Category

Member News

AGM OPAL ASSOCIATION INC

By Member News

Location: QT Gold Coast hotel
Staghorn av
Surfers paradise
Time: 8am on the 5th August – Friday

Positions open
President
Vice president
Treasure
Secretary
Public officer Nsw based.

Agenda

8am open
Apologies
President report
Treasures report
Election of office bearers
General Business
Discussion of opal certificates
Close 9 am

Opal certification draft test and Opal Association 2022/23 Membership renewal

By Member News

We hope you are all keeping well.

Its that time of year again when Memberships are due on the 30th June 2022.We have now connected the Paypal account to the site, automating payments. Please be sure to use this option as it will ensure your Membership will update automatically.

Please go to https://www.opal.asn.au/ to make payment Thank you

Opal Certification Test

We are in the final stages of making available the Opal Certification Test. We have drafted the questions and are working on how best to implement it online and or in person. Your input to questions herein will help us to better streamline the format and execution of the test. Your answers will also help us shortlist the questions for the test so that it results in appropriate and relevance of the current issues and standards affecting the opal industry today, not only on the “field” with us but also in the greater scope of the gem industry and its standards. Hopefully this process of taking the test and being able to issue Certificates of Authenticity will help us achieve our mission here at the Opal Association to accurately inform our potential clients so that they come to and want to purchase an opal above all other stones.

We appreciate the time and effort you will be putting in to answer the following questions.

  1. Do you think the test should include basic knowledge of gemmological properties of opal (e.g. RI, Specific Gravity, Spectrum etc) and the implications thereof?
  2. Would you consider the format of the exam to contain a short answer in addition to multiple choice and true/false?
  3. Should we propose a study guide online before we all take the test?
  4. How many times should members be able to retake the test and within what time frame (every quarter/ half yearly/annually)?
  5. Should qualification of passing the test be 100% or should we consider 80% as the pass rate?
  6. Should the exam paper test the knowledge of the current nomenclature of opals?
  7. What changes would you like to see on the actual Certificate e.g. probable location versus location, treatment, brightness?
  8. Do you want the test to be easy to pass or shall we push the limit as far as learning and knowing more information about opal in general?
  9. What details do you think should be included in the Certificate of Authenticity?

Please email your answers to [email protected] by 10th of July. After careful consideration of your answers, we will finalize the question list and start our beta testing for the test online.

We appreciate all your opinions, advice and knowledge in making this Association better and better.

Sincerely with thanks

OPAL ASSOCIATION AGM Minutes

By Member News

THURSDAY 2 SEPTEMBER AT 2Pm 

25 surfers av mermaid waters Qld 

PRESENT: 

Paul Sedawie (Pres; Chair) 

Ted Hamilton 

Ross Sedawie 

Wayne Sedawie 

Patrick Ujsjaszi 

Robert Short [zoom] 

Sylvia Iskenderian [zoom] 

George Emmanuel Christianos [zoom] 

Jason Blaiklock {zoom] 

APOLOGIES: 

Chris Gawthorpe 

John McDonald 

Meeting declared open by the Chair at 2 pm: 

President’s Report: 

Paul Sedawie, President 

Over the last twelve months we have been involved with the the Opal Classification/Nomenclature Committee and we have had several zoom  meetings and have progressed what has been four and a half years’ work into two foolscap pages to be submitted to CIBJO. (Together with the Gemmological Association of Australia) 

There is still a strong demand from members wanting to issue certificates through the opal association. There are still many gem testing labs issuing in correct opal certificates. Check out our face book page which has 3500 followers for examples of misleading certificates. Over the next twelve months we will be focusing on the areas of education (consumers and gem classification labs), promotion of the industry to new entrants, developing a system for member certification of Opals and also some community promotion centred around Opal cutting and polishing.  If any one has a project you think we should be involved with please contact us. 

President’s report accepted. Moved: Ross Sedawie Seconded Ted hamilton 

Treasurer’s Report 

This year we lost many members. The pandemic has taken its toll and many members dropped out so we are considering possibly freezing dues for affected members so that they may continue to be members during this time which is proving difficult for some. Total membership fee income for the year was only $2800. Operating expenses included $1800 to the Qld Boulder Opal Association towards an advertising campaign agreed to earlier, $1400 wages and salaries, $1650  to repair hacked Opal Association website. 

Presently the Association has $30792 in the bank. 

Treasurers Report Accepted: 

Moved: Wayne Sedawie 

Seconded: Ted Hamilton 

Election of Office Bearers: 

The same committee will stand for the same offices as last year. 

President calls for any additional nominations – None received. 

So the present committee were elected unopposed, for the record: 

President – Paul Sedawie 

Vice President – Yanni Anastasiadis 

Treasurer – Sally Patel 

Secretary – George Emmanuel Christianos 

Publicity Officer – Edmond Lahoud 

Moved: Paul Sedawie 

Seconded: Ross Sedawie 

General Business: 

Suggestions were invited for ideas as to running a cutting and polishing promotion type of workshop to encourage some new industry entrants in Opals and Opal cutting  

Paul Sedawie mentioned that the base body tone posters be available at 20 cents to members and they can be listed on our web site. As Paul paid for the web hosting of 200$ he asked to take posters instead. 

It has come to the committee’s attention that some gem labs have been issuing certificates with no testing for treatment and often writing in small print at the back that the stone has not been tested for treatment. In one such case Paul Sedawie emailed both the gem lab and the sellers and it appears that the seller referred him to the gem lab and the gem lab referred him to the disclaimer / was not willing to listen to corrective information or to be cooperativeThe issues are to do both with the identification and certification of composites as natural and of treated Welo Opal as natural black Opal. 

Discussion about how to go about implementing a system whereby members could do certification of Opals. Jason Blaiklock suggested the Tuna industry model whereby each member must abide by the industry code of practice. 

Ted Hamilton: We should move ahead to implement Opal certification by members. 

A discussion regarding a testing regime whereby each member wanting to issue certificates would have to take a study course to be developed in house and then pass a testing regime so that they knew exactly what they were looking at when examining an Opal – could distinguish all treatments, composites and could tell the difference between Welo and Australian Opals.  

This regime has been discussed previously over the past few years since the online certification feature was taken down.  

It was moved by Paul Sedawie that we pay a sum to Natasha Patel to develop the course for us. All those present agreed on the sum up to $2000 to develop the course. 

 Paul Sedawie moved and Ted Hamilton seconded. 

Jason Blaiklock offered some materials into the mix pertaining to Opal identification which he has on his websites and provided the following links: Your comments on his work would be most welcome 

https://www.opal.org.au
https://opalinfo.com/#/

George Christianos: Together with the education and certification we need to bind the members who will be issuing the certificates to a code of ethics which states that they will be truthful and faithful to the meaning of the terminology – members not permitted to mislead etc. 

The Year Ahead: 

Four area of concentration for the year ahead: 

  1. Develop a comprehensive test for members wanting to issue certificates of Authenticity 
  2. Education of Gem Labs 
  3. Promotion of our industry to new entrants 
  4. 4. Education of consumers 

Close: 

No further business to discuss, the Chairman called the meeting closed at 2:40 pm. 

Kind Regards 

Paul Sedawie

President of the Opal Association 

http://www.opal.asn.au/opal/