Skilled technicians are the backbone of every service industry – none more so than in the landbased engineering sector.
Ensuring that tractors run efficiently, combines work effectively, fine turf mowers cut perfectly and chainsaws run safely are all in a days work for technicians working in an industry that extends from farms to large estates, golf courses to forests, lawns to sportgrounds.
Faced with such diversity, the industry itself launched the ground-breaking Landbased Technicians Accreditation (LTA) scheme in December 2007. Its aim is to establish a clear career path for technicians through the achievement of four qualification levels, Entry (LTA1), Standard (LTA2), Advanced (LTA3) and Master (LTA4).
The Independent LTA Career Pathway has been developed to address this and will be delivered by the appointed LTA Assessment Centre at our Barony campus, utilising distance learning modules developed uniquely for the LTA scheme by the campus engineering team.
The new Independent scheme was publicised in the May 2012 edition of the Service Dealer, and was launched formally on 15 April 2013 when Barony campus started processing the first applications from dealership technicians.
David Kirschner, LTA manager and co-ordinator says:
“Technicians are the ‘engine-room’ of every dealership, and as an industry we have to ensure that we provide them with a recognisable career pathway to the benefit of their employers, customers – and of course themselves. In doing so it will make the industry more attractive to new recruits and help dealers retain their highly valued technicians”