The Province

Diver’s family calls for tougher scuba regulation­s

More regulation needed, say relatives of dead diver Chu

- JOHN COLEBOURN jcolebourn@postmedia.com

The grief-stricken family of a man who died in a diving accident near Victoria say tougher regulation of the sport is needed to help prevent further fatalities.

At an emotional press conference on Monday, relatives of Timothy Chu said the novice scuba diver should never have been taken in to Race Rocks, an area known for notoriousl­y strong currents and treacherou­s conditions.

Relative Bill Chu said they have reviewed the B.C. Coroners Service report that was released in November and feel a full inquiry is needed to let the public know what is happening in the recreation­al dive industry.

Timothy Chu, a 27-year-old British tourist, set up a diving excursion through Ogden Point Dive Centre.

Bill Chu said Timothy had little experience and only had 14 dives under his belt when he went to Race Rocks for the open water dive on July 5, 2015.

Chu said anyone going for a dive in that area should be closely monitoring the strong current and conditions. He said the dive shop should not have taken a person into the area with such limited experience due to the high risk.

“The current is so strong there you can generate power,” said Chu. He noted that just prior to the fatality of his nephew, two other diving accidents happened in that area, with search and rescue crews managing to get the divers to safety.

“Those two were lucky to be found,” he said. “The current there is very, very strong.

“It’s like playing Russian roulette,” he said of divers with little experience being taken into the dangerous area.

Chu said it is not difficult to get a scuba licence to have a tank filled, and he called on more training for anyone who wants to do an open-water dive. “Tim, by all accounts, was a novice diver and the dive centre made a whole series of wrong decisions,” he said. “They did not have a risk-management plan in place.”

Timothy Chu, a policeman from London, was certified as an advanced open-water diver in 2010.

During his time in Victoria, Chu made arrangemen­ts with Ogden Point Dive Centre to take part in a dive charter to Race Rocks Ecological Reserve on July 5, 2015.

In the coroner’s report, it is noted Chu sought out some expertise for the dive at Race Rocks.

He hired a “dive master” to act as a “buddy” for that day’s dive.

But problems developed as Chu and the dive master began to surface. In the report, coroner Courtney Cote notes how Chu “encountere­d conditions which overwhelme­d his experience and training.” During the swim toward the surface, Chu was entangled in a bed of kelp which added to the problem. The coroner also notes that once he began encounteri­ng difficulti­es he consumed more oxygen, resulting in the dive master supplying Chu with oxygen from his regulator. Fighting a heavy current and the kelp, Chu was pulled down and his body was found more than a month later.

Tom Beasley, a director of the Underwater Council of British Columbia, said it welcomed any measures to make the sport safer. “We would like to participat­e in that review,” he said. “We want to make it a safer sport. We always want to see things improve.”

In her report, coroner Cote notes there is sizable risk with the sport. “Recreation­al scuba diving is an inherently risky sport,” she writes.

Cote writes there have been 37 diving deaths in B.C. in the past 10 years, with none of them happening at Race Rocks.

The Ogden Point Dive Centre did not return calls.

B.C. Coroners Service spokespers­on Barb McLintock said the family can apply to the chief coroner to have the investigat­ion reopened.

 ??  ??
 ?? NICK PROCAYLO/PNG ?? Bill Chu talks about the death of his nephew, diver Timothy Chu (in framed photograph), on Monday in Richmond. The family, which reviewed a B.C. Coroners Service report on Timothy Chu’s death, wants to see tougher regulation of the sport.
NICK PROCAYLO/PNG Bill Chu talks about the death of his nephew, diver Timothy Chu (in framed photograph), on Monday in Richmond. The family, which reviewed a B.C. Coroners Service report on Timothy Chu’s death, wants to see tougher regulation of the sport.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada