Masonry Magazine August 2007 Page. 8

Masonry Magazine August 2007 Page. 8

Masonry Magazine August 2007 Page. 8
President's Message

Certification: Good Efforts and Bad Rumors

Frank Campitelli, President
Mason Contractors Association of America

MCAA New Members
The Mason Contractors Association of America is proud to welcome the following new members to the Association. MCAA would like to take this opportunity to thank them for joining their fellow mason contractors nationwide in helping to build a strong masonry industry. MCAA's members look forward to a long association with their firms.

Recently, I read an article in a competing magazine regarding certification and, although the Mason Contractors Association of America (MCAA) was not specifically named, many of the statements could be construed to reference the MCAA National Mason Contractor Certification plan. Therefore, I would like to clarify any misconceptions that anyone may have relating to the plan proposed by MCAA.

First and foremost, membership in MCAA is not a requirement to becoming certified. Any mason contractor who earns the required number of points and passes the exam will be certified. True, a very small portion of the educational seminars required to achieve certification are conducted through MCAA but everyone - member and non-member alike - not only can sign up and participate, but are strongly encouraged to do so.

Second, there is no collusion, price fixing or discrimination against small- or medium-sized contractors, nor am I even sure how this could even be considered to be a part of any certification program. The goal of MCAA is to promote quality workmanship through education. We all know that quality comes with a price regardless of whether it's an automobile, appliance or any other item purchased. If an owner desires to award a job strictly on price and gets a bad result, the industry as a whole takes a hit, not just the contractor that provided the poor work.

The goal of national certification is to give owners a tool to help them find contractors who are committed to quality work. If an owner chooses to select a contractor that is not certified and has a poor result, you hope the owner will have learned a lesson on contractor selection, rather than a lesson about the selection of masonry as a building material.

No one wants to see the small contractor be at a disadvantage because of a certification program; in fact, we feel it could provide just the opposite. If a smaller contractor can say that they are a certified contractor, we feel this will open doors that may otherwise have been closed. Also, getting certified will not require an exorbitant amount of money and, as the certification program develops, the MCAA would expect to see classes offered for little to no cost. The MCAA also is considering some type of assistance for contractors who would have a hard time affording some of the mandatory courses.

Ultimately, as an industry we must do something to address poor workmanship or, as an industry, we will lose market share. In the past, the MCAA has helped negotiate continued use of masonry by federal agencies despite several bad experiences they have had with poor workmanship. Our discussions with these agencies regarding a certification program have been well received; we need to act in order to police ourselves and make sure our market share is not driven away due to poor workmanship.

The MCAA welcomes comments and input on the certification program, and I would encourage anyone with concerns and questions to contact the MCAA office at (800) 536-2225. We cannot afford to let rumors, unfounded stories or misconceptions of certification steal our industry headlines. Our market share and future as an industry are too important to let these misconceptions pit one contractor against another on the issue of certification. We need to act as an industry united, willing to back up the products we install.

American Limestone Company
1905 Marilla Street
Dallas, Texas 75201
Chapter Associate
If your company is interested in becoming a member of the Contractors Association of America as a contractor, supplier, or instructor, please contact MCAA at (800) 536-2225, or complete an application at www.masoncontractors.org.


Masonry Magazine December 2012 Page. 45
December 2012

WORLD OF CONCRETE

REGISTER NOW; RECEIVE A FREE HAT!
The first 25 people to register this month using source code MCAA will receive a free MCAA Max Hat (valued at $15.00)! The MCAA Max Hat features a 3D MCAA logo embroidered on front with a

Masonry Magazine December 2012 Page. 46
December 2012

Index to Advertisers

AIRPLACO EQUIPMENT
888.349.2950
www.airplace.com
RS #296

KRANDO METAL PRODUCTS, INC.
610.543.4311
www.krando.com
RS #191

REECHCRAFT
888.600.6060
www.reechcraft.com
RS #3

Masonry Magazine December 2012 Page. 47
December 2012

AMERIMIX
MORTARS GROUTS STUCCOS

Why Amerimix Preblended Products?

576

The choice is CLEAR:

Consistency

Labor reduction

Enhanced productivity

ASTM - pretested to ASTM specifications

Masonry Magazine December 2012 Page. 48
December 2012

MASON MIX
Type S Mortar
QUIKRETE
www.quikrete.com
800-282-5828

MASON MIX
Type 5 Mortar
COMMERCIAL GRADE
QUIKRETE

Our mortar mix on Vail's Solaris was so consistent, every bag was like the next. And the next