The SA Paint Manufacturers Association
(SAPMA) and the Corrosion Institute of Southern Africa (CorrISA) have signed a
Memorandum of Understanding that will add substantial benefits to the training
offered by both industry representative bodies.
The MoU was signed recently by Deryck
Spence, executive director of SAPMA, and Hendrick Rasebopye, executive director
of CorrISA.
Spence says CorrISA will now incorporate
its own training into SAPMA’s SETA-accredited paint application courses so that
CorrISA – which does not hold government accreditation for its training – can
offer its members the opportunity to recover funds spent on skills development
training back from the government.
“The existing SAPMA paint application
courses will be augmented and modified to include anti-corrosion and spray
application training for industrial projects obtained from the extensive curriculum
of CorrISA training programmes.
Anti-corrosion measures are not covered in depth in SAPMA courses so
this broadens the scope of the SAPMA paint application tuition. CorrISA, on the
other hand, benefits from now having accreditation for its training courses,”
Spence explains.
For SAPMA, another major benefit is that
CorrISA will now allow SAPMA to carry out training at the well-equipped
training and laboratory facilities operated by CorrISA. SAPMA was in urgent
need for such a training venue.
“Another benefit is dual membership:
SAPMA members will now also become CorrISA members, and vice versa,” Spence
adds.
More
information at www.sapma.org.za/TrainingEdu/OnlineTraining
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