Garrobo:
So you're worried about a little extra weight? What's the big deal? Every breath you take is going to pull air out of your tannk and change your buoyancy to some degree. You're only going to be down for an hour or so and the trip up the ladder shouldn't take you more than 15 seconds. If you are in any kind of decent physical condition that shouldn't be a problem.
Let's see...here are just a couple of interesting quotes:
"[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]An over-weighted or under-weighted diver is at increased risk in a number of ways. In both, the diver has to work harder to maintain control and thus increases risk."
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-- September/October 2006 Alert Diver
"Controlling your buoyancy is one of the most important skills you'll master. Buoyancy control improves your safety, reduces fatigue and enhances the enjoyment of diving. It also enables you to avoid destroying delicate portions of the underwater environment.
Diving incident reports often cite overweighting and/or poor buoyancy control as a contributory factor to, or a factor associated with, accidents or near accidents. For example, in a study of 100 diving fatalities that occurred in Australia and New Zealand between 1980 to 1987, 45 percent of the victims were believed to have been overweighted, with 40 percent being more than 4.5 pounds/2 kilograms negatively buoyant on the surface."
-- The Ups and Downs of Buoyancy Control By John Lippmann
It looks to me like being properly weighted and having good buoyancy control makes you a safer diver.