Taxi Diver: Foreign Boat Wants to Ferry Passengers in U.S. Coasts?
Published Date: 5/13/2026
Notice
Summary
The government is asking for your thoughts on letting a foreign-built small passenger boat, the M/V TAXI DIVER, operate in U.S. coastal waters. This could affect U.S. boat builders and businesses that use American-made vessels. You have until June 12, 2026, to share your opinion before a final decision is made.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 0 benefits, 2 costs, 0 mixed.
Foreign-built Vessel Could Hurt U.S. Builders
The Maritime Administration (MARAD) is considering a request to let the foreign-built small passenger vessel M/V TAXI DIVER, which would carry no more than 12 passengers for hire, operate in U.S. coastwise trade. MARAD is asking for public comments by June 12, 2026 on whether allowing this use would have an undue adverse effect on U.S. vessel builders.
May Affect Coastwise Trade Businesses
MARAD seeks comment on whether permitting the M/V TAXI DIVER to operate in U.S. coastal waters would adversely affect U.S. coastwise trade businesses that employ U.S.-built vessels. Interested parties may submit comments to Docket MARAD-2026-0700 by June 12, 2026 to present evidence of any undue adverse effect.
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this regulation affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Key Dates
Department and Agencies
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-09579 — Request Notice: Use of Foreign-Built Small Passenger Vessel in United States Coastwise Trade, M/V ALOLKOY
The government is asking for your thoughts on letting a foreign-built small passenger boat, the M/V ALOLKOY, operate in U.S. coastal waters carrying up to 12 passengers. This could affect U.S. boat builders and businesses that use American-made vessels, so they want to make sure it won’t hurt local jobs or trade. You’ve got until June 15, 2026, to share your opinion—no cost changes yet, just a chance to weigh in!
2026-09550 — Request Notice: Use of Foreign-Built Small Passenger Vessel in United States Coastwise Trade, S/V DAMA LINDO
The Maritime Administration is asking for your thoughts on letting a foreign-built small passenger boat, the S/V DAMA LINDO, operate in U.S. coastal waters carrying up to 12 paying passengers. This could affect U.S. boat builders and businesses that use American-made vessels, so they want to hear from the public by June 12, 2026. If approved, this might open doors for more foreign boats but also raise questions about supporting local shipbuilders.
2026-09549 — Request Notice: Use of Foreign-Built Small Passenger Vessel in United States Coastwise Trade, S/V DEVINE SAILING
The government is asking for your thoughts on letting a foreign-built small passenger boat, the S/V DEVINE SAILING, operate in U.S. coastal waters carrying up to 12 paying passengers. This could affect U.S. boat builders and businesses using American-made vessels, so they want to hear from the public by June 12, 2026. No money changes hands yet, but your input could shape future rules!
2026-09548 — Request Notice: Use of Foreign-Built Small Passenger Vessel in United States Coastwise Trade, S/V LA BATEAU
The government is asking for your thoughts on letting a foreign-built small passenger boat, S/V LA BATEAU, operate in U.S. coastal waters carrying up to 12 paying passengers. This could affect U.S. boat builders and businesses that use American-made vessels, so they want to make sure it won’t hurt local jobs or trade. You’ve got until June 12, 2026, to share your opinion—no cost to comment, just your voice!
2026-09552 — Request Notice: Use of Foreign-Built Small Passenger Vessel in United States Coastwise Trade, S/V ALDEBARAN
The Maritime Administration is asking for your thoughts on letting a foreign-built small passenger boat, the S/V ALDEBARAN, operate in U.S. coastal waters. This could affect U.S. boat builders and businesses that use American-made vessels. You’ve got until June 12, 2026, to share your opinion before a final decision is made.
2026-09545 — Request Notice: Use of Foreign-Built Small Passenger Vessel in United States Coastwise Trade, M/V REMEDY
The government is asking for your thoughts on letting a foreign-built small passenger boat, the M/V REMEDY, operate in U.S. coastal waters carrying up to 12 passengers. This could affect U.S. boat builders and businesses that use American-made vessels, so they want to make sure it won’t hurt local jobs or trade. You have until June 12, 2026, to share your opinion—no cost changes yet, just a decision in the works!
Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2026-09545 — Request Notice: Use of Foreign-Built Small Passenger Vessel in United States Coastwise Trade, M/V REMEDY
The government is asking for your thoughts on letting a foreign-built small passenger boat, the M/V REMEDY, operate in U.S. coastal waters carrying up to 12 passengers. This could affect U.S. boat builders and businesses that use American-made vessels, so they want to make sure it won’t hurt local jobs or trade. You have until June 12, 2026, to share your opinion—no cost changes yet, just a decision in the works!
Next: 2026-09547 — Request Notice: Use of Foreign-Built Small Passenger Vessel in United States Coastwise Trade, M/V MISS APALACHICOLA
The Maritime Administration is checking if a foreign-built small passenger boat, the M/V MISS APALACHICOLA, can be used for U.S. coastal trips carrying up to 12 passengers. They want to make sure this won’t hurt U.S. boat builders or businesses using American-made vessels. If you have thoughts, send your comments by June 12, 2026!