When PADI (Professional Association of Diving Instructors) standardized diver training and retail in 1966, they opened the floodgates and the industry grew wildly. Initially it facilitated the establishment of safe training standards and a marketable and insurable product. However over the years the profession became saturated with training agencies, Instructors, dive boat charter companies and shops.
The training agencies, in order to maintain their annuals sales have not only had to continue to improve their product line, but increase it as well offering dozens of specialty training programs each requiring a manual and certification fee. In addition to expanding curriculum they made it easier to both become an Instructor, and to be an Instructor. Eventually the standards for all programs from open water level through to Instructor Trainer required less experience and prerequisites not too mention a less intense qualifying process.
Quality assurance is now the hot topic of discussion among insurance brokers around the world. The insurance companies that have provided liability Insurance to diving professionals for reasonable rates over the decades have recently either cancelled those policies or are now offering them at exorbitant rates. These underwriters are citing a lack of quality control on behalf of the training agencies consequently leading to costly arbitration associated to diving incidents.
Today the industry is inundated with ‘fast food’ style products, including ‘whirlwind’ introductory courses to cattle boats dropping platoons of mud-puppies on vulnerable environments. We are now faced with a generation of diving Instructors who have little no experience relative to the calibre of professionals in the industry fifteen or twenty years ago. As a result the industry has experienced a dilution in the level of competency and ability expected of a diving professional. Yes, I am generalizing, and I do need to acknowledge the various operations and individuals who have committed the time and effort to maintain a quality product and service. There are several excellent and experienced professionals, many with whom I hold a great deal of respect and admiration for.
We also have to extend some gratitude to the training agencies for without them we all would not likely have had the positive and rewarding careers we have had in this business. Remember when Instructors could recount countless tales of adventure, each with a learning point or two? They demonstrated confidence and you could not help but respect their experience and knowledge. It made you want to go out and explore and learn all that you could about the underwater world. For anyone who has been in this business for more than ten years however, the change in Instructor experience is significant. Despite DAN’s (Divers Alert Network) statistics that show a decline in diver accidents per capita over the last fifty years, anyone with any time served on the front lines of dive tourism knows that the border between a safe dive and a diving incident is increasingly becoming more vulnerable. Perhaps what has helped keep the statistics low is the vast improvement on diving equipment. In fact if I had to provide some key milestones in the development of the diving industry that have contributed to the reduction in diver accidents I would list the following;   Â
Improvements of diving equipment technology   Â
Advancement of the continuing diver training for using that equipment
Spreading awareness of the risks involved and the value of training
Somewhat ironic is it not, that training can quickly go from a positive aspect in creating a safe diving infrastructure to a weak link? Where are we going in this industry if the same intrinsic value that abruptly lowered the rate of diving accidents and added adventure to diving, is quickly becoming watered down?
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