I would suggest you contact the manufacturer of the valves you currently have. If you have more than one manufacturer, contact anyone of the major vendors (Crosby, Dresser, Farris, etc) as they can all help you. The training itself is quite simple, and can be done in one day. And it's the same no matter who provides it - if you make sure its generic for all of the valve types you have (ie Pilot Valves, Direct Spring, Thermal, Steam, etc.) The manufacturers can and will conduct the training at your facility as well. If you have sufficient test facilities - ie a test bench capable of enough volume to adequate lift the PRV (open it), even only for a short time, then you can re-establish the set & reseat pressures for proper calibrations. Liquid valves are more difficult to determine opening and closing pressures, and the specific manufacturers definition should be followed for each type. One of the problems many end-users have is they test all of the valves on the same medium - either air or water because they only have a single medium test bench. This often translates into actual variations of the set pressures in the installations during the operational conditions. So be sure the training covers exactly how to correlate for other service media which is different from your test bench medium.