tuning and teaching

Richard Brekne Richard.Brekne@grieg.uib.no
Sun Apr 28 14:57 MDT 2002


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Wimblees@aol.com wrote:

>
> My comment was in regard to how the PTG as an organization should do
>
>> promotion on behalf of its members. There is a clear problem among
>> our
>> members who are employed part-time in situations where the workload
>> would
>> actually call for full-time employment. And worse of course, there
>> is also a
>> problem of techs who are nominally employed full time but paid only
>> part-time wages and expected to make up the difference in private
>> business.
>> This problem deserves PTG organizational attention, IMO.
>>
>
> This is where I have a problem with the workload formula the CAUT
> committee is promoting. It is assuming a certain number of pianos to
> be the workload of a full time technician. It started out at 60, but
> then revised the number from 40 up to 80, depending on the kind of
> institution. An administrator who might not be aware of how much work
> is involved in taking care of pianos in a school setting, might not
> realize the amount of time is required to do so. An administrator is
> going to look at a full time technician in the private sector, and see
> that person with a customer base of 500 - 2000. How can an
> administrator justify a full time technician with only 60 - 100
> pianos, when a "full time technician" can take care of 2000 pianos?
>

It would seem to me that "taking care" of 60 - 100 pianos in a Music
Conservatory situation and "taking care" of 2000 private home pianos are
quite obviously two different ball parks, and it shouldnt be too
difficult to clarify that much to anyone....grin... even an
administrator.

>
> This is why the formula I have devised uses hours per week as a basis.
> If the PTG can show, through the use of the formula, that taking care
> of 60 - 80 pianos, including the repairs, rebuilding, and
> administrative duties, is a 35 - 40 hour a week job, then perhaps the
> administrator will realize that the tech won't have time to supplement
> a part time salary to take care of those pianos.
>

Relative to educating an administrator as to what kind of workload is
involved in taking care of X amount of instruments under a given useage
load while maintaining some given level of quality,,,,  I cant see that
equating it in form of hours per week, or pianos per year amount to much
more then the difference between 6 and a half dozen. Whatever works
best. Either way it should work out to about the same net result. Or
what ?


>
> Wim

--
Richard Brekne
RPT, N.P.T.F.
Bergen, Norway
mailto:rbrekne@broadpark.no
http://home.broadpark.no/~rbrekne/ricmain.html


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