The key to training is in the balance between making sure staff is well-trained and making sure we are delivering enough to our shareholders investments.

How Much Training Is Enough? Strategic Approaches to Training Cycle Design
For training professionals in utilities and other high-risk industries, the question of how much training is enough is rarely straightforward. Too little and employees may not have the knowledge to keep themselves and others safe. Too much and you risk disengagement, scheduling nightmares, and unsustainable administrative burden. Finding the right balance requires more than following legislation — it demands a strategic, defensible, and competency-based approach.
This course draws on real-world experience leading a curriculum review at a large Canadian utility serving over one million people. The instructor walks through the challenges that prompted a full review of training cycle periods — including 56,000 annual training hours, frustrated employees, and strained managers — and shares the frameworks, industry research, and governance processes used to build a more sustainable model.
From sliding-scale near-miss tracking to gap-based refresher training and risk-ranked delivery methods, participants will explore emerging approaches to training cycle design and gain practical tools they can apply in their own organizations. The course also addresses the critical role of documentation and process in defending training decisions during audits, incidents, or regulatory reviews.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this course, participants will be able to:

As a Certified Training and Development Professional (CTDP) with years of experience working with associations, I am currently the Executive Director of the Institute for Performance and Learning or I4PL. Our purpose is to elevate the performance of the Canadian workforce.
This portal is provided as a training and development resource for City of Markham employees. Every course is delivered by a qualified subject matter expert or learning organization, is quantifiable in hours, and is verifiable — you receive a documented certificate of completion for every course you finish, stored on LearnFormula indefinitely.
If you hold a professional designation (for example in engineering, accounting, human resources, or law), courses may be counted as professionally relevant, verifiable learning activities toward your continuing professional development. Individual practitioners are responsible for confirming that an activity meets the requirements of their professional body. For questions about the City of Markham's training and development policies, please speak with your people leader or Human Resources.