I guess you were too busy to read what I have written. I never said "eliminate" all risk. I have used terms like reduce risk and manage risk.
Your "right response" fails to address the enforcement of standard including inspection. I hope your agency has not also left that out.
No what you said was:
"I do understand risk management. When you have unacceptable risks (unnecessary death is in that category) even with very low probabilities of occurrence, they earn a high priority for management. "
Please explain how there is an "unacceptable risk" in the PADI DSD program.
Then you said this little gem:
"I'm not saying PADI is wrong. I don't really know what they are doing. But I am really shocked at the attitude of some of the instructors on this board. The avoidable death of a student should not be acceptable collateral damage while you make a few extra bucks on the side."
How was the death "avoidable" on the Program/Agency side of this?
All available information points to instructor error and/or potentially a medical condition.
You do know that PADI makes no money on the DSD program, right? The only one who does directly is the instructor.
"There is no doubt in my mind that more can be done. But there seems to be little interest."
Maybe because instructors analyzing this tragedy are pretty isolated into two camps:
The anti-PADI crowd which thinks it's all about student ratios
And
Everyone else who sees it as a series of instructor and participant errors
But that's too simple for some folks who think there is a solution to every problem. Sometimes there isn't. And in this case- the blame is squarely on instructor and student error. The only way to fix the instructor error is unfortunately post facto- because how could anyone know the series of mistakes made that lead to this- especially since they violated training standards he was supposed to maintain.
---------- Post added December 22nd, 2014 at 07:14 PM ----------
Yes and all the facts claimed by opposing counsel in other threads go right out the window with it.!