Babylon
Well-Known Member
I was recently booked on a YM Coastal 5 day course plus MCA exam, which turned out to be a 4 day course minus MCA exam! - because the training boat had been double-booked for the first day of the course and no examiner had been arranged at all - both the fault of the school!
I'd arranged the course through a highly experienced freelance instructor (who was both first-class and indeed inspirational), who'd booked the yacht with the sailing school; and both the instructor and the school provided students.
While I certainly got all the relevent additional training and preparation I personally needed over the four days that the boat was available (night and blind nav, mob recovery under sail and boat-handling in challenging conditions, etc,), and while it was encouraging that in the instructor's own opinion I'd almost certainly pass the MCA assessment, I was pretty miffed that the school had been so bl**dy casual about ensuring that the boat was available and an examiner properly booked. Due to intense work and young family commitments, I only had a short window in which to mug up the theory beforehand, do the course and be assessed by an examiner - now I won't be able to afford the time probably until next season.
I've contacted the school requesting some compensation, but my efforts have been completely ignored. Technically my contract was with the instructor, not the school, so there's no benefit in pursuing it legally with the school. The instructor, who was faultless in every regard, has decided not to work with the school any more - and has also very kindly offered to give me exam preparation tuition on my own boat over a future weekend and book the examiner himself directly.
The shame of the matter is that the school used to be quite good, but is now apparently owned by a businessman who, although a yachtsman himself, seems to have no interest in running the show professionally. Should I make a formal complaint of my experience to the RYA?
I'd arranged the course through a highly experienced freelance instructor (who was both first-class and indeed inspirational), who'd booked the yacht with the sailing school; and both the instructor and the school provided students.
While I certainly got all the relevent additional training and preparation I personally needed over the four days that the boat was available (night and blind nav, mob recovery under sail and boat-handling in challenging conditions, etc,), and while it was encouraging that in the instructor's own opinion I'd almost certainly pass the MCA assessment, I was pretty miffed that the school had been so bl**dy casual about ensuring that the boat was available and an examiner properly booked. Due to intense work and young family commitments, I only had a short window in which to mug up the theory beforehand, do the course and be assessed by an examiner - now I won't be able to afford the time probably until next season.
I've contacted the school requesting some compensation, but my efforts have been completely ignored. Technically my contract was with the instructor, not the school, so there's no benefit in pursuing it legally with the school. The instructor, who was faultless in every regard, has decided not to work with the school any more - and has also very kindly offered to give me exam preparation tuition on my own boat over a future weekend and book the examiner himself directly.
The shame of the matter is that the school used to be quite good, but is now apparently owned by a businessman who, although a yachtsman himself, seems to have no interest in running the show professionally. Should I make a formal complaint of my experience to the RYA?