[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 33, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2001]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 33CFR207.680]

[Page 82-85]
 
                TITLE 33--NAVIGATION AND NAVIGABLE WATERS
 
         CHAPTER II--CORPS OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
 
PART 207--NAVIGATION REGULATIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 207.680  Willamette River, Oreg.; use, administration, and navigation of canal and locks at Willamette Falls, Oreg.

    (a) Administration--(1) Administrative jurisdiction. The canal and 
locks and all appurtenances shall be in the charge of the District 
Engineer, Portland District, Corps of Engineers, Department of the Army, 
319 S.W. Pine Street, Portland, Oregon 97208. The representative of the 
District Engineer at the locality shall be the lockmaster, who shall 
receive his orders and instructions from the district engineer. In case 
of emergency, however, the lockmaster shall have authority to take such 
steps as may be immediately necessary without waiting for instruction 
from the district engineer.
    (2) Operational jurisdiction. The lock master shall be charged with 
the immediate control and management of the canal and locks and the 
grounds and public property pertaining thereto. He shall see that all 
laws, rules and regulations, for the use of the canal and grounds are 
duly complied with, to which end he is authorized to give all necessary 
orders and directions in accordance therewith, both to employees of the 
Government and to any and every person within the limits of the canal 
and locks or grounds pertaining thereto, whether navigating the canal or 
not. In case of the absence or disability of the lock master, his duty 
shall be performed by an assistant or

[[Page 83]]

other employee to be designated by the District Engineer.
    (b) Use and navigation--(1) Authority of lock master. The lock 
master or his assistants shall direct the movement, operation, and 
moorage of all vessels, boats, rafts, barges, or other floating things 
using the locks, while they are in the locks, the canal basin, or in 
either the upstream or downstream lock approaches. Crews of vessels, 
boats, rafts, barges, or other floating things seeking lockage shall 
render such assistance as the lock master or his assistants may require.
    (2) Signals. All vessels desiring lockage shall signal the same by 
one long and one short blast of the whistle, delivered at a distance of 
approximately 1,000 feet from the locks. Requests for lockage may also 
be made by contacting the lockmaster on VHF-FM radio on channel 14, at 
WUJ 363, Willamette Falls Locks or by telephone or otherwise notifying 
the lockmaster's office. Notice to vessels desiring lockage will be 
given by red and green traffic lights. Vessels may enter locks on green 
lights, but must await green signal when lights are red. Permission to 
leave the lock will be given in the same manner. In the event a failure 
occurs and the referenced lights cannot be operated, the lockmaster will 
indicate by voice or by hand or lantern signals when vessels may enter 
or leave the locks.
    (3) Controlling dimensions. For lockage purposes the maximum length 
of space available is 175 feet and the maximum clear width available is 
37 feet. All vessels, boats, rafts, barges, or other floating things of 
less size than the foregoing dimensions can pass through the locks. The 
controlling water depth over the intermediate miter sills throughout the 
locks is 6.5 feet. However, the depth on the sill of the upstream gate 
at low water is 7.5 feet and over the downstream sill is 8.4 feet. The 
elevation of the upstream sill is 43.7 feet and of the downstream sill 
is -6.4 feet, corresponding to the elevations shown on the gages 
provided at both the downstream and upstream approaches to the locks. 
All vessels, boats, rafts, barges, and other floating things of which 
the dimensions or draft are greater than will permit clearing any of the 
above indicated elevations shall be prohibited from entering the locks. 
All vessels, boats, rafts, barges or other floating things entering the 
locks in violation of the above shall be responsible for all resulting 
damages.
    (4) Precedence at locks. Ordinarily the vessel, boat, raft, barge, 
or other floating thing arriving first at the lock will be locked 
through first. In the event of a simultaneous approach from opposite 
directions ascending craft will ordinarily be locked through first. When 
several boats are to be passed through the locks, the order of 
precedence shall be as follows:
    (i) To boats owned by the United States or employed upon river and 
harbor improvement work.
    (ii) To passenger boats.
    (iii) To freight and tow boats.
    (iv) To rafts.
    (v) To small vessels and pleasure craft.

The lock master shall have authority to digress from the above 
precedence in order to eliminate reversing the flow of traffic through 
the locks when both upbound and downbound lockages are in waiting.
    (5) Entrance to locks. The lock master shall decide whether one or 
more vessels may be locked through at the same time. No one shall 
attempt to enter the locks with a vessel or attempt to cause a vessel to 
enter the locks until he is authorized by the lock master to do so. No 
one shall take a vessel, or cause a vessel to be taken, within the 
limits of 500 feet above the upper gate and 300 feet below the lower 
gate, except for the purpose of entering the locks; and not for this 
purpose until it has been indicated to him by a proper person by signal 
that the lock is ready to receive the vessel. All vessels within the 
foregoing limits must be operated under ``slow bell'' and be kept 
constantly under control.
    (6) Lockage of small boats. Pleasure boats, skiffs, fishing boats, 
and other small craft may be passed through the locks singularly, in 
groups, or as part of a lockage of other than pleasure craft. A 
continual flow of traffic in one direction will not be interrupted or 
reversed to accommodate these small pleasure boats. However, any such 
small boat will be accommodated at

