Forty-seven-year old triathelete
Jane Ornstein was likely unconscious
when she inhaled her first
mouthful of seawater at dive off
Pompano Beach, Florida. Already
debilitated — probably by the
effects of oxygen poisoning —
Ornstein succumbed and died with
merciful swiftness.
Things began to unravel at one
of the first decompression stops as
Ornstein, 33-year-old instructor
Derek McNulty, and three other
students ascended from a short trip
to the murky 275-ft. bottom on that
day in May 1998. Investigators
believe she mistakenly switched her
breathing supply over to an oxygenrich
mixture highly toxic at great
depths .
McNulty later told investigators
that Ornstein continued ascending
with him and three other students
until she was just 40 ft. shy of the
surface. At this point, he said, she
signaled to him that she was out of
air. He instructed her to switch to
another tank and head up another
ten feet, then went to help another
diver who had entangled himself in
a safety line. But Ornstein overshot
the 30-ft. mark and floated up to a
depth of 20 ft. Apparently suffering
from the onset of oxygen poisoning,
which can cause visual disturbances,
nausea, or disorientation, she struggled
to cope with her BC, which was
later found to have malfunctions.
With the surface just a few feet above
her, she lost consciousness.
Twenty-eight out of the
nation’s 161 diving facilities,
or roughly seventeen
percent of the total, were techies. |
McNulty told Broward County
homicide detectives that he saw a
burst of bubbles from Ornstein; then
he watched her limp body, saddled
with more than 250 pounds of gear,
begin to plummet toward the bottom.
Another student swam down after
her, but couldn’t catch her. Daniel
Mitchell, himself a diving instructor —
but only a student on this trip — told
investigators that there was no physical
way anyone could save Ornstein and
stay alive.
When Ornstein’s body was found on the bottom the next day, her
face mask was off and her regulator
was out of her mouth. One of her
tanks still contained breathable gas.
The Pompano Beach incident
resembles any of a dozen fatal accidents
that occur each year in the
high-risk world of technical diving,
which involves descending beyond
130 feet, often in shipwrecks and
caves, at times using combinations
of helium, nitrogen, and oxygen.
And it is precisely the kind of event
that throws the diving community
into a fit of pained self-examination.
Only now, the internal debate is
being fueled by a broad institutional
change: In January, an arm of
PADI rolled out its first technicaldiving
training program. Their new
courses will make what many consider
to be the hazardous fringe of
the sport more accessible to millions
of sport divers.
This scenario — which concerns
many veteran tech divers — could
scarcely have been imagined back
in the mid-1980s, when Bill Stone, a
structural engineer from
Gaithersburg, MD, first began
experimenting with helium-based
gases to explore deep caves in
Wakulla Springs, Florida. Stone and
his team ventured more than three
miles into underwater cave passages
at depths exceeding 300 ft. Though
commercial and military divers had
breathed “mix” for decades, and
Jacques Cousteau had used it to
reach 400 ft. in 1976, Stone was one
of the first to apply it to recreational
diving. By the early 1990s, with the
support of a handful of specialized
training and equipment vendors,
the fledgling sport of technical diving
began to take hold among
more adventurous scuba fans.
Today it is arguably the highest-profile
segment of the sport.
PADI estimates there are 3 million
sport divers in the U.S., but
Technical Diving International, a
school based in Maine, says that
there are only about 200,000 technical
divers in the entire world. Still,
techies make a dent in the market
disproportionate to their numbers.
Each commonly spends as much as
$5,000 on gear, including a specialized
buoyancy-compensator and
sometimes an underwater scooter.
(A typical sport diver owns about
$2,000 worth of equipment.) Tech
divers also invest heavily in training
courses. Which is where PADI comes in .
PADI claims to certify 70 percent of
all new divers in the United States,
and 60 percent of all divers worldwide.
Its global network of about
100,000 retailers and instructors
dwarfs that of NAUI, the firm’s nearest
competitor. Some 200 staff work
for PADI, a privately owned company.
In a 1996 interview, PADI president
John Cronin said PADI pulls in more
than $30 million a year from certification
fees and the sale of instruction
books and videos in 24 languages. It is
a finely-tuned marketing machine,
built on untold scores of regimented
dive classes.
