties back into the room, when the written decision is read to the parties. Then, as a matter of course, the decision is emailed to the parties, and posted on the noticeboard.
Seeing a semi-illegible, scrawled, cramped, protest form page 2 posted, purporting to be a decision of a protest committee makes me feel embarrassed as a judge.
If you find yourself on a PC and you quickly write-up something like I did in the room
Facts Found were not too bad, although a couple could be deleted.
There were at least five conclusions that were unnecessary. Time spent in a protest room writing these would have been time ill-spent.
and use that to walk the parties though the decision, I don't think many here would poo-poo that,
Sorry, poo-poo.
If you presented 5 (out of 12) irrelevant conclusions to the parties before getting to the 'meat' of the conclusions, they would be highly likely to lose track or lose interest.
I don't agree that the protest committee should 'walk the parties through' the decision. All that is required is to read a carefully written decision.
especially if this is a rare teaching moment for the parties.
The primary purpose of a protest hearing and decision is to decide a dispute between the parties. Teaching rules is what coaches do.
On the other hand, if one of the parties asks for a written copy of the decision, especially if they are making sounds that they are going to appeal, then I think most here would suggest that the more concise approach is the desired form.
There can be only one best way to express a decision. Write the decision properly then read it to the parties.
In a perfect world, racers learn the RRS from coaches and seminars put on by qualified Judges. Out of all the adults sailing at the club level though, the % that have ever had a coach in their lives or since they have been adults is, I would imagine, quite small. For better or for worse, from local club race officers in the protest room is where many, many sailors learn and most of those local Race Officers (sounds like John E is one of them) are happy for the opportunity, because they know the more people out there that know the RRS, the fewer people are going to get hurt or put themselves in dangerous situations.
Maybe I have sympathy for John E's POV because I know when I helped run a local all-PHRF program along with a rag-tag box of other misfit toys, we took every opportunity that came along. Maybe that was wrong, but people do their best with the opportunities they are given. Protests were few and far between and we were happy to take the extra time and walk them though it.
PS .. which FF's would you delete? I tried to be complete knowing I was going write it without authorizing a drawing. I'll go back and number the FF's too.