[[Page 84]]

such time as the lock master upon receipt of a request for lockage deems 
such action will not interfere with other traffic. The decision of the 
lock master shall be final as to whether craft requesting lockage is 
defined as a pleasure boat.
    (7) Use of canal locks. No person, unless authorized by the 
lockmaster or his assistants, shall open or close any bridge, lock gate, 
wicket gate, or operate any lock machinery, or in any way interfere with 
any mechanism or appliance connected with the operation of the locks, 
nor shall anyone interfere with the employees in the discharge of their 
duties. The lockmaster or his assistants may call for aid from the 
persons in charge of any craft, vessel, or raft using the lock should 
such aid be necessary. Persons rendering such assistance shall be 
strictly under the orders of the lockmaster. The Government reserves the 
right to refuse lockage to any vessel, craft or raft when the persons in 
charge thereof refuse to give such assistance when it is requested. The 
persons in charge of vessels with tows or rafts, barges and other craft 
must provide sufficient personnel, lines and towing equipment of 
sufficient power to insure at all times full control of such tows, 
rafts, barges and other craft while moving into and through the locks, 
unless otherwise prearranged with the lockmaster. A copy of these 
regulations shall be kept on board each vessel regularly engaged in 
navigating the locks. Copies may be obtained without charge from the 
lockmaster or from the District Engineer, Corps of Engineers, Department 
of the Army, 319 S.W. Pine Street, Post Office Box 2946, Portland, 
Oregon 97208.
    (8) Petroleum vessels. All tankers, barges, and other floating 
equipment, used for transporting inflammable liquids, either with or 
without cargo, shall be equipped with fixed timber fenders and, if not 
so equipped, shall have aboard an adequate number of suitable fenders of 
timber, rubber, or rope which are to be placed between the vessel and 
unfendered lock structures. All such barges or other vessels navigating 
without power within the canal or locks must be assisted by one or more 
tugs of sufficient power to insure full control at all times whether 
passing upstream or downstream through the locks with or without cargo.
    (9) Mooring in locks. All boats, barges, rafts, and other craft when 
in the locks shall be moored by head and spring lines and such other 
lines as may be necessary to the fastenings provided for that purpose; 
and the lines shall not be unloosed until the signal is given for the 
vessel to leave the lock.
    (10) Mooring while waiting for lockage. The mooring of boats, tows 
or other craft in the approaches to the locks where such mooring will 
interfere with navigation or other vessels to or from the locks is 
prohibited.
    (11) Delays. Boats, barges, rafts, or other craft must not obstruct 
navigation by unnecessary delay in entering or leaving the locks. 
Vessels failing to enter the locks with reasonable promptness, when 
signaled to do so, and vessels arriving at the locks with their tows in 
such shape so as to impede lockage shall forfeit their turn.
    (12) Landing of freight. No freight or baggage shall be unloaded on 
or over the walls of the canal or locks. Freight and baggage consigned 
to the Willamette Falls locks shall be unloaded only at such places as 
may be provided for this purpose or as directed by the lock master.
    (13) Refuse in canal or locks. No refuse or other material shall be 
thrown or dumped from vessels into the canal and locks, or deposited in 
the lock area, or placed on the berm of the canal so that it is liable 
to be thrown or washed into the waterway. Violations of this paragraph 
(b)(13) shall be subject to sections 13 and 16 of the River and Harbor 
Act of March 3, 1899 (33 U.S.C. 407, 411).
    (14) Damage to locks or other structures. The regulations contained 
in this section shall not affect the liability of the owners and 
operators of vessels for any damage caused by their operations to the 
locks or other structures. Persons in charge of vessels and log rafts 
passing through the locks must use great care to prevent the vessels or 
log rafts from striking any gate or appurtenance thereto. All boats or 
barges with metal nosings, or projecting irons, or rough surfaces, and 
log rafts with dragging cables that may damage any part of

[[Page 85]]

the lock structures will not be permitted to enter the locks unless said 
craft are provided with suitable protective buffers and fenders and log 
rafts are free of loose, dragging cables.
    (c) [Reserved]
    (d) Trespass. No one shall trespass on the grounds or buildings, and 
everyone shall be deemed guilty of trespass within the meaning of this 
paragraph who shall willfully or carelessly damage or disfigure the 
canal and locks or any part thereof, or any building or appliance on the 
grounds, or who shall carry on business or trading of any sort, or shall 
build any fishing stand or lead, or set any fish net within the limits 
of the reservation, or do any act to or on the grounds or buildings 
which would be recognized by law as a trespass.
    (e) Definitions. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b)(6) of 
this section, whenever such a word as ``vessel'', ``boat'', ``barge'', 
``raft'', or the like is used in this section, it shall include all 
types of floating things which may be subject to lockage. Failure to 
refer specifically to a type of floating thing by its name shall not 
mean exclusion thereof from applicability of this section.

[19 FR 5816, Sept. 9, 1954, as amended at 35 FR 14988, Sept. 26, 1970; 
48 FR 10062, Mar. 10, 1983; 56 FR 13765, Apr. 4, 1991]