Visibility varies depending on depth and other factors (from terrible to not as terrible, lol) but I’ve never seen Athens as a better alternative and I am equidistant from both.I was there today. 3' vis at the boat. On a Friday. With no classes and no one else in the water
I don’t disagree that someone was negligent. That much is abundantly clear, a family lost their child because of that negligence..
To your question: they lost a student - that's negligent. Whether or not that negligence contributed to her death is tbd, but on it's own, that's negligence.
My point is that ScubaToys didn’t lose a student, their instructor did. That is not to say they’re not negligent. I’m not a lawyer, but in my opinion, the instructor is clearly the negligent party. I don’t know, and have seen no information to clarify, how their instructors are hired or vetted.
As you mentioned, factual information regarding this incident has been painfully difficult to gather. Nothing on the local news, a virtual blackout on social media platforms, including the axing of the original thread on this platform and little more than opinion and conjecture with the exception being the police report from this thread.
I found a mask and snorkel out there a couple of weeks ago, in the area of the incident, and can’t help but wonder if it was hers.