Worldwide cleaning industry association, ISSA, has announced that it and the Global Biorisk Advisory Council (GBAC) have agreed to merge, with the GBAC effective immediately now known as ‘GBAC, a Division of ISSA’.
GBAC is a recognised leader in training, education, and certification in Forensic Restoration biorisk management, decontamination, and infection-control disciplines. The merger of GBAC into ISSA addresses a market need for advanced knowledge and application of science-based cleaning, disinfection, and infection-control practices worldwide.
ISSA Executive Director John Barrett said: "ISSA and GBAC have come together to make the world a safer, healthier, and better place. The merger clearly complements ISSA's mission to change the way the world views cleaning and advance the professionalism of the cleaning industry. We are incredibly excited about the positive impact GBAC will have on our members and our industry overall."
As part of the agreement, GBAC Executive Director Patricia Olinger will become a full-time ISSA staff member on 1 September. Olinger, a Registered Biosafety Professional, Certified Forensic Operator, and Certified Bio-Forensic Restoration Specialist, has held board and committee leadership positions with the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), American Biological Safety Association, the US National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the Campus Safety Health and Environmental Management Association.
Olinger will lead the GBAC division and its advisory council members while developing and delivering new training, certification programs, company accreditation, and licensing programs under ISSA’s worldwide platform.
Olinger added: "Merging with ISSA is a truly exciting milestone for GBAC. Being able to augment GBAC programs with ISSA's global network will allow us to increase awareness, interface with industry leaders, and deliver biorisk management services. The merger is especially timely as facilities and cleaning professionals face challenges in preparing for and preventing public health outbreaks such as measles, influenza, hand-foot-and-mouth disease, and more."
As a division of ISSA, GBAC will expand its formal training and certification offerings while continuing to serve as a trusted resource to government, commercial, and private entities to help them prepare for, respond to, and recover from public health outbreaks and crisis situations. Through GBAC's global health preparedness platform, its experienced network of experts and certified partners prescribe best practices for public health response, including how to assess, contain, monitor and eradicate pathogenic and microbial threats in emergency medical services, school campuses, hospitals, airports, corporate offices, and beyond.
GBAC Director of Forensic Operations, Jeff Jones, commented: "ISSA and GBAC will prepare cleaning professionals to become 'microbial warriors' for public health preparedness. Together, we will drive awareness, educate, and accelerate adoption of best practices, proper protocols, and procedures in preparation, response, and recovery to biological incidents."
ISSA plans to host specific GBAC events this calendar year, with the first workshop taking place in Dallas in October. Additionally, Olinger and the GBAC division will present education sessions and exhibit at ISSA Show North America 2019, which takes place 18-21 November in Las Vegas, Nevada.