Re: [Paddlewise] BCU Issues/A Question and Answer with Craig and Rob!

From: Craig Jungers <crjungers_at_gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 21 Oct 2009 11:34:44 -0700
On Wed, Oct 21, 2009 at 10:46 AM, <rcgibbert_at_aol.com> wrote:

>
> Craig: I'd rather not see that. Can you not see at least a little sense in
> this attitude?
>
> Rob: For your argument to succeed, you would have to have some valid claim
> that the ACA rep and the BCU rep had mined the participation rosters of
> their state clubs and headed for the state assembly house and gone to work.
> Got any? Show me something that the volunteer coach at the pool session
> teaching the nooby how to roll is secretly grooming them for secret rites in
> an all pervasive BCU, soon to open an affiliate in the state capitol.
>

For your argument to succeed you need to convince us that what we have seen
happen in other sports simply cannot happen here.

All my argument needs to succeed is to put forward some credible concerns
and a few examples. Robert Cline's remarks about the early days of SCUBA
certification in the 1970s is a perfect example of how what seems like a
common sense system can be perverted into a accreditation process with an
authority in charge. Once politicians begin to believe that insurance will
solve a "problem" you can bet that insurance will become mandatory; and
along with it a slew of rules.

In this state - and in most - you cannot drive your car legally without
liability insurance. In fact you cannot even register your car without
showing insurance. Stopped by a cop? He will ask to see your driver's
license and proof of insurance. The insurance has no bearing on whether you
are competent as a driver, can see well enough, or anything other than your
ability to write out a check. This is the power of insurance and politics.
It's a paper solution that is nearly impossible to avoid.

Within ten years you will not be able to teach kayaking as a business
without having BCU certification. Every guide will need a BCU cert in order
to get a job. Most rentals will require a level 1 course (which they will
gladly provide for only $50). By the time an instructor reaches Level 5 in
any discipline (s)he will have over $10,000 invested in just the courses and
"assessments" alone. (Just one course leading to an assessment in the UK
commonly costs 300 pounds now!) The WSCKS (Port Townsend kayak seminar) will
devote several sessions to BCU certification.

Don't believe me? Try to rent a SCUBA outfit without being a "certified
diver" and see how far you get. Don't have one? No worries. The store you
tried to rent from will have a course leading to certification.

Try to get a job as a ski instructor without being certified. And if
business falls off because too many people learned last year's "approved
technique" why you can just have this year's "approved technique".

This is the power of certification authorities when they combine with
underwriters and politics.

It's all for our own good.


Craig Jungers
Moses Lake, WA
www.nwkayaking.net
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Received on Wed Oct 21 2009 - 11:34:51 PDT

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