I wish my local building authority would do this. I asked and they said the only option was to join a competent person scheme, unless I wanted to pay them an similarly steep fee to come and sign off one new circuit on my behalf!
They aren't allowed to do that
In theory, they aren't allowed to charge for testing/inspection either - but my LA gets round that by having two rates listed for minor electrical works, where the higher fee if you can't provide the testing results required just happens to be about ÂŁ75 higher than the lower fee for if you can.
Ah, just looked and they've changed things again :
Re-wiring not covered in Competent Persons Scheme | ÂŁ270.00 |
New circuits or consumer units | ÂŁ180.00 |
Single socket/light point | ÂŁ120.00 |
I'd be inclined to just put in a notice and provide them with an EIC. If they argue then turn it around on them and tell them to prove that you aren't competent to provide the details.
But now I see what mu local LA have done here, I'm tempted to ask the DCLG (or whatever they are called this week) under what lawful grounds the LA can penalise someone in this manner for not being a member of a commercial outfit. I've got a new MP this month, he's already going to be getting several requests from me !
Interestingly, recently we've had some new electrical works done by contractors, with no certification or compliance certificates provided. We've had an automated door installed, where the contractor picked up the power supply from the emergency lighting.
In my previous self employment, the company that does all the electrical work I used to do, is rarely seen testing its work, and has only provided a few certificates when asked.
So what you need to do is flag this up each and every time - inundate head office with reports of substandard electrical work which, to cover their backsides as the new system is intended to do, will mean them having to follow up on each and every report. After a while, they may start to realise that it's not as easy to CYA as they think. Also, the contractors will realise that they have to "do things right" and costs will go up - or you'll just find that no-one will want to come and work there.
Maybe it'll get to the point where head office will decide it's cheaper/easier to arrange the right insurance to allow in-house maintenance - perhaps with some form of outside oversight.
I think all electrical work across, domestic, commercial & industrial, needs some checks & balances. There is a lot of poor workmanship being carried out, and not just in domestic works.
Agreed. But the problem is, how do you deal with that without being a complete PITA to everyone - especially those who don't do enough relevant work to justify joining one of the scams ? It's demonstrably the case that the scam system isn't working - simply because the incentive isn't there for the scams to actually do what they are supposed to be doing.
Not to mention, if you make the rules too tight then you can create more of a problem than what you are trying to solve - I think that's what was behind the relaxation of the notification requirements in the 2013 amendments to the Building Regs. Anecdotally, plenty of charlatans were using "Part P" as an excuse to mislead customers into paying for work which they could still legally do themselves - or have done by someone not in a scam. So you risk creating a situation where instead of having a new socket fitted (too expensive), granny carries on using the extensions lead under the carpet across the doorway - and so on.
Mind you, IMO Gas Safe aren't much better. I've seen some downright rubbish (and dangerous) work done by supposedly qualified Gas Safe (and before them, Corgi) members. And gas Safe themselves are "not easy to deal with" if you have a complaint - as I've done twice now.
The later case was where a BG subbed "engineer" condemned my mother's boiler as "dangerous" and "not repairable" - I'm convinced he was trying to meet his "scare a granny" quota for new boiler installs. Gas Safe would not consider any complaint unless we left it as it was until they could be arsed to come and look at it - i.e. several weeks. As it was, a local outfit came and looked at it, was unable to see the fault described*, and after careful inspection & testing declared it safe for use - not something you'd do without thought when you know it's already been declared dangerous. Since mum didn't want to be without heating or hot water for weeks, nothing was done about it.
In a previous case (dangerous incorrectly fitted flue for a gas fire in my rental house) they couldn't do anything at all as the business that did the work was no longer a member (dunno about the individual who signed the certificate).
* He'd pointed my "not very technical" mum to some "crud" that I think was just some bits of dirt that had dropped down the flue and settled on an internal duct, and told my mum that a gasket had failed - and they aren't available any more. I found sets including that gasket for sale online ! The independent engineer could not find any fault with it. But on the paperwork, there was no description whatsoever.