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The PADI form includes the following verbiage:
“You must complete this Medical Statement, which includes the medical questionnaire section, to enroll in the scuba training program.”
Maybe I'm missing something in 24 pages of the thread, but I read this as her asking if a doctors certificate was required for her husband to do OWD (in Japan) through PADI. She didn't say anything about checking boxes, and she has only posted twice (the OP and one clarification) on page 1.
As far as a transfer of liability, why is that such an awful thing for any company to do? I mean, every dive boat that I have ever been on does it.
Yeah, you can bet I'll be following up on that this week.Not requiring answers when doctor's signature is provided is the reasonable thing to do and if PADI tells its instructors to do it, more power to them. What boggles my mind is that after 50 pages of this a year, every year, people still don't get it that unless there is an official statement to that effect on PADI letterhead, with PADI date and PADI stamp, publicly available from PADI, only one of those two is an official requirement. The other is hearsay, something I read on the Internet (therefore it must be true).
Yeah, you can bet I'll be following up on that this week.
Will likely be a topic included with updates at the Vegas DEMA Show in a couple of weeks. PADI has also been moving towards online paperwork rather than relying on the printed forms. I'm not sure where they are with those options at the moment, as I am still in a comfort zone that involves killing a few trees. Just haven't had the need yet.Tell them to tell WRSTC that you either have to
- refuse to train EU citizens (and possibly residents as well), or
- get your paperwork, document storage, and disclosure rules and procedures, examined and certified for GDPR compliance.
Either of which would drive the cost of doing business with a WRSTC-affiliated agency unacceptably high.
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Lol ! More seriously I think GDPR would apply only to business made in the EU, EU citizens doing their business in the US wouldn’t require the US business to apply EU laws ?Tell them to tell WRSTC that you either have to
- refuse to train EU citizens (and possibly residents as well), or
- get your paperwork, document storage, and disclosure rules and procedures, examined and certified for GDPR compliance.
Either of which would drive the cost of doing business with a WRSTC-affiliated agency unacceptably high.
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Not a lawyer, and I don't play one on TV, but I'm thinking the law can apply anywhere they want it to apply, the question would be just how they would/could plan to enforce it?Lol ! More seriously I think GDPR would apply only to business made in the EU, EU citizens doing their business in the US wouldn’t require the US business to apply EU laws ?