Boats are lined up in a marina in the town of Baileys Harbor, Wis., in Door County on July 28, 2021. (Coburn Dukehart and Tad Dukehart / Wisconsin Watch)
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In Wisconsin, boating accidents reported to the Coast Guard that involved drugs or alcohol were nearly 25% more likely to result in injury than accidents not involving drugs or alcohol.

Recreational boaters across the United States are required to report boating accidents that result in death, serious injury, disappearance or significant damage. The Data Liberation Project filed a public request for this data and published it as a database for outside use. The resulting data ranges from 2009 to 2023.

In Wisconsin, there have been 1,574 unique boating accidents over the 15-year period — about 100 per year. Of these accidents, about 88.7% did not have alcohol or drugs reported as a cause. 11.3% involved one or both of these causes. 

On average, accidents that involved alcohol or drugs would result in at least one death or serious injury. Half of the accidents reported to the coast guard resulted in death when alcohol or drugs were involved. This is more than 30% more often than incidents where no drugs or alcohol were involved.

Overall, when drugs and alcohol were not involved, about three in four accidents resulted in a death or serious injury.

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Khushboo Rathore graduated from the University of Maryland, College Park, in May with a dual degree in journalism and information science. Her main focus is data journalism, with a specialization in gathering inaccessible data and creating visualizations and websites to show information. She has worked on projects with the Associated Press, Howard Center for Investigative Journalism, Local News Network and The Frederick News-Post. Her journalism interests include education equity, public policy and public figure accountability.