Guest guest Posted August 4, 2001 Report Share Posted August 4, 2001 This was in Friday's Philadelphia Inquirer. I thought it might be of interest to some of you. Hugs, M. ~~~~~~~ http://inq.philly.com/content/inquirer/2001/08/03/business/SHEE T03.htm Friday, August 3, 2001 New training aims to diagnose sick buildings A sheet metal workers' union and a contractors' group are funding a program to teach members how to test air quality. By Jane M. Von Bergen INQUIRER STAFF WRITER Twenty-five years ago, a mysterious ailment struck conventioneers attending an American Legion gathering in Philadelphia during the Bicentennial. The air they breathed inside their hotel - the former Bellevue Stratford - killed 29 of them and made 170 others sick. The legacy of Legionnaires' disease and the spotlight that it directed on the problem of sick buildings is one reason why Philadelphia, along with four other cities, was chosen to spearhead a new training program, sponsored by unions and management, to teach sheet metal workers how to test, analyze and balance the air inside a building. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that there are 8,000 to 18,000 cases of Legionnaires' disease each year. " There's a problem that exists [in buildings]. It's a health problem and an energy problem. We can cure this problem, " said J. , president and business manager of Local 19 of the sheet metal workers' union. " I'm willing to bet that 50 percent of the ventilation systems have some kind of contaminant in them, " said. said mistakes can easily happen. One winter, he said, someone accidentally shut the fresh-air intake to the union hall. " This place was a mess, " he said. " Everyone was out sick [with colds and the flu]. We fixed it. The next year, absenteeism was down 75 percent. " Sometimes ventilation systems are badly designed. Sometimes building owners cut corners on maintenance or do not set up a proper system in the first place. During the 1970s, buildings often were constructed with windows that did not open, making workers dependent on air-conditioning systems to provide the correct amount of fresh air. Local 19 has long taught courses in air-system analysis. Training coordinator McClure teaches a 300-hour two-year course on air-balancing analysis for technicians. The new effort, an 80-hour course followed by 24 hours of testing, will lead to a Testing Adjusting and Balancing Bureau certification that would qualify graduates to write legally binding analyses of building quality. The program, paid for jointly by the union and the Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Contractors National Association, cost $3 million to set up, with $500,000 just to cover instructional costs for the first 175 students who will take the course around the country, said S. Emblem, executive director of the National Energy Management Institute. The students' tuition will be free. The program was designed by the National Energy Management Institute - a group made up of the Sheet Metal Workers International Association and the contractors' national association. In Philadelphia, about 40 workers will be certified by the end of the year. " Right now there's not enough people to meet the demand, " Bill Reardon, director of Philadelphia's sheet metal contractors' association, said. Not only does Philadelphia have old buildings that need refitting, but the region's many hospitals and pharmaceutical companies require exacting standards of air quality for " clean " operating rooms and laboratories. said he hoped the program would lead to more work for his union members. He also would like to see legislation that would give tax credits to building owners who upgrade ventilation systems. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Jane Von Bergen's e-mail address is jvonbergen@.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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