What areas do you think a certification school should cover? Take into consideration this is not going to be a how to clean school but a school that tells people already in the business what the local fire marshalls want us to do when we run across non compliant facilities. How to document the problem. NFPA AND OSHA regs that are relevant to us.
Fire inspectors and or AHJ's are apparently allowed to "grandfather" some non compliant systems. How will we find this out? To cover our own asses.
What other issues do you think should be covered in a certification school.
Standard reports that could be used that would offer some consistancy to our paperwork that goes to the AHJ.
And the all important issue, the term inaccessible. Seems to have a different meaning to each business. From what I have seen, inaccessible often depends upon what type of equipment you have. Also how far outside the scope of "cleaning" you are willing to go. And the safety issues involved with the creative installation of duct. There definitely needs to be clarification from the AHJ. Not the individual cleaners.
Fire inspectors and or AHJ's are apparently allowed to "grandfather" some non compliant systems. How will we find this out? To cover our own asses.
What other issues do you think should be covered in a certification school.
Standard reports that could be used that would offer some consistancy to our paperwork that goes to the AHJ.
And the all important issue, the term inaccessible. Seems to have a different meaning to each business. From what I have seen, inaccessible often depends upon what type of equipment you have. Also how far outside the scope of "cleaning" you are willing to go. And the safety issues involved with the creative installation of duct. There definitely needs to be clarification from the AHJ. Not the individual cleaners.