puckvirus
Contributor
NWGratefulDiver:This was an AOW night dive. According to one of the participants, they were not told until they arrived at the site that the planned depth was 200 feet. When one of the new divers objected, the instructor assured them that it would be alright. As it turned out, that diver and his dive buddy bailed on the dive at 55 feet, due to current and poor vis conditions. The other four continued to the bottom ... the depth on one diver's computer registered 211 feet.
NWGratefulDiver:This instructor had no insurance at the time of the accident ...
You have got to be kidding here? [I know your not] The first big question I have is: Why did the dive shop allow this instructor to continue teaching without insurance? As I do understand it, most agency's require it to even be a dive master more less be an instructor? While I do understand this is a situation where the instructor is primarily at fault here; however after reading your statements I wonder about my above question and wonder if this accident could have been avoided if the dive shop prevented said instructor from teaching said class to begin with?
I do assume that most dive shops check (or have the responsibility) to check if their instructors have the correct credentials for teaching classes and that they [instructors] maintain insurance?