The past fourteen years have seen huge changes to the landscape of the electrical industry, with Competent Person Scheme Operators helping to maintain high standards by regularly assessing their members onsite to ensure continued competence. However, while the introduction of Part P has helped to raise standards in general, more must be done to punish those who continue to carry
out non-compliant, potentially dangerous electrical work.
It is this fight which I have been heavily involved in over the past few years.
I agreed to become chair of the Electrical Safety Roundtable (ESR) at its inception in 2012 because I was concerned that Part P of the Building Regulations hadn’t been quite the success it should have been.
Consumers seemed generally unaware of the value of using competent registered electricians and the severity of the dangers that could arise from poor-quality installations. In addition, the electrical safety information available on the majority of consumer facing websites was inconsistent at best, and confusing at worst.
It’s Time to Focus on Building Regulation Enforcement
Industry News
It’s Time to Focus on Building Regulation Enforcement
Alex · 1 October 2018
When the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister introduced Part P of the Building Regulations back in 2005, it was amid concerns that the risks posed by unsafe electrical installations were increasing.
The past fourteen years have seen huge changes to the landscape of the electrical industry, with Competent Person Scheme Operators helping to maintain high standards by regularly assessing their members onsite to ensure continued competence. However, while the introduction of Part P has helped to raise standards in general, more must be done to punish those who continue to carry
out non-compliant, potentially dangerous electrical work.
It is this fight which I have been heavily involved in over the past few years.
I agreed to become chair of the Electrical Safety Roundtable (ESR) at its inception in 2012 because I was concerned that Part P of the Building Regulations hadn’t been quite the success it should have been.
Consumers seemed generally unaware of the value of using competent registered electricians and the severity of the dangers that could arise from poor-quality installations. In addition, the electrical safety information available on the majority of consumer facing websites was inconsistent at best, and confusing at worst.
The past fourteen years have seen huge changes to the landscape of the electrical industry, with Competent Person Scheme Operators helping to maintain high standards by regularly assessing their members onsite to ensure continued competence. However, while the introduction of Part P has helped to raise standards in general, more must be done to punish those who continue to carry
out non-compliant, potentially dangerous electrical work.
It is this fight which I have been heavily involved in over the past few years.
I agreed to become chair of the Electrical Safety Roundtable (ESR) at its inception in 2012 because I was concerned that Part P of the Building Regulations hadn’t been quite the success it should have been.
Consumers seemed generally unaware of the value of using competent registered electricians and the severity of the dangers that could arise from poor-quality installations. In addition, the electrical safety information available on the majority of consumer facing websites was inconsistent at best, and confusing at worst.
