Based on the new book Maintenance Planning, Scheduling and Coordination

From Industrial Press in New York (and of course, Amazon.com  

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creating a Maintenance Work Program is the first step in Scheduling

 Maintenance departments are under tremendous pressure to provide services to larger and increasingly complex assets. Constant change without regard for appropriate crewing has caused a widening gap, which increases backlog and deferred maintenance. 

 Burying your head in the sand is particularly problematic if you happen to be on a railroad track.  Can you see the train coming?  It looks like a second-class organization leading to reduced profit, quality of life and increasingly dangerous deferred maintenance items that are deteriorating at increasing rates.  

In mechanical systems the deterioration slowly builds and builds over a year or more (or decades or more). When it reaches the critical point you can just hang on for the ride.  The solution is not as much fun as a roller coaster but help get you off the ride. It starts with an assessment of what is needed to maintain your assets.

 The Work Program is a realistic determination of the labor needed to maintain a particular facility. You create the work program by analyzing the amount of work to be done by category and the actual amount of labor available to complete the work.

 Step 1 is to determine the hours available for work by craft. You do this by adding up the amount of time everyone is paid for and subtract vacation, average absenteeism, training time, jury duty and everything that pulls people off jobs. One of the traps is not to include time away from the job. In informal studies the average worker is paid for 2080 hours straight time but is available for work only 1700 or fewer hours.

 Step 2 is to add up all of the hours for PM tasks needed to properly maintain the equipment and other routine work. Only use your history as a guide unless you have 100% PM compliance. Actually list out the PMs needed for each class of equipment and asset and expand them by frequency (monthly, quarterly, etc.). This breakdown should include craft requirements unless you are truly a multicraft shop (very rare).

 Step 3 is to look at your historical records for the amount of emergency work for that month or quarter last year. Correct that for new assets that weren’t on-line last year. As the backlog and PMs are completed in a timely manner the emergency hours will naturally start to decline. You might start in the 30% range and end up in the 10% range.

Step 4 See what hours are left. This is the amount of work needed to provide backlog relief. Backlog comes from all sources including the PM group (called corrective maintenance). It is the total of all work not including emergency jobs. Backlog jobs can be planned and should be scheduled for maximum efficiency. Scheduling cannot take place effectively if the resource allocated to backlog relief is interfered with!

  Step 5 is to add hours to bring assets up to standard. This item covers rehabilitation, remodeling and renovation. Bringing assets up to standard will also reduce emergency work orders (and in many cases will take a bite out of the backlog as well).

 The Work Program goes to top administration officials every quarter with trend charts.  The Work Program document tells you what is needed in the real world. Where there is a significant shortfall, contractors, overtime or some other solution (such as making a deal with some of your just retired people) will be necessary.

 NOT funding the Work Plan also has consequences. Identify the consequencies for top management. Help them by collecting case studies of breakdowns that would have been corrected if you had people to take care of the PM or backlog items. You can gather these stories from your own organization (remember your digital camera) and from the trade press. Major maintenance events make it to the general press and can be very persuasive.

 If you would like additional information on the Work Program please consult the author’s new book Maintenance Planning, Scheduling and Coordination available from Industrial Press in New York (and of course, Amazon.com  )

 Joel

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Joel Levitt, President Springfield Resources 

800-242-5656  Voice:215-924-0270  Fax:215-424-4284

Maintenance Training and Consultation

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