drrich2
Contributor
One diver said Dutch Springs, owned by Stuart Schooley and his wife, Jane Wells Schooley, could do more to alert divers of the risks. Tom Kozlowski, a recreational diver from Bethlehem, said Dutch Springs should post signs indicating the number of fatalities it has had as a way to drive home warnings about the dangers.
Or divers could be adults or under adult supervision by their parents or parentally chosen care takers. Should McDonalds put annual heart attack & diabetes statistics on Big Mac wrappers? Who runs a business trying to scare people off?
I envision walking into the dive shop to check in, and a wide-eyed, crazy-looking staffer reaches across the counter, grabs me by the shirt and shrieks 'You could die!!! There's death waiting down there! Death I tell you!' What is this 'do more' crap? If you go underwater, you could drown. If you go underwater & have a heart attack or similar major medical event, you could die. If you run out of air underwater, that is not good.
Is diving going to become regulated like the tobacco industry? Are tanks going to be sold with photos of bloated dead divers on them?
At the 100-acre Dutch Springs recreation area, there have been 16 deaths since 1986, according to The Morning Call's archives. It's difficult to determine if that is a high or low number of deaths for one diving area. Because there is no regulatory agency overseeing the sport, statistics on diving deaths aren't readily available.
Because there's not yet another government regulatory agency blowing tax dollars regulating people who don't want to be regulated?
After two deaths at Dutch Springs during a less-than-three-week period in 1986, Schooley contemplated getting out of the business. He ultimately decided to keep Dutch Springs and instituted a safety patrol.
Up to four or five dive masters or instructors are on hand to patrol the shores and look for signs of inexperience or trouble. Schooley says the operation has emergency medical technicians and paramedics on site and a safety boat.
Dutch Springs prohibits solo diving except for those with a solo diving certification card. Those divers must provide additional paperwork and use a dive locater, a sort of tracking device. Solo divers must also file a dive plan.
"We have to be assured that if they're not with an instructor that they know what they're doing," Schooley said during an interview this month.
And this is how regulation tends to work out. Nobody is supposed to die. Every time somebody does (& they will), your measures aren't adequate, you could 'do more,' and you need a 'plan of correction' with more requirements.
Northampton County Coroner Zachary Lysek said that during the death investigations his office has done at Dutch Springs, Schooley and his staff have been cooperative.
"I have found that they adequately warned the divers [about the dangers] and had adequate safety measures," Lysek said.
"It's a high-risk recreational activity," he added. "You make one mistake, it's not forgiving."
High risk compared to what? Hiding under your bed? Yes, people can die diving. But I think the large majority of mistakes don't result in serious injury. Look at all the posts on this forum criticizing what someone saw another diver do.
It sounds like Dutch Springs management has considerable safety management features in place. Compare that to when we read posts about some dive op.s basically acting as taxis to & from dive sites rather than 'molly coddlers' providing adult supervision, and posts talking about how people should be responsible for themselves.
Richard.