jrh, I jumped at Eloy and Lodi last month. The bad reputation I think has more to do with politics than safety. People used seatbelts (which were in good repair) and wore helmets for takeoff. Aircraft seemed well maintained. The whole facility is spartan compared to some (like Skydance, Perris, or Elsinore) but the DZO was there being cranky and making sure that jumpers followed traffic recommendations and FAA stuff. Also, $650 gets you 50 tickets to 13k. At Eloy it cost me one thousand.
I have no doubt politics play a part in the reputation. Jumping is no different than flying. Lots of Type A personalities as leaders, and people pick fights with each other over stupid issues sometimes.
Still, there are some SERIOUS issues that can't be ignored. The FAA fine for disregarding maintenance inspections is a huge red flag. The feds don't go around handing out fines like that over petty, disputable issues. They have to be darn sure a significant safety hazard was created before dropping the hammer the way they did. Frankly, I trust the feds more than a questionable DZO any day of the week.
This video is another issue. Pretty much every instructor who's seen it says this TI's conduct was absurdly outside of accepted safety practices. This wasn't an issue of a minor slip in judgement, not being quite seasoned enough, or cutting one little corner. This was appallingly sloppy work that nearly resulted in a fatality. Thing is, nobody operates in a bubble at a DZ. I hold many others indirectly responsible for his conduct. What kind of safety culture by the DZO and other professional jumpers allows a TI like this to slip through the cracks and cause an incident like this? Who trained the TI? Who hired him? Who sat next to him on the load and didn't say anything about the student's harness fit? It's total BS and never should have even come close to happening.
As for your experience at Lodi, I'm glad to hear they wore belts and helmets for takeoff, but I'd hardly judge a DZ as "safe" because they do those things. I've seen plenty of scary things happen to jumpers who wore belts for takeoff. Or did somebody accuse Lodi of having issues with belts and helmets not being worn?
And finally, I'd use your example of price as evidence against Lodi, not for it. One of the many things I've learned in flying says, "When it sounds too good to be true, it probably is." Industry standard rates right now are $20-$30/13K out of an Otter. That's what I've paid at Elsinore, Pepperell, Deland, and many boogies (using Skydive Arizona aircraft), and other DZs using Caravans. There is no way a DZ can be selling tickets for $13 without cutting corners on SOMETHING. I don't know what that something is exactly, but I'm sure it's more than just the facilities.
The reason I feel so strongly about these things is because I'm afraid the few DZs out there like Lodi are going to ruin this amazing sport for the rest of us. As you're probably well aware, jumping is a very self-regulated activity, at least compared to flying. A quick way to get rid of our freedom would be to have a few plane crashes because of shoddy maintenance, followed by a few fatalities from tandem students falling out of their harnesses. It's absolute BS that should never happen.