International Diving Institute
The International Diving Institute was a private, for-profit technical school in North Charleston, South Carolina. Originally a scuba diving shop called East Coast Dive Connection, the school was founded in 2004 when it offered advanced dive training, especially in the use of surface supplied air, underwater welding, rigging and hyperbaric chamber operation, leading to a certification required for commercial divers working on oil platforms in the offshore oil industry and for diving operations in the United States that are regulated by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
History
In 1996, Sergio Smith, a former US Navy diver and member of its Seabee program, established a scuba diving shop called East Coast Dive Connection, located in Summerville, South Carolina. The dive shop sold and serviced scuba gear and offered recreational scuba classes. The company was then turned into a school in 2004, establishing its campus in North Charleston, with underwater archaeologist E. Lee Spence as a co-owner, and retaining the Summerville location as a dive shop. In 2004, it was renamed to International Diving Institute and the underwater welding curriculum was added. Both Smith and Spence have served as instructors.In 2016, 12 members of the Seabee Underwater Construction Team 2 (UCT 2) enrolled in IDI's wet welding course. Of the 12, only two people had previous experience in surface welding. In 2017, members of UCT 2's Construction Diving Detachment Alpha participated in the two-week underwater welding certification course.
Governance
IDI was licensed by the South Carolina Commission on Higher Education as a non-degree occupational training institution.IDI was one of fewer than a dozen professional diving schools operating in North America. It was a member of Association of Diving Contractors International and trained to the Standards published by the Association of Commercial Diving Educators, the American National Standards Institute, and the Sea Research Society.