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Fenestration B.C. pulls out of the Canadian Glass Association

January 22, 2014  By Patrick Flannery


Jan. 22, 2014 – Fenestration B.C. has cancelled its membership in the Canadian Glass Association
in a letter sent to the CGA board yesterday. Fenestration B.C. was
created in 2011 through the merger of the Window and Door Manufacturers
Association of B.C. and the Glazing Contractors Association of B.C. The
GCABC had previously been a member of the CGA, but the WDMA-BC had not.

Jan. 22, 2014 – Fenestration B.C. has cancelled its membership in the Canadian Glass Association in a letter sent to the CGA board yesterday. Fenestration B.C. was created in 2011 through the merger of the Window and Door Manufacturers Association of B.C. and the Glazing Contractors Association of B.C. The GCABC had previously been a member of the CGA, but the WDMA-BC had not.

The letter from the FenBC board of directors says the board "could not justify" the $25-per-member CGA membership fee, which amounts to a $3,000 payment to the national association annually. The board noted that Fenestration B.C. now includes window and door manufacturers and installers as well as glazing contractors, and said it believes the CGA "does not serve or provide a benefit to the majority of its membership." 

In an attached letter, the FenBC board stated its view that the licensing agreement allowing the CGA to distribute the Glazing Systems Specification Manual was voided by the dissolution of the GCABC into FenBC, and that all ownership and rights to the manual devolved back to FenBC. The CGA announced in 2011 that work by the GCABC to bring its previous manual into agreement with the National Building Code was complete, and that it was licensed by the GCABC to distribute the manual across the country.

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FenBC chairman Terry Adamson has not responded to a request to comment.

"This is truly a disappointing turn of events," said CGA president Jim Brady. "Since taking on the role of president in July 2013 I have worked to establish continual dialogue with member associations from across the country. We hold conference call board meetings once per month to discuss various issues that everyone is facing and also to discuss how to move forward. One of the challenges has been that B.C. did not nominate anyone to be a board member at the Annual General Meeting last June, and as a result they are not realizing the growth that is occurring in the Canadian Glass Association. We had a Glass Connections Conference in Calgary last October that had 85 attendees and by all accounts was very successful. We are organizing another Glass Connections Conference for Halifax on June 5, and we are working in conjunction with the OGMA and Glass Canada on the Top Glass trade show set for May 28 in Mississauga. Part of reaching out to regional associations, is to discuss other issues such as education for apprentices, the Red Seal Program and at the very least, to get the Glazing Specifications Manual into their hands. Now that FenBC is striking the licensing agreement that was made between the Glazing Contractors Association of B.C. and the Canadian Glass Association, we will no longer be able to offer [the manual] to regional glass associations. With regards to the manual, the CGA board will be meeting next week to discuss our options. As events unfold, I will keep our members informed through Glass Canada."

For more information
canadianglassassociation.com
fen-bc.org


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