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Mad Dog Riverboarding director said he respected people's concerns and was taking them seriously.
"We take our responsibilities as an adventure tourism operator incredibly seriously. I'm doing everything in my power to co-operate with the authorities and industry to make sure we've reviewed, audited and implemented any changes to our operations," he said.
Alongside the maritime safety review, Mr McLeod said he was seeking an external audit by the Register of Outdoor Safety Auditors and an independent peer review by the rafting industry.
Ms Jordan drowned after getting caught between submerged rocks while riverboarding with Mad Dog on the Kawarau River on April 29 last year.
Black Sheep Adventures Ltd, Mad Dog's parent company, was fined $66,000 and ordered to pay $80,000 in reparation to Ms Jordan's family after admitting two charges.
Prime Minister John Key announced a Government investigation into adventure-tourism-industry safety standards, to be led by Labour Minister Kate Wilkinson, which would investigate how the industry managed risk, in light of accidents and deaths in the sector.
Mad Dog has applied for a new resource consent to operate on the Kawarau River.
Having already gained a consent in 2005 to take up to 200 people a day on trips on a section of the Kawarau River known as the Chinese Dog Leg rapid, Mad Dog Riverboarding is seeking a land-use consent to use the Kawarau River from the Arrow River confluence to the boundary of the Queenstown Lakes district at the Roaring Meg power station.
The application also seeks to increase the maximum number of people it can take to 300 a day, with up to 16 people on each trip.