Quality Asbestos Training Courses In Merthyr Tydfil

Non-Licensed Asbestos Removal Training in Merthyr Tydfil

Asbestos pops up all over the place in buildings across the UK. It was so widely used it is often one of those materials we need to be trained to work with.

Merthyr Tydfil invested nearly 60 years in using asbestos containing materials within the fabric of its buildings. This has contributed to the awful legacy of ill health, disease and death amongst UK workers. At the last count 5,500 people were losing their lives each and every year to asbestos conditions.

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Asbestos Training in Merthyr Tydfil

Whether you are an electrician, a roofer or a grounds-worker, it is highly likely certain aspects of your work in Merthyr Tydfil bring you into contact with asbestos containing materials. Asbestos training courses, available in Merthyr Tydfil, help teach you to work on these products in line with the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012. Non-licensed training will ensure you have the knowledge to not only work with asbestos safely, but how to deal with all the other issues around it like method-statements, disposal and transport to name a few.

Merthyr Tydfil Asbestos Courses – Non-Licensed Removal Training

By taking part in an accredited training session in Merthyr Tydfil, you are assured of a quality service as our course has been externally audited. This verification of compliance with the legal requirements has been carried out by the Independent Asbestos Training Providers (IATP). Our course is certified to meet their standards.

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Asbestos Training courses run in Merthyr Tydfil, under the IATP accreditation, are 1-day in duration and include asbestos awareness in the syllabus. This avoids the longer and more costly route stipulated by UKATA saving you both time and money. As a further advantage, Fit2Fit accredited face fit testing is also available as part of the course.

