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if they are motivated by the bottom line regardless of safety then if the instructor is worth anything they will jump ship and move to another agency, plain and simple. PADI has come a long way in the last few years, they're still the best scuba publishing company in the business, but they must have had some long hard discussions over the last 5 years about where they're headed. We pick on them constantly, but they are changing for the better. NAUI has a lot of work to do, but I think Chris Richardson is kicking them a bit to get on it faster than they may have liked. GUE has the ability to make that call regarding safety maybe a bit easier than the others, but the CDS, NACD, and IANTD are small enough that they are able to make those same calls if they choose to. It appears the NACD has decided to make that decision.
Victor made a good point about having an "end" to their training progression earlier which I guess can coincide with the Equivalent Narcotic Depth for END mentioned recently. If the cave agencies stay strictly cave agencies, we teach cave diving nothing more. Cave, sidemount cave, technical cave, DPV cave, CCR cave, and acknowledge other agencies are going to handle mixed gasses and the actual CCR training, then the instructors have an easier time because now it is no longer "our cave" vs "your cave", it is just classes with no crossover. Recreational agencies are a bit different because you can teach a PADI and a NAUI OW, rescue, whatever type class without blatantly violating one of the others standards to the point where safety comes into play, and they are easier to distinguish the two. It gets a little fuzzy with leadership since NAUI and PADI have a rather pronounced disagreement on what constitutes a divemaster, but even then it is easier to distinguish. This is a non-issue for technical diving when instructors have one "class" regardless of which agency they are teaching for at the time, so long as those agencies mostly agree. Obvious three are classes combining NACD/CDS/IANTD classes, this is a nonissue because the standards are basically the same with some very minor differences. Throw in an agency with a different philosophy and it not becomes an issue.
James made a great comment about JJ, that one is obvious. It is an extreme example, but it lays it out clearly. Frankly I am with him about forgiving prior transgressions as long as they weren't extremely unsafe, and just fixing it from here. Tell the instructors the new rules, if they don't like it leave. Clean house. This incident wouldn't gain much since the instructor hasn't been actively teaching in almost 5 years.... I think he is still current with a few agencies, but he hasn't been seen in cave country in a long time, certainly not teaching classes
Victor made a good point about having an "end" to their training progression earlier which I guess can coincide with the Equivalent Narcotic Depth for END mentioned recently. If the cave agencies stay strictly cave agencies, we teach cave diving nothing more. Cave, sidemount cave, technical cave, DPV cave, CCR cave, and acknowledge other agencies are going to handle mixed gasses and the actual CCR training, then the instructors have an easier time because now it is no longer "our cave" vs "your cave", it is just classes with no crossover. Recreational agencies are a bit different because you can teach a PADI and a NAUI OW, rescue, whatever type class without blatantly violating one of the others standards to the point where safety comes into play, and they are easier to distinguish the two. It gets a little fuzzy with leadership since NAUI and PADI have a rather pronounced disagreement on what constitutes a divemaster, but even then it is easier to distinguish. This is a non-issue for technical diving when instructors have one "class" regardless of which agency they are teaching for at the time, so long as those agencies mostly agree. Obvious three are classes combining NACD/CDS/IANTD classes, this is a nonissue because the standards are basically the same with some very minor differences. Throw in an agency with a different philosophy and it not becomes an issue.
James made a great comment about JJ, that one is obvious. It is an extreme example, but it lays it out clearly. Frankly I am with him about forgiving prior transgressions as long as they weren't extremely unsafe, and just fixing it from here. Tell the instructors the new rules, if they don't like it leave. Clean house. This incident wouldn't gain much since the instructor hasn't been actively teaching in almost 5 years.... I think he is still current with a few agencies, but he hasn't been seen in cave country in a long time, certainly not teaching classes