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Last week it was discussed how nobody is taking ownership of enforcing Part P. Just thought I'd quote this except from the "Electrician's guide to the Building Regulations".

"The primary responsibility for achieving compliance with the Building Regulations rests with the person carrying out the building work. If electrical installation work is non-compliant, the local authority will usually take action against the electrician...."

Has anybody ever known LBC take action against such an electrician/pretend electrician?
 
Isn't it an odd society we live in when the Government will hound you if you owe a pound of income tax, yet they turn a blind eye when it involves someone's safety....
Guitarist are you suggesting the governments should be putting more effort into enforcing safety and less effort into trying to make sure taxation meets public spending? Not sure if I agree with this. Infact I dont.

Enforcing part P is not really about safety anyway. Its not as if an installation done by a timed served, non registered spark (and there are plenty about) then EICR'd by a registered spark is going to be more dangerous than an installtion carried out by a Electrical Trainee with a scheme membership, and not subjected to an EICR.
If people are so against Part P then why complain about the lack of enforcement?
 
Part P has nothing to do with improving electrical safety, if you think that you are being incredibly naive. when part p was introduced, the claim made on the ODPM website (ODPM introduced it, thank you Mr prescott) was "this legislation is introduced to stem the rising tide of electrical accidents in the home". Unfortunately that statement is a barefaced lie as there was no "rising tide". Both DTI and RoSPA figures showed that electrical accidents in the home flattened in 1960, began falling in 1962, and have been falling steadily year on year ever since. Although evidence is difficult to put together it seems that accidents have begun to RISE since part P was introduced. Whether this rise is due to the huge increase in "registered" Electrical Trainee's is anyones guess. I personally don't do much domestic work, but what I do is under the inspection of our LBC who have a very good dedicated inspector (apprentice trained elec engineer with HND) who is much cheaper than registering with the scams, which are staffed by largely unqualified ppl now anyway. Part P was introduced so that a lot of suits could live off the backs of the qualified, as no one else would give them a job. They lobbied the government for it and they got it. rant over
 
If you are willing to carry out tax evasion you'd have to be a bit simple to actually notify the jobs you are evading tax on.

I thought that was the whole point of Scam providers and Domestic installers, so how do you get out of notifying, if your issueing EICR and the like??

Look, i'm sure there are way's around everything if it's worth the trouble to do so. All i'm saying is that IR will have access as to what work you have done and when, by going through the scam provider/LABC route. Whether you want to go down the line of tax evasion is down to the individual.. lol!!
 
Guitarist are you suggesting the governments should be putting more effort into enforcing safety and less effort into trying to make sure taxation meets public spending? Not sure if I agree with this. Infact I dont.

Enforcing part P is not really about safety anyway. Its not as if an installation done by a timed served, non registered spark (and there are plenty about) then EICR'd by a registered spark is going to be more dangerous than an installtion carried out by a Electrical Trainee with a scheme membership, and not subjected to an EICR.
If people are so against Part P then why complain about the lack of enforcement?

If you think that it's ok to ignore a law because it's too much trouble to enforce, then we may as well just throw away the statute book and all do whatever we like.
I don't think most of us would be against Part P if we felt that it was being enforced correctly. We pay our yearly fees and follow the rules, while the chancers (I don't personally believe that most electricians who avoid being part P registered are time-served, qualified guys) undercut us and don't bother testing or certifying.
Enjoy your evening :)
 
I would also image it'll be very easy for Inland Revenue to check-up on your Tax returns to find out if what your declaring is accurate, ...or Not!! ...lol!!!

From day one of the current fiasco coming into affect , I have firmly believed this was probably the true reason for it !
 
If you think that it's ok to ignore a law because it's too much trouble to enforce, then we may as well just throw away the statute book and all do whatever we like.
I don't think most of us would be against Part P if we felt that it was being enforced correctly. We pay our yearly fees and follow the rules, while the chancers (I don't personally believe that most electricians who avoid being part P registered are time-served, qualified guys) undercut us and don't bother testing or certifying.
Enjoy your evening :)

Im not sure about this one. I personally know of and have heard of, a lot of older electricians, who, when Part P was introduced, said "balls to that I know my business Im not paying somone just so I can prove it to them" and carried on as normal. They may or may not be the majority but they certainly are a large portion.
Of course you still get un qualified builders and other trades who do a lot of their own work, and this should be stopped but I think it happens less than it used to due to the fact most trades don't realise that part P is not enforced.
 
From day one of the current fiasco coming into affect , I have firmly believed this was probably the true reason for it !

Completely agree with dp.
The promise of improved electrical safety from introducing part p was just another bare-faced lie by Misters Blair & Brown.
Electrical accidents have been dropping for years anyway as has been mentioned earlier , part p has had no real effect on this.
Its real purpose was to ensure domestic building works are declared and tax paid on.
Its ALWAYS about the money.
 
Im not sure about this one. I personally know of and have heard of, a lot of older electricians, who, when Part P was introduced, said "balls to that I know my business Im not paying somone just so I can prove it to them" and carried on as normal. They may or may not be the majority but they certainly are a large portion...

That number grows by the day looking at the posts put on here and elsewhere.
 
Im not sure about this one. I personally know of and have heard of, a lot of older electricians, who, when Part P was introduced, said "balls to that I know my business Im not paying somone just so I can prove it to them" and carried on as normal. They may or may not be the majority but they certainly are a large portion.
Of course you still get un qualified builders and other trades who do a lot of their own work, and this should be stopped but I think it happens less than it used to due to the fact most trades don't realise that part P is not enforced.

Thats me to a T, and I can assure you that it is the vast majority im my area, Our BCO elec is a good guy, and I use him when I need to, but I wouldnt have anything to do with the schemes/scams or the crooks who run them.
 
Im not sure about this one. I personally know of and have heard of, a lot of older electricians, who, when Part P was introduced, said "balls to that I know my business Im not paying somone just so I can prove it to them" and carried on as normal. They may or may not be the majority but they certainly are a large portion.
Of course you still get un qualified builders and other trades who do a lot of their own work, and this should be stopped but I think it happens less than it used to due to the fact most trades don't realise that part P is not enforced.

Maybe it's just the area I live in then. All the time I come across jobs which haven't be certified, let alone notified, and I know that it's not the local "old boys" as I know most of them, and they are all registered (usually NIC).
I think you are right about a lot of builders "having a go" to save money, along with plumbers doing jobs "while you're here".

As for the whole part P machine, I think that it was conceived with good intentions and became about the money (as with most things).
 

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