About Merthyr Tydfil

Merthyr Tydfil includes the town of Merthyr, and towns and villages such as Treharris, Cyfarthfa, and Dowlais. The town of Merthyr has a population of around 30,000, although it was once more than double this thanks to the iron and coal industries that built up in the valley, and Cyfarthfa Works was at one time the largest ironworks in the world. Today the county is part of the Brecon Beacons National Park, and attractions include the Cyfarthfa Park and Museum, Parc Taf Bargoed. Fashion designers Julien Macdonald and Laura Ashley both hail from Merthyr.Merthyr Tydfil’s tourism success story is continuing apace, with the sector having a £100m economic impact locally in 2018 – an increase of almost £30m from the previous year.The 35.4% rise was due to a 41% increase in the number of annual visitors from 1.27m to 1.79m and the number of full-time equivalent jobs supported by tourism up 31% from 917 to 1,200.The increase in day visitor numbers was due partly to a big rise in attendances at the 17 visitor attractions across the county borough, along with ‘influential factors’ including the opening of the Trago Merthyr store.Delegates at the County Borough Council’s annual ‘Destination Day’ conference heard that the number of staying visitor days was also up 13.6%. This was due to the growth of bed stock, particularly in the non-serviced sector – hostel-type accommodation, caravan and camping, an extra 104 bed spaces at Rock UK Summit Centre and a mushrooming number of Airbnb establishments.Presenting the findings, Interim Chief Executive Ellis Cooper told the conference: There are many exciting plans and projects in development for Merthyr Tydfil – too many to mention – but the following, which are already beginning to come to fruition, are merely a snapshot of all the good work that will happen.He then outlined some of the key projects taking place between 2019-2022, including the development of a Cyfarthfa heritage area masterplan, Valleys Regional Park funding, Merthyr Tydfil’s new bus station, Phase 2 developments at BikePark Wales and a £417,000 grant secured from Welsh Government’s Sustainable Management Scheme for preventative works at Taf Parc Bargoed.The Orbit Business Centre event had a diverse range of speakers including experts in the fields of tourism, architecture and construction, along with entrepreneurs providing adventure activities, accommodation, shopping, dining and entertainment.Council Leader Cllr Kevin O’Neill said the continued growth of the tourism sector in the past 10 years had been consistent. We only need to look at the increase in accommodation providers here over the past decade- there were 19 businesses trading in 2009, compared to 53 now and still growing, he added.In 2018, STEAM (Scarborough Tourism Economic Activity Model) figures captured that Merthyr Tydfil benefited from over 1.79m day visitors, with over 200,000 people staying overnight for an average of two nights per stay.Cllr O’Neill said the authority would ‘strive to grow and promote our existing offer and produce collaborative packages to encourage people to stay longer in the locality, increase the number of staying visitors and strengthen the local economy even further’.He added: We have dedicated resources in our economic development team to work in collaboration with you in order to drive forward a dynamic programme of destination priorities.Other speakers at the conference included Ian Ritchie, whose team of architects is working on designing the Cyfarthfa Plan aimed at creating an international heritage centre.A talk was also given by Trago Merthyr Site Manager Richard Mears and Business Improvement Manager Ellie Robertson about the second phase of developments at the store, including a petrol filling station and further leisure facilities.The Council’s Programme Manager, Ryan Barry, outlined his proposals for the development of a new ‘Destination Management Plan’ and its strategic alignment to Visit Wales’s new Action Plan for Wales, as well as future projects being developed by the Community Regeneration team.Destination Management Co-ordinator Lyndsey Handley said: The Destination Day event was the biggest and most successful one we’ve had to date. The delegates were massively impressed by the huge amount of positive change that’s happening in our county borough and went away feeling very confident about the future of tourism in Merthyr Tydfil.Merthyr Tydfil includes the town of Merthyr, and towns and villages such as Treharris, Cyfarthfa, and Dowlais. The town of Merthyr has a population of around 30,000, although it was once more than double this thanks to the iron and coal industries that built up in the valley, and Cyfarthfa Works was at one time the largest ironworks in the world. Today the county is part of the Brecon Beacons National Park, and attractions include the Cyfarthfa Park and Museum, Parc Taf Bargoed. Fashion designers Julien Macdonald and Laura Ashley both hail from Merthyr.Merthyr Tydfil’s tourism success story is continuing apace, with the sector having a £100m economic impact locally in 2018 – an increase of almost £30m from the previous year.The 35.4% rise was due to a 41% increase in the number of annual visitors from 1.27m to 1.79m and the number of full-time equivalent jobs supported by tourism up 31% from 917 to 1,200.The increase in day visitor numbers was due partly to a big rise in attendances at the 17 visitor attractions across the county borough, along with ‘influential factors’ including the opening of the Trago Merthyr store.Delegates at the County Borough Council’s annual ‘Destination Day’ conference heard that the number of staying visitor days was also up 13.6%. This was due to the growth of bed stock, particularly in the non-serviced sector – hostel-type accommodation, caravan and camping, an extra 104 bed spaces at Rock UK Summit Centre and a mushrooming number of Airbnb establishments.Presenting the findings, Interim Chief Executive Ellis Cooper told the conference: There are many exciting plans and projects in development for Merthyr Tydfil – too many to mention – but the following, which are already beginning to come to fruition, are merely a snapshot of all the good work that will happen.He then outlined some of the key projects taking place between 2019-2022, including the development of a Cyfarthfa heritage area masterplan, Valleys Regional Park funding, Merthyr Tydfil’s new bus station, Phase 2 developments at BikePark Wales and a £417,000 grant secured from Welsh Government’s Sustainable Management Scheme for preventative works at Taf Parc Bargoed.The Orbit Business Centre event had a diverse range of speakers including experts in the fields of tourism, architecture and construction, along with entrepreneurs providing adventure activities, accommodation, shopping, dining and entertainment.Council Leader Cllr Kevin O’Neill said the continued growth of the tourism sector in the past 10 years had been consistent. We only need to look at the increase in accommodation providers here over the past decade- there were 19 businesses trading in 2009, compared to 53 now and still growing, he added.In 2018, STEAM (Scarborough Tourism Economic Activity Model) figures captured that Merthyr Tydfil benefited from over 1.79m day visitors, with over 200,000 people staying overnight for an average of two nights per stay.Cllr O’Neill said the authority would ‘strive to grow and promote our existing offer and produce collaborative packages to encourage people to stay longer in the locality, increase the number of staying visitors and strengthen the local economy even further’.He added: We have dedicated resources in our economic development team to work in collaboration with you in order to drive forward a dynamic programme of destination priorities.Other speakers at the conference included Ian Ritchie, whose team of architects is working on designing the Cyfarthfa Plan aimed at creating an international heritage centre.A talk was also given by Trago Merthyr Site Manager Richard Mears and Business Improvement Manager Ellie Robertson about the second phase of developments at the store, including a petrol filling station and further leisure facilities.The Council’s Programme Manager, Ryan Barry, outlined his proposals for the development of a new ‘Destination Management Plan’ and its strategic alignment to Visit Wales’s new Action Plan for Wales, as well as future projects being developed by the Community Regeneration team.Destination Management Co-ordinator Lyndsey Handley said: The Destination Day event was the biggest and most successful one we’ve had to date. The delegates were massively impressed by the huge amount of positive change that’s happening in our county borough and went away feeling very confident about the future of tourism in Merthyr Tydfil.

Our Courses

We offer a wide range of courses run by qualified trainers covering all aspects of face fit testing and asbestos training.

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