Do I need an SMS if I run a small seasonal charter boat?
Yes, in most cases. If your charter boat carries passengers commercially in Canadian waters, you are required to have a documented Safety Management System under MSMSR. Seasonal operation does not exempt you: the regulation applies based on what your vessel does when it is operating, not how many months per year. Vessel size, voyage area, and commercial use all factor into your class determination. Class 4B passenger vessel operators must obtain a Canadian Maritime Document from Transport Canada. When in doubt, a free applicability check takes under 30 minutes.
How do I know what class my vessel is under MSMSR?
Your vessel class under MSMSR is determined by three factors: the type of operation (passenger or non-passenger), your vessel’s size in gross tonnes, and the waters you operate in (unlimited, near-coastal Class I, near-coastal Class II, or sheltered). Most Ontario charter and tour boat operators carrying passengers commercially on the Great Lakes or inland waterways fall into Class 4B. Class 4B is split by vessel length: over 7 metres (grace period ended 2 July 2025) and 7 metres and under (grace period ends 2 July 2026). Class 4B requires a TC application and CMD. Non-passenger commercial vessels under 15 GT typically fall into Class 5. Your classification drives your deadline, your documentation requirements, and the TC application path you follow.
What has to be in my Safety Management System?
Under Transport Canada’s TP 15566 guidance, your SMS must include: a signed safety and environmental protection policy; a Ship Manager identified via Form 85-0547A; a Master’s authority statement; crew competency and training records; documented operational procedures for normal and non-standard situations; emergency response procedures by scenario (fire, flooding, MOB, collision, grounding); a maintenance and inspection program; a system for reporting incidents and near-misses; document control procedures; and an annual internal review with a Management Review Report. The full list of SMS elements is detailed in the Deadlines and SMS content sections above.
Can I use a template, or does everything have to be custom?
A template is a legitimate starting point, but Transport Canada expects your SMS to accurately reflect your vessel, your routes, and your crew. A generic document with your name pasted in will not survive an inspection. Procedures, emergency plans, crew assignments, maintenance schedules, and voyage-specific content all need to match what actually happens on your boat. Aurora Marine builds from established frameworks that are then fully customized to your operation; you get the efficiency of a structured starting point without the compliance risk of a one-size-fits-all document.