Postby Phrancus » August 31st, 2021, 2:47 am
Here (note; Europe) we're charged by the square meter. So width also matters. As long as we have more long boats than short, this works out fine so we don't get small boats occupying big slips.
This is not a commercial port though, so it's the members through the chairman (plus team) who decide what is fair and what is less (or not but acceptable in the end).
All fees together pay for all water/electricity/maintenance etc so no complex charging system for that. A bit of monitoring of electricity (expensive over here) is done to distinguish between heavy users and the usual trickle charge users.
Generally: bigger boat, member for longer, more involved in the club, more to say. Newcomers are seasonal guests at first and can choose to apply for membership. Members get the right to vote and pay a relatively high entrance fee but get discount on the per meter fee. To avoid people coming and going too quickly and influencing the longer term stability of the club's strategy and rules.
In the end it's always a discussion with many variables. What to do with that anchor sticking out, or a dinghy, or the height blocking the view from the terrace, and some slips have different specifications (high, low, long, short, pole, etc). Policy is to keep it simple and even it all out. Those with much higher 'advantage' are known and generally donate a voluntary extra to the club.
The slips are used for guests who visit and pay an overall fee per night. That usually fills in the financial holes in the budget.
Share your Carver experiences, share marine life. Donate when you can but post what your Carver adds to your life too!