her obituary seems to imply she was a more experienced diver than the Complaint does.
I read—certified in NC at 15, a dive on GBR at 16, then the horror at 18. Seems consistent to me, fwiw.
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her obituary seems to imply she was a more experienced diver than the Complaint does.
If a root cause analysis was performed, I’m fairly certain that instructional quality would be an elemental factor.Almost all of the very grievous errors she made had almost nothing to do with diving or instructional skill. She could have been the greatest thing they had ever seen at the ICD and IE. The violations are all conscious decisions.
Perhaps, but we cannot tell much about her instructional skill since we never see her use it, except on that first dive with E.G., which was certainly an abomination.If a root cause analysis was performed, I’m fairly certain that instructional quality would be an elemental factor.
PADI did expel Gull Dive following the Hubbell case. They removed all PADI logos from their website and store, but the website wording wasn’t changed, indicating that they still offered PADI courses. Linnea was given an actual Adventures in Diving crew pack (I didn’t know you could still buy crew packs) and she had done “some” knowledge reviews.The story gives information about the Hubbell case which we were otherwise unable to discover.
Last July, according to records, Ellen Hubbell sued Gull Dive in the death of her husband Jesse who drowned in Canyon Ferry in June 2019. Jesse hadn’t scuba dived in more than 25 years so he wasn’t certified, but Gull Dive still rented equipment to him and it was later found Hubbell’s regulator was on backward.
The complaint said he was not certified, but this article said he had not dived "in more than 25 years so he wasn’t certified." The reporter likely did not know that certifications do not expire. If he was certified 25 years ago, then he was certified when he rented the equipment and when he dived. Perhaps he was not certified 25 years ago. I do not know what it means that a regulator was on backward. It is possible that the tank was set up with the valve on the back rather than toward the head, but in that case the regulator would work.
The Hubbell case is still ongoing but hadn’t gotten far by the time Linnea started interacting with Gull Dive. But there was no way for students like Linnea to know about the Hubbell case because Gull Dive didn’t report it to PADI in 2019 and kept using the PADI name.This, too, contradicts the complaint, which faults PADI for not dealing with the dive shop over the Hubbell case.
The complaint said he was not certified, but this article said he had not dived "in more than 25 years so he wasn’t certified." The reporter likely did not know that certifications do not expire. If he was certified 25 years ago, then he was certified when he rented the equipment and when he dived. Perhaps he was not certified 25 years ago. I do not know what it means that a regulator was on backward. It is possible that the tank was set up with the valve on the back rather than toward the head, but in that case the regulator would work.
Is Drysuit an adventure dive for Advanced, and is it a chapter in the Adventures in Diving paper manual?
Meh. Turn a mark 10, 11, 15, 17, or 20 with the reg barrel up and the hoses may be a little short but still in close to the right spots.Other than being a weird hose routing, it will work.
Nope, that’s what I needed to know....I have my AOW book and there is a Drysuit Adventure Dive chapter, with a knowledge review that the student is supposed to sign off on The book, though, is title "Advanced Open Water Diver" so maybe that is different from "Adventures in Diving."