[CAUT] Workload; was Position announcement

Jeannie Grassi jcgrassi at earthlink.net
Tue Jul 20 18:08:02 MDT 2010


Jeff,

I appreciate your sentiments, but even if PTG gets on board such
recommendations probably will count for little when schools (or at least
those who are doing the hiring) are so out of touch with what is needed and
what is possible for one person to accomplish.  I'm afraid it will fall on
deaf ears. 

 

I was also dismayed once again to see that no mention of PTG or RPT status
was given as even a minimum requirement.  I think this is the 2nd or 3rd
position advertised without such mention.  Are we making progress any
progress?

 

jeannie

 

  _____  

From: caut-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf Of
tannertuner
Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 7:13 AM
To: caut at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Workload; was Position announcement

 


I communicated until I was blue in the face. I wrote letters that were put
on file. I talked to the faculty everytime I came in to service their piano.
Funny, one day nobody remembered any of that. They just woke up and realized
the pianos were going down hill. Pianos that were brand new "yesterday" were
all of a sudden in need of transformation. Rooms were overscheduled and no
time was available for tuning, much less pulling pianos out for hammer
filing, regulation and voicing. Even if you could go from room to room, the
body and mind just aren't cut out for that kind of work intensity long term.
That's what whoever takes this job is going to get. After the first year,
he'll start voicing his concerns to the faculty and they'll look at him like
he's just making excuses, he's lucky to be getting paid so much to be able
to pursue a hobby all day, and he just needs to start doing his job and shut
up.

 

Problem is, people are accustomed to having their pianos tuned in their
homes once or twice a year, or once every 3 to 5 years. They look at 144
pianos in a college and see a part time job at best, especially if the
pianos are new. New stuff doesn't need fixing, right? We've even had one RPT
comment on this list that he couldn't have imagined a school needing a full
time tech for 80 pianos until he took a college job, and then a year in, he
saw that there was no way possible for one tech to handle 80.

 

This situation needs 3 full time technicians. Newton said it. Steinway says
it. 40 pianos for one technician. I appreciate what our PTG Guidelines goes
into about condition and all, but new or old, 40 pianos in a school is a
full time job for any piano technician. PTG needs to get on board with that
recommendation.

 

Jeff

--- On Tue, 7/20/10, Dennis Johnson <johnsond at stolaf.edu> wrote:


From: Dennis Johnson <johnsond at stolaf.edu>
Subject: Re: [CAUT] Position announcement, James Madison University
To: caut at ptg.org
Date: Tuesday, July 20, 2010, 9:32 AM

This is a very possible scenario, but the way around that is communication.
We are looking at expansion ourselves next year which means buying a
significant number at once. Some of the piano faculty are already concerned
about this exact potential problem of everything wearing out the same time.
Not to take issue, but it's highly recommended that anyone considering this
position talk about that in very precise terms.  Something like phasing in
at least a part time assistant after 5 years would be perfect.  Of course
talk is cheap, but I remember Newton telling us to never tire reminding them
of reasonable staffing needs.  There is only so much we can do, but the
solution comes from both sides. 

Dennis.
______________

On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 7:50 AM, tannertuner <tannertuner at bellsouth.net
<http://us.mc1806.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=tannertuner@bellsouth.net> >
wrote:

The Steinway verticals aren't the problem. One technician versus all these
NEW pianos and what it will look like in 8 to 10 years is. First few years
it will look like a cakewalk, until one day you wake up and everything needs
new hammers, strings start breaking nothing will stay in tune. The students
and faculty will start complaining that the tech used to do a good job but
overnight he appears to not be doing his job anymore.

Jeff

--- On Mon, 7/19/10, Ron Nossaman <rnossaman at cox.net
<http://us.mc1806.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=rnossaman@cox.net> > wrote:

> From: Ron Nossaman <rnossaman at cox.net
<http://us.mc1806.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=rnossaman@cox.net> >

> Subject: Re: [CAUT] Position announcement, James Madison University
> To: caut at ptg.org
<http://us.mc1806.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=caut@ptg.org> 

> Date: Monday, July 19, 2010, 3:30 PM

> tannertuner wrote:
> > Wouldn't wish this job on my worst enemy!
>
>
> But a hundred of these pianos are new Steinway verticals.
> Your worst enemy is the ideal recommendation!
>
> Is the previous tech AWOL or just heavily sedated?
> Ron N
>

 

 

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