Staska receives MnCCECT lifetime achievement award

Release Date: June 12, 2017

State Council for Customized Training awards
lifetime achievement honor to Riverland Fire Training Program Manager Brian Staska

 

Brian Staska, Riverland Fire Training Program Manager

The Minnesota Council for Continuing Education and Customized Training (MnCCECT) announced at the 2017 State conference that Brian Staska, Riverland Community College’s Fire Training Program Manager received the lifetime achievement award.

This award is not necessarily an annual award, but is given to nominated and selected candidates who match the eligibility requirements. Eligible persons must have served at least 15 years in a customized training/continuing education capacity, or 20 years in a combination of customized training/continuing education and positions that directly support this function. Eligible candidates must have been significant contributors to the Continuing Education and Customized Training system through the work that they have done. Candidates must be/or have been actively involved with or in support of the MnCCECT organization and its mission.

According to Staska’s nomination form, as a firefighter for 30 years, Staska “is always looking for new techniques and technologies that keep firefighters safe and allow for better rescue operations for saving civilian lives. His passion for his work is exemplified by his constant striving to keep current in his industry and the continuous improvements he makes to his programming.”

Further, “Brian is a leader in fire training and other fire trainers know if there is anyone to ask about what’s next in the fire world, it is Brian. Brian works countless hours and volunteers much of his time to ensure that his clients get exactly what they need. He has built an infrastructure for training at Riverland that is best-in-class from a model house to a grain bin rescue training mockup to a burn structure currently in construction. Brian constantly tries to have his training mimic real-life as much as possible and he is extremely creative in developing simulations and infrastructure to do so.”