Wednesday, August 20, 2025
8:30 a.m. Eastern: MIAQC Annual Business Meeting
9:00 a.m. Eastern:  Webinar

Fees:  $0.00
(There is no fee to attend this program. Donations to support MIAQC will be accepted at registration)

Program Overview

Several times a year, Maine experiences extreme heat events (days when the maximum daily temperature exceeds 90 degrees F.)  Many, but not all, buildings in Maine have cooling systems to lower temperatures to acceptable levels in hot weather.  This one-hour webinar will provide employers, building owners, and facility managers with practical guidance for how to prevent heat-related illness and reduced productivity in building occupants when extreme temperatures outdoors create the risk for extreme temperatures indoors.

The program is designed for those who manage both unconditioned spaces; (without summertime mechanical cooling) and/or conditioned spaces, as well as those responsible for creating guidance for vulnerable populations, and treating those with heat-related symptoms.  Discussion will include managing spaces during emergency events, such as power outages.

The session is designed to be engaging and interactive.  Be prepared to ask your questions and get answers to address your specific space concerns during high heat events.

What You’ll Learn:

  • How the Maine CDC and other local, regional, and national entities create and distribute extreme heat alerts, and where you can go to find them
  • How to calculate an indoor heat index, and how to use it to guide actions during a high heat event.
  • The symptoms of heat-related illness, and how to address them
  • General strategies for managing indoor spaces during high heat events (based on MIAQC’s own guidance:  Managing Indoor Environments During High Heat Events – Maine Indoor Air Quality Council)
  • Tips and tricks used by seasoned facility managers to manage their indoor spaces to protect the health of their occupants

Who Should Attend:  

  • School facilities personnel;
  • School policy decision makers (principals, school board members, superintendents);
  • Day care providers;
  • Long term care providers;
  • Health professionals (physicians and nurses, local health officers);
  • Municipal representatives (city personnel, fire departments, emergency responders);
  • Public health representatives;
  • Employers and directors of workers; and
  • Occupants of indoor spaces.

Presenters:

Session Moderator:  Norman Anderson, Anderson Environmental Health, Winslow, Maine

Norman’s professional career has focused mainly on environmental public health practice, especially involving the intersection of air quality and public policy. Norm is the former research director and environmental scientist at the American Lung Association of Maine; a former program manager at the Maine CDC, and currently is a consultant with Heinz Endowments in Pittsburgh, PA.  Norm is a member of the Board of Directors of the Maine Indoor Air Quality Council.

Rebecca Lincoln, Sc.D., Maine CDC, Augusta, ME

Rebecca Lincoln, Sc.D. is an Environmental Epidemiologist and the Acting Manager of the Environmental Health Program at the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, where she specializes in exposure assessment, climate change, heat and health, environmental health surveillance, private well water quality issues, metals, and PFAS. She serves as the Principal Investigator for several federal grants that support Maine CDC’s work to promote private well water testing; provide free private well water test kits to low-income Mainers; better understand the impacts of climate change on water quality and other aspects of public health; and summarize and make available data on private well water quality, usage, and testing rates. She holds a doctorate in Environmental Health from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

William Hansen, P.E., Facilities Director, Windham/Raymond Schools, Windham ME – Presenter

Bill Hansen, P.E. is the Director of Facilities at RSU #14 Windham Raymond Schools where he is responsible for managing 600,000 square feet of educational building space, a wastewater treatment plant, and all school properties.  The nine buildings range in age from 3 years old to 78 years old.  Bill has been in this role for the last sixteen years and previously worked 20 years for S. D Warren/Sappi Fine Papers in Facilities, Process, and Project Engineering.  His educational background includes a BS in Mechanical Engineering and a Certificate in Pulp and Paper Management from the University of Maine at Orono.

Greg Marles, P.E. – Chat Moderator

Continuing Education Credits

Type of Credit# Credits
BOCSelf-Submit for Consideration
BPIApproved for 1 credit - Program #22356
EngineersSelf-Report with Certificate of Attendance

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Questions?

Have specific questions you want answered during the webinar?  Consider submitting them to the presenter in advance!  Email your questions to:  christy@maineindoorair.org at least 60 minutes prior to webinar start.

Questions about registration and donations can be directed to the office of the Maine Indoor Air Quality Council.  Call 207-626-8115 or e-mail christy@maineindoorair.org.

Register Here:

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