The IET is carrying out some important updates between 17-30 April and all of our websites will be view only. For more information, read this Announcement

This discussion is locked.
You cannot post a reply to this discussion. If you have a question start a new discussion

WHY CANNOT AN ELECTRICAL ENGINEER BE A QS.

It would appear that the IET EAS document now requires a QS to be an NVQ qualified electrician.

In the same way a building surveyor needs to be professionally qualified person who does not need to be a bricklayer but needs to know how bricks should be laid why cannot a professionally registered electrical engineer with an 18th Edition Qual. and C and G 2391 with maybe a Level 4 2396 design qualification be a QS?

The so called competent person schemes do not register electricians. They only register “enterprises” which have to have a single assessed person who is responsible for the technical standards in the company. It would appear a spotty faced youth with an NVQ 3 with minimal experience can be a QS but a Charted Engineer with decades of experience cannot be?

Before you ask I was the NICEIC PDH and  QS  for my own company for 15 years up until last year.

I would be interested in your views? 

 

 

Parents
  • Right in the middle of Covid NAPIT told me they were taking A1.2 off my registration because I had never had a non-domestic installation assessed.

    Just think that one through:

    • I joined NAPIT to be enrolled on the competence scheme to self certify domestic electrical installations under Part P, so that has been the type of work that I have completed that they assessed for the last sixteen years.
    • For fifteen years I have been considered capable of completing electrical work in all types of electrical installations and it has said so on my NAPIT card.
    • I was told about this during Covid when arranging a site visit was difficult, but also I was told retrospectively, I wasn't actually told we need to see a non-domestic installation this time so that you can keep A1.2 on your card, I was told during my assessment.
    • I can still do non-domestic electrical work, but cannot use NAPIT branded certificates or the logo on associated paperwork.

     

    Who gets the “blame”? The authors of the IET EAS specification.

Reply
  • Right in the middle of Covid NAPIT told me they were taking A1.2 off my registration because I had never had a non-domestic installation assessed.

    Just think that one through:

    • I joined NAPIT to be enrolled on the competence scheme to self certify domestic electrical installations under Part P, so that has been the type of work that I have completed that they assessed for the last sixteen years.
    • For fifteen years I have been considered capable of completing electrical work in all types of electrical installations and it has said so on my NAPIT card.
    • I was told about this during Covid when arranging a site visit was difficult, but also I was told retrospectively, I wasn't actually told we need to see a non-domestic installation this time so that you can keep A1.2 on your card, I was told during my assessment.
    • I can still do non-domestic electrical work, but cannot use NAPIT branded certificates or the logo on associated paperwork.

     

    Who gets the “blame”? The authors of the IET EAS specification.

Children
No Data