Which is, in the eyes of many,
exactly the problem. Making tech diving
more accessible to a mass market
is “like putting a civilian behind the
controls of an F-14,” says attorney
Bobby Delise, whose Metairie, LA firm
built its practice on representing families
of those killed in diving accidents.
“ You can’t market life-threatening
activities like tech diving and BASE
jumping the same way you market
other services. You have to play by different
rules.” He is concerned that
would-be techies already take so many
classes that they don’t get enough realworld
diving experience. “It doesn’t
make any sense for students with
fewer than 100 dives to be taking a
mixed-gas class,” he says. “The bar is
too low, and when a mistake occurs
the price is too high.”
Like alpinism, tech diving is brutally
unforgiving — participants risk such
physiological disasters as nitrogen narcosis,
oxygen poisoning, and the
bends. In 1998 and 1999, 28 out of
the nation’s 161 diving fatalities, or
roughly 17 percent of the total, were
techies. If that sounds unimpressive,
consider that tech divers constitute a
very small slice of the overall diving
population. “I lose two friends a year, ”
says Bridgeport, CT-based technical
diving instructor Joel Silverstein. (He’s
never lost a student or partner.) “Fatalities are part and parcel of
technical diving.”
PADI acknowledges that it is
plunging into treacherous waters.
“Our philosophy is that tech is not
for everyone,” says Karl Shreeves, a
vice president of Diving Science
and Technology, the arm of PADI
that will run the new techie program.
“We’re not going to market it
that way. We don’t expect huge
numbers.”
But many tech trainers have profound
philosophical issues with the
firm’s approach. PADI students
progress through a sequence of
written exams before advancing to
the next level. Instructors must stick
to the book and are given little or
no leeway to improvise. By contrast,
old-school tech trainers believe religiously
that the experience of the
instructor is everything and that
rote rules just won’t help beyond
200 ft., when problems must be
solved quickly and instinctively.
Though Shreeves says PADI
won’t oversell the tech program,
critics fear the firm’s mass-market
focus. “Tech diving is completely
different [from sport diving],” says
Dave Mount, the general manager
of the International Association of
Nitrox and Technical Divers
(IANTD). “It requires an exceptional
instructor with tremendous experience
and currency.” Shreeves
counters that PADI has a proven
track record and offers the indust
ry ’s best quality-assurance program
— asking students to critique their
instructors. Further, he stresses that
the new program will only accept
students who have logged more
than 100 dives, trained in specialities
such as night diving, and have several
certifications above the basic
open-water level.
The Pompano Beach incident
arguably demonstrates that not
even the training organizations that
specialize in tech diving have spotless
records: At the time of the
tragedy, Derek McNulty was an
IANTD-certified instructor.
In some respects, PADI may
usher in a higher level of professionalism
for the sport. “PADI has a
long history of creating outstanding
[classroom] materials,” says Bob
Decker, the training director at
Olympus Dive Center in Morehead
City, N.C. “In that manner they will
raise the bar.” But he also charges
that the company has in the past
been guilty of taking what he calls a
“fast-food approach” by not insisting
divers put in the time to pay their
dues and gain critical experience.
It is difficult to say whether the first
large-scale foray into training beyond
130 ft. will mean more divers will die
there. “Tech is more risky than recreational
diving, but to be honest, that’s
part of the appeal,” says PADI’s
Shreeves. “Extreme-sports enthusiasts
appreciate the challenge of managing
that risk in exchange for the
experience that few people get to
have.”
By virtue of its sheer size and
resources, PADI will undoubtedly
open the dark depths to throngs of
adventure seekers, and if not launch
a trend, then tap into one that is
already growing. “People treat tech
diving as if it were just another recreational
specialty like night diving,”
says Florida-based Jarrod Jablonski,
one of the top tech divers in the
world and holder of the record for
the deepest underwater cave penetration,
just over three lateral miles. “But
it isn’t.”
Michael Meduno (www.menduno.com) ,
was the founder of the first tech-diving magazine, Aqua Corps. His stories have appeared
in Wired, Scientific American, PADI
Undersea Journal, and elsewhere. The article ,
which originally appeared in the January issue
of Out side, was reprinted by permission from Outside magazine. Copyright © 2001,
Mariah Publications Corporation.