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from the March, 2002 issue of Undercurrent
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The demise of dive travel agency Tropical Adventures has left many
clients, vendors and employees high
and dry. As we reported in January, Seattle-based TA and its sister
companies Adventure Express and
Dive Tours shut down without warning just before Thanksgiving, leaving
what may be hundreds of
thousands of dollars in clients deposits unaccounted for. Identical
messages on the three firms phone
lines blamed the tragic events of 9/11 and the resulting
downturn in the world travel market.
Although the closures came as a shock to many, they were no surprise to ex-TA employee Donna Lattin, who now operates Seattles South Pacific Island Travel. She says Tropical Adventures problems began long before the terrorist attacks. Yes, 9/11 has hurt the whole industry, she concedes, but weve been able to redirect most bookings from hot spots such as the Red Sea to safer destinations. The real cause of TAs downfall, according to Lattin, lies with the owner Brian Yesland, who bought Tropical Adventures from Bob Goddess, now retired in Fiji. From Lattins perspective, Yesland gave more attention to pursuing his personal interests than managing the company. TAs failure leaves the rest of the industry to pick up the pieces. Client files for the three companies were turned over to PADI Travel Network and Caradonna Caribbean Tours. No money accompanied the files. Some clients, who chose to do business with people they knew, have moved to other agents, such as Lattin, for resolution. No one has found any of the missing client payments intended to go to boats, hotels or dive operators. Many Undercurrent readers have contacted us; some individuals are out of pocket as much as $4,000-$5,000, some couples twice that amount. Furthermore, no ones been able to find any applicable liability insurance or bond coverage. In fact, it appears that Tropical Adventures was not even properly licensed in the State of Washington, so theres no recourse from the state. PADI Travel Networks Christine Grange reports that they are resolving each case individually, with mixed results. A few vendors, such as the Ocean Hunter, have offered discounts to clients whose deposits have been lost. Some liveaboards and resort operators left hanging by Tropical Adventures recall a similar debacle when San Franciscos See & Sea Travel went belly up in 1997. Ironically, Tropical Adventures had picked up many of See & Seas files at that time. So history is, sadly, repeating itself. Lattin says that many employees of the three firms never received commissions due them thats how travel agents get paid and also lost their year-end bonuses. Now theyre out of work in a shrinking travel market. Thats particularly unfair, says Lattin, because it was the agents who made Tropical Adventures what it once was. We attempted to contact Yesland at his home number, but when we called the young lady who answered told us he didnt live there any longer. She claimed to have no forwarding number for him, either. |
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