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TEC Meeting on15/11/2002

 

Participants:      Isabel Bejar-Alonso, Gerrit Jan Bossen, Paula Carvalho-Correia, Sudeshna Datta-Cockeril, Gianni Deroma, Sue Foffano, Andrée Fontbonne, Anne Kerhoas, Erwin Mosselmans, Linda Orr-Easo, Josi Schinzel, Peter Sievers, Mick Storr, Davide Vite, Sylvain Weisz

 

Excused:           André Arn, Margrit Burry, Enrico Chiaveri, Friedmann Eder, Francois Fluckiger, Michelle Mazerand, Alberto Scaramelli, Tony Shave, Mauro Taborelli, Marc Tavlet, Myriam Veyrat

 

 

1.      Minutes of September 27th meeting and matters arising:

            The minutes of the previous TEC meeting were approved.

2.  Report on the Procurement & Contract Management course:

            Linda Orr-Easo presented the program of the 9CM course that was established following advices of experts in the SPL division and interviews with different contract managers. This training splits into two levels:

-        Level I presents general information and explains the standard procedures;

-        Level II is a workshop, the first session was organised in November 2002, for those responsible for Industrial Service Contracts. A level II workshop for people involved in Supplies Contracts will be organised early in March 2003.

            Level I presents the basic policy, legal aspects, rules and procedures for specifying, purchasing and contracting with external providers. It is a one-day session targeting a large audience and is a pre-requisite for Level II. The objectives of Level II are to develop the skills needed to manage Industrial Support contracts, to create a network of people involved with such contracts and to ensure a coherent approach within CERN on this subject. Linda presented some statistics about the participation and feedback received for these courses (see Annex I). She also mentioned that safety aspects still need to be added in this training.

            The next step is the pilot session on Supplies Contracts. Further developments are envisaged, such as the creation of a database of participants/contracts or the organisation of half-day case study sessions.

            Answering to questions about the target audiences, Linda replied every one involved in contract management should follow Level I while ~50 persons, to be identified by their division, are expected for the IS version of Level II. There was also a suggestion to invite a CERN contractor to the round table discussion of Level II to get some feedback from our partners.    

3.      Present situation of Safety Courses

Safety courses enter into 3 categories: general courses that are described on the catalogue, courses dedicated to a particular audience and courses organised on demand (see Annex II). Anne Kerhoas reviewed the list of general safety courses accessible through the web pages of the HR-TD group. In particular, she described:

-        The training of safety officers which splits into an external training in the speciality (Flammable Gas, Radiation or Cryogenics), a partial participation to the RSO course and a web-based training in the relevant domain presenting all aspects specific to CERN.

-        The courses for new comers that need to be followed by all people working on the site fall in the second category. Those are organised every Tuesday (morning in French and afternoon in English), without previous enrolment, and it is the responsibility of the supervisor to insure that every-one working for him/her indeed followed that course.

-        The course for first-aid is organised in 3 half-day sessions with a refresher every 3 years. The list of first-aider is available at http://safety.cern.ch but a review of building with risks is going on to identify people likely to follow that training.

-        The course for TSO, with 5 sessions organised in 2002, corresponding to a total of 100 persons trained. The course lasts 3 days, alternating theory and practice.

-        Examples of courses organised on demand for work in the Hall 180 or for team leaders in the CMS assembly facility at point 5.

The radiation safety course is under preparation and a pilot session is foreseen for ISOLDE before the end of the year. It is evaluated that ~1000 persons a year need to be trained to cope with CERN’s obligations regarding the host states and the INB regulations. This will require the help of external trainers; a web-based version of the radiation safety course is also foreseen in the long term.

Anne is also working, together with the M&C Training team of HR-TD, on the development of a safety course for supervisors and contract managers, aiming at raising their awareness in safety matters and specifying their obligations in this field.

Finally, Anne also mentioned that safety courses organised on the CERN site should be free for Member of the Personnel  (Staff, Fellows, Users …) . However, external companies would have to pay for their staff, except for the course for newcomers.

4.      Update on Technical Training:

Davide Vite gave an update on a selection of new Technical trainings (see Annex III):

-        Technical Training Seminars: announcement is made through the Bulleting and directly to relevant groups (list available on the TT web pages). It takes place in the auditorium of the Training Centre, usually on Wednesday afternoon, and is well attended (10-50 persons).

-        Learning for the LHC series: this is the ELEC2002 or FEED2002 courses. Those are recorded and available on the Web

-        New courses:

o     CAO-CADENCE: introduction to CADENCE, VHDL and simulation with NCVHDL tool (5 sessions, 45 participants);

o     HeREF: helium refrigeration technique, pilot course in collaboration with ALLS consortium;

o     CLEAN 2002+: working in a clean room (5 sessions, 52 participants);

-        CERN Web Based Training: now up and running, accessible on http://www.course-source.net/sites/cern

Davide also mentioned a long list of project for next year:

-        DISP2003: Digital Signal Processing course on 2 terms (February – April);

-        FEED2003: follow up of FEED2002 - Spring term;

-        MAGNE2003: magnetism foe engineers and technicians, by CEDRAT Technologies;

-        AXEL2003: course on accelerator techniques (within the new structure of the accelerator sector);

-        ELEC2003: follow up of ELEC2002 – Under study;

-        Reliability Theory: very early stage

-        Best Practices in Mechanical Engineering Projects: very early stage.

The Technical Training team needs suggestions and comments from the DTOs, and relies on them to identify likely lecturers. In this line, Sue Foffano expressed interest for courses on “Coding Standards” and on “Data Management”.

5.      Proposition f or a temporary help desk for Office software:

The courses on Office automation and Administrative software are becoming less frequent, probably because most people who need these tools are now familiar with them. However, this does not mean that they do not have any difficulties with their application. In order to identify further possible training, Mick Storr proposed to organise an on-line help service on Office software: this could be handled during a limited period by the trainers from CIP. A report and an analysis of the occurrence of the questions would indeed allow a precise knowledge of the difficulties experienced with the use of the basic Office software at CERN. It was decided to postpone any decision on that proposal to a further TEC meeting, in order to get comments from a wider representation of the divisions.

6.      Next meeting:

The next TEC meeting will take place on December 13th .

 

                                                                                    Sylvain Weisz