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Maintaining and Improving Your IAQ Baseline:

Step 4: Educate Building Personnel About IAQ Management
Reference: Building Air Quality: Section 5, "Managing Buildings for Good IAQ: Assign Responsibilities/Train Staff," Pages 33-34.
Purpose: To identify and educate staff about IAQ issues so that they can become valuable agents in identifying, preventing, and solving IAQ problems.

It is important that building staff are knowledgeable about IAQ issues. Typically, facility personnel are not trained to think about IAQ issues as they go about their work, even though their perspective could be helpful. For example, staff may observe unsanitary conditions, blocked vents, evidence of leaks in tenant spaces or other indicators of potential IAQ problems and fail to recognize their importance. Educating building personnel about IAQ issues will allow them to recognize potential problems before they cause harm.

Specific Steps:
Identify in-house and contractor personnel whose functions could affect IAQ.
Provide training and information for in-house personnel and contractors.
Develop a flow of information from building staff to IAQ Manager.

The Action Plan asks that you identify in-house and contractor personnel whose functions could affect IAQ, such as pest control contractors, housekeeping personnel and HVAC maintenance staff. It is important to create, keep, and update a list of these personnel so the information can be used and referred to in the future. The list will also help to identify who might benefit from IAQ training. Another way to help identify which staff could benefit from IAQ training is by completing Steps 2 and 3, Establishing an IAQ Baseline. The findings from Steps 2 and 3 of this action plan will help the IAQ Manager identify areas where improvement can be accomplished through additional training or information.

The Action Plan asks that you provide IAQ training or information to building staff and contractor personnel whose responsibilities could affect your building’s IAQ. Both informal, in-house information sharing and formal training courses are beneficial. You can choose the methods that are most effective: structured training courses and materials, distribution of IAQ information and fact sheets to staff, informal discussions, seminars, or self-training materials. However, it is required through the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA) Hazard Communication Standard that you inform and train staff who use hazardous chemicals, even if infrequently, about the health effects of the chemicals they use in their duties, how to read, understand and follow label instructions and Material Safety Data Sheets, and what to do in case of emergency.

Descriptions of EPA developed training courses are located in Appendix 2. The EPA Regional IAQ coordinators can help you locate EPA-sponsored training courses in your area.

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