First Accreditations to Be Announced in August 2012
WASHINGTON, July 13, 2012 /PR Newswire/ -- ?The American National Standards Institute (ANSI), coordinator of the U.S. voluntary standardization system, and the Interstate Renewable Energy Council, Inc. (IREC) are pleased to announce the four certificate-awarding entities that are currently participating in the ANSI-IREC pilot accreditation program for energy efficiency and renewable energy.
These four organizations are in the final stages of an accreditation process that began in January 2012. Accreditations are expected to be announced for the pilot program by the end of August 2012. ANSI and IREC expect to re-open the program for general accreditation applications in late 2012.
Certificate programs are being evaluated against the IREC Standard 14732: 2012, General Requirements for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Certificate Programs. The standard describes curriculum, administrative, personnel, facilities, and equipment requirements for certificate programs involved in the training of the energy efficiency/weatherization and renewable energy workforce.
Assessment to this new standard will also provide third-party verification to students, funders, policymakers, and others that certificate programs have demonstrated meeting the requirements for issuing a market-valued certificate.
'We are proud and humbled to have been chosen for the ANSI-IREC pilot accreditation program,' said Bob Chomko, president and director of the Building Science Institute. 'The accreditation process has been an extremely rewarding experience and as a result our weatherization curricula will prove to be an asset to our stakeholders.'
'This pilot program has helped us to form a better process with which to develop and deliver our certificate programs. We are pleased to have been chosen as a participant, and are looking forward to implementing these programs,' said Michael Bachand, president of CalCERTS. 'We believe this will become the industry standard of practice for certificate programs to develop a well-trained workforce that can deliver consistent, reliable results to energy efficiency programs nationwide.'
ANSI and IREC follow the evaluation process outlined in the international standard ISO/IEC 17011, General Requirements for Accreditation Bodies Accrediting Conformity Assessment Bodies. This process includes using specially trained assessors to review documents submitted by applicants against defined requirements, conduct on-site assessments of all applicants, and make recommendations to the body responsible for making the accreditation decision.
'This pilot program is just the latest example of ANSI's commitment to enhance the credentialing of personnel and fostering a more robust and qualified American workforce,' said Dr. Roy Swift, ANSI senior program director of personnel credentialing accreditation programs. 'The Institute brings many years of experience and government recognition in assisting in the delivery of quality accreditation programs. We are pleased to partner with IREC to demonstrate value and assure competency for this important national priority.'
IREC's Executive Director Jane Weissman commented, 'IREC's standard provides the framework for a specialty accreditation that will raise the bar for training the clean energy workforce. Our partnership with ANSI has been built on mutual respect and a common goal of quality assessment and training.'
For more information, contactANSI'sDiana Singhavong (DSinghavong@ansi.org) or IREC's Pat Fox (patfox@irecusa.org).
About ANSI
The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) is a private non-profit organization whose mission is to enhance U.S. global competitiveness and the American quality of life by promoting, facilitating, and safeguarding the integrity of the voluntary standardization and conformity assessment system. Its membership is comprised of businesses, professional societies and trade associations, standards developers, government agencies, and consumer and labor organizations. The Institute represents the diverse interests of more than 125,000 companies and organizations and 3.5 million professionals worldwide.?
The Institute is the official U.S. representative to the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and, via the U.S. National Committee, the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), and is a U.S. representative to the International Accreditation Forum (IAF).
About IREC
IREC has worked aggressively to break down barriers to renewable energy use since 1982. Throughout its history, the organization has been instrumental in rulemaking for connecting distributed power to the utility grid, quality assessment, workforce development, consumer protection and stakeholder coordination. Since 2005, IREC has been the North American Licensee for the ISPQ International Training Standard. Today, there are over 115 credentials awarded to training programs and instructors.? For more information, visit www.irecusa.org.
SOURCE American National Standards Institute
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