My understanding of the NFPA is that they are just guidelines.
I also understand that DRI and MR. Blades himself are leading the charge to revise NFPA 1006 and form what I hear it should be official this spring.
I would love to hear from him though.
Mavdog,
Please know I am not "leading the charge" as there are MANY fine people involved in this process. DRI, the IADRS, and many others have supported this process for several years and it is my opinion that the standard has greatly increased diver safety. Through the efforts of smart people we have all benefited and I am proud to stand shoulder to shoulder with those who have supported the process.
As you eluded to, the NFPA Standards lack enforceability if they are not adopted as Federal, State or Municipal law. While the standards may "lack teeth" in a criminal court system, they carry a "mouthful of fangs" in the civil court.
Training agencies, dive team leaders, agency administrators and political appointees should give
strong consideration to the NFPA Standards as it relates to liability.
I can tell you, in the updated DRI/DR-1 program (released Oct 2007) the text was written with the NFPA in mind. We did a "limited edition" printing on the student manuals in anticipation of future updates and we have begun the process of informing DRI trainers to anticipate annual updates to their teaching materials. The industry is evolving and DRI plans to stay in the leading position, thanks to many who are smarter than I. (You gotta love smart people!)
One thing that the NFPA committee members did, and I give them kudos for it, is putting the responsibility on the
Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) to determine their specific needs. The NFPA is challenged today in the same way the OSHA group was challenged in the 1970s; how to "regulate" and "standardize" public safety diving. The needs are so diverse it is nearly impossible to wrap one's arms around it.
In the 1980s, I was asked to participate in the drafting of a national PSD standard for the IADRS. I was on a committee with a fairly easy task (I thought); to come up with a list of basic equipment and specifications. Being "new in PSD" but having taught (recreational) SCUBA and having a quantity of dives under my belt, I assumed it would be prudent for divers to have a mask. This seemed like a "no brainer" until someone smarter than I asked about Superlites. I suggested that the masks should have tempered glass and another person mentioned that the Interspiro mask had a plastic lens. I thought divers should have snorkels (remember the PADI, mouth to snorkel technique?) and someone asked why divers wearing a full face mask would want a snorkel too. And it started to become apparent to me, that the folks who write these standards are incredibly smart and I didn't know as much as I thought I did!
Since then, another 20 years has elapsed and I have worked to increase my knowledge, but I still have a LONG way to go before I call myself "smart." The advantage I have now is I know the smart people and I am not afraid to ask questions and pass that information along to others (I've been doing that for years now). But even with knowledge and the benefit of many smart people wanting to volunteer their services, I believe the AHJ is in the best position to determine the needs for thier community. I suspect I don't care for "big brother" taking on a "one shoe fits all" approach when I would really prefer "gloves and a cap" instead of "shoes." The AHJ is in the best position to make "risk/benefit" decisions
AND when divers have the ability to make good "dive/no dive" decisions based on their knowledge, skill and ability,
AND they have the proper equipment,
THEN the citizens are served well and saved is assured.
I could start my own company, copy and paste from available on-line policy and procedure manuals, and I could be the next DRI or LGS.
Canal, I understand where you're coming from and there are many one man shows now waving "PSD flags" and advertising they are THE DEAL. I am not certain a "mandated" standard will make things better and I suspect that the NFPA standard may prove my point. The "one man shows" market their programs as being NFPA compliant (that should be a warning sign!), OSHA compliant and RSTC compliant. What they are really admitting to, in my opinion, is they have more book knowledge than "real world" experience. If someone TRULY knows the NFPA standards, they will know that the ONLY agency that can say a person is "compliant" is the AHJ. DRI markets programs as providing NFPA technician level training. Companies that say they offer NFPA "certification" don't have a clue so that's why I mention, this claim should be a warning sign.
I hope this addresses the latest round of questions to me. I am worried about Gary though... No posts in the past 48 hours... GARY ... are you alive???
Ohh... I just saw an avatar of Gary -->
Sitting on the sidelines eating popcorn...
C'mon G, get in the fray here. You're the moderator and voice of reason!
