July 20, 2008

Font Size


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines

Strategies for Success: Energy Management

Jul 1, 2005 12:00 PM, by Mike Kennedy

To ensure that schools and universities are using energy efficiently, facility managers need to be able to accurately measure how much energy is being used, and monitor the conditions of the buildings and equipment that consume that energy.

“Facility managers must be expert collectors, organizers and assessors of facilities data if a school district is to have safe and well-maintained school buildings,” says The National Center for Education Statistics' Planning Guide for Maintaining School Facilities. “Collecting and reporting good data for use in analysis, trending and planning is a vital step toward good organizational management.”

Most education institutions have ample access to computers and the Internet; this has made a computerized maintenance management system (CMMS) an affordable and valuable tool for keeping track of an institution's building components and equipment, and how they are performing, as well as for assessing the level of maintenance required to keep the facilities functioning efficiently.

The planning guide recommends a CMMS for education institutions that have more than 500,000 square feet of facilities.

“At that point, facilities, assets, staff and scheduling become complex enough to warrant an investment in CMMS software, equipment and staff training,” says the guide.

The guide spells out some of the features that a CMMS should have.

“The CMMS should be network- or web-based, be compatible with standard operating systems, have add-on modules (such as incorporating the use of hand-held computers), and be able to track assets and key systems,” the guide states.

A desirable CMMS also will:

  • Acknowledge receipt of a work order.

  • Allow maintenance staff to set work priorities (such as emergency, routine or preventive).

  • Allow the requesting party to track work orders to completion.

  • Allow preventive-maintenance work orders.

  • Allow labor and parts costs to be captured on a per-building basis (or per-task basis).

The CMMS should allow a staff member from every building and campus in an education institution to have the ability to initiate a work request and check on its progress. The guide recommends that one person at each site be given “official” requesting authority so a school can maintain better oversight and avoid multiple requests for the same job.

The results of work orders should be entered into an institution's database so that facilities managers can use the data to better anticipate future maintenance and repair needs.

“Sophisticated CMMS enable the data to be analyzed in detail and at different scales (weekly, monthly and annual reporting, as well as by room, building and campus), depending on user need,” the guide says.

NOTABLE

A good CMMS work-order system will compile the following information:

  • The dates a request was received and approved.
  • A job tracking number and job status.
  • The location of a job and its priority status.
  • The person who requested the work, and the staff members assigned to it.
  • The job's supply and labor costs.

Source: NCES, Planning Guide for Maintaining School Facilities.

Most Recent Story

Armed and Dangerous

Mike Kennedy

Just when you think you've heard everything! A lawmaker in Nevada plans to introduce a bill this month that would allow teachers to carry guns in classrooms. (Yes, you read that correctly.)

Most Read

Subscribe to RSS headline updates from:
Powered by FeedBurner

Essential Reading

The Subtle Stuff

Vikas Nagardeolekar and Edwin Merritt

It's hard to win passage of a school construction bond — whether through a citizen referendum or the vote of a town council or general town meeting.

Hear and Now

Michael McKeon and Lincoln Berry

When acoustics are mentioned with regard to schools, many people first think of performing arts.

Making it Readable

Peter Gisolfi

When my daughter was 10 years old, she left the comfort of her elementary school for the unfamiliar territory of the middle/high school building — a crazy quilt of pieces from the 1910s, 1930s, 1960s and 1970s.

Echo Boom Impact

Phillipe Dordai and Joseph Rizzo

Like their baby-boomer parents, the echo-boom generation is reshaping the college and university landscape.

Spotlight On:

Now Accepting Entries Architectural Portfolio 2008. Entry forms due June 3. VView more information on the 2008 Architectural Portfolio.

Top 10

How does your institution rank? Including enrollment and expenditures, growth rates and more!

AS&U 100

American School & University highlights the largest 100 school districts each September| Who's growing and who's slowing

Back to Top

Browse Back Issues

ASU May Cover ASU May Cover ASU April Cover ASU March Cover ASU February Cover ASU January Cover ASU December Cover
BROWSE BACK ISSUES