Does anyone know what ANSI standard is applicable to Chemistry Technicians in the commercial nuclear field? I have been hearing one of my supervisors at work talking about how he is an ANSI certified chemistry technician who became a supervisor, but when I questioned him as to what it meant to be ANSI certified he didn't really give me a straight answer. Being the new guy and not really being satisfied with the answer that the supervisor gave me, I started asking some of my coworkers how one goes about gaining his ANSI certification as a chem tech. None of them had any idea, but all assumed that they were ANSI certified as well. I assume that after I complete the site specific training program that this will meet the requirements for the certification.
This leads me to my next question: Is Navy ELT experience sufficient to meet the ANSI requirement for chemistry technicians? If not, what more does one need to do to gain this ANSI certification, and is there a formal process (i.e. documenting hours and training and submitting this documentation to a governing organization)?
Long story short, I'm an ex-ELT (6 yrs) with 1 yr of research radiochem lab experience and ~5 months at a commercial site, and I'm just wondering if perhaps I already meet the ANSI standard for certification as a chem tech. I know I'll still have to complete the site specific training program, I'm just trying to resolve this issue in my mind for my own edification.