Mike, I studied up a bit more on all this. Much of the information below is directly from USHIP:
Any legal carrier should be authorized by the Federal Motor Carrier Authority and the Federal DOT. The website SAFER (
http://www.safersys.org) allows you to look up your carrier by their MC and DOT license numbers. They charge $20 for a Comopany Safety Profile (CSP) which is emailed to the user within 72 hours. This is probably overkill, but for our boats is might be worth it. Before you buy the CSP consider doing the following:
The insurance issue is real. You will need additional insurance from the shipping company because your personal boat insurance probably won’t cover any professional transportation damages. You can look up a carrier’s insurance information on SAFER (
http://www.safersys.org). Make sure they offer cargo insurance, as basic liability insurance won’t cover your boat. If their base insurance policy doesn’t cover your boat’s value, it may be a good idea to ask about purchasing additional coverage. I found it easy to look up a company's (snapshot) profle on USHIP which listed both DOT and MC numbers in the form of links. I'll call my own insurance company to see if my boat is covered during transport by someone else, too.
Clicking on the MC link on the USHIP snapshot for Sharp Yachts brought me up SAFER's database information as of 5/3/11 at 7:06AM detailing stuff like how many drivers they have, how much mileage they logged in 2009, what they ship, interstate or not, etc. Even crashes for the prior 24 months are listed and detailed. Their BIPD (bodily injury and property damage), Cargo and Bond insurance limits were on file. For Sharp they have $750,000 BIPD but no Cargo or Bond insurance on file, so that's a wake-up call to get copies of their Cargo Ins.–they advertise $200k but I'd still want to see a copy. Clicking on the DOT link at the USHIP snapshot brought up essentially the same information.
Whether you use USHIP to move a boat or not, you should use it for education. Their articles are excellent and train you as to the right questions to ask of a transporter, how to negotiate, what not to do, and how to prepare the boat for shipping, all about trailer prep, how to measure the boat, and advice for international shipping:
http://www.uship.com/boats/articles/choosing-boat-carrier/. Also, use it for the snapshot background of any transporter you are considering along with the easy look up of their SAFER information by clicking on their DOT and MC numbers. Finally, the feedback aggregation is superb with detailed comments. The feedback on Sharp Yachts dated right to 2 weeks ago. Remember, Sharp can respond to negative feedback but they can't hide or remove it from USHIP's feedback page so you can read all 43 feedbacks dating all the way back to 06/20/08. Sure many shippers wouldn't bother with feedback, but you can be sure the disappointed ones probably would! They even list feedback from potential shippers that cancelled with Sharp, explaining why they did. Usually this is because they got a better bid.
There may well be 'fly by night' operators listed on USHIP, but they will have to have MC and DOT numbers so you won't find any guys making extra money with their 3/4 ton rigs on weekends. Aside from the normal risk of accidents all transporters face, I'd say if I hired a bad guy it would only be because I was too lazy/uninformed to check them out in detail or ask the right questions. USHIP helps the process immensely while saving money thru bids (if you go with one of their competitive bidders). I wouldn't blame USHIP for my folly, since they only provide information and recommendations from other shippers and government agencies (e.g., the FMCA and DOT). There's no way you could get all this stuff by calling a guy recommended by a friend or a boatyard based on experience with just one or a few moves. I'm impressed the more I study this site. How can you wind up with a 'fly by night' if they have no accidents, have 100% positive feedback over 40+ moves for the last three years, have a profile saying all they do is move boats, etc. And, you can get competitive bids from a bunch of these professionals. Just weed out any with even the slightest hint of a problem and communicate with the best of the bunch, only.