There is another issue to using JIB gradings and registration as it currently stands.
Effectively, we would be putting control of all of this into a commercial organisation - i.e. one out to make a profit.
The DNOs will never agree to handing over their profits to another.
IMVHO, it is beyond time that our government - the prime body who is charged with care of our nation in ALL respects, in every possible avenue - takes hold of the whole shooting match, and seriously thinks about how ALL trades go forward.
And I mean this from pre-apprenticeship (i.e. during our school days) right the way through until retirement. A unified register of trades, maintained by a government body, at tax payers expense, which is (a) Easily accessible, (b) maintained DAILY, (c) Understandable to the public (d) reflect the REAL skills of trades people, including a summary of fines, bans, etc, and (e) makes it EASY for trades to register work, gain compliances, meet standards, access training, and provide fully qualified, quality work.
This "body" would also take away the need for COMPANIES to pay up to trades association for approvals that don't factually do very much at all, and place the requirements for "approval" on every single trades person out there, irrespective of company. The companies, in trun would then be able to employ only qualified people in the right places, and would have a clear structure for taking on new blood.
It would also, at a stroke, cut cowboy trading out.
I know there are a million "buts" and "what if's" to this, but in principle, it is the ONLY way, we're ever going to get past any of the issues which affect the state of our industry, and every other one. Simply, qualifications and approvals need to be on the individual and NOT on the company, and they need to be centralised under an impartial body of regulation and licencing.
The fees we pay as an industry, and the hidden costs all of us pay through employment - that's where the money for it comes from, as well as approximately one penny in every hundred on an electricity bill, and one penny in every hundred on a gas bill - and for the other trades, one penny in every hundred on council tax, as every occupied building has this charge.
Who can tell me why a National Register of trades, collated from what we have today from SIC codes, to C&G records, to approvals databases, could not be worked into a system that benefits everyone, from the bottom to the very top?