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Re: One month to go until BS 7671:2018+A1:2020 is withdrawn….act now!

I have just reveived an email from "IET Wiring Regulations".  In it, it says:-

Do you carry out inspections for landlords?

If you are performing electrical inspections for landlords of rented properties you must ensure that the installation is inspected against the most recent version of BS 7671. Staying up to date is imperative.

Am I wrong, or is that totally false?  Looking at https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2020/312/regulation/2/made, it says:-

“electrical safety standards” means the standards for electrical installations in the eighteenth edition of the Wiring Regulations, published by the Institution of Engineering and Technology and the British Standards Institution as BS 7671: 2018(3);

So that is a specific version of the Wiring Regulations, and not the new 2020 one.

Parents
  • The lawmakers, or whoever collated the wording should have written- 'must comply with the Wiring regulations that are current at the time of the Inspection.'

    Apparently someone did raise that very point with those concerned - and it turned out it was a deliberate, principled, decision to specify a fixed version of the regs. The problem is that if the legislation says 'the current standard' then those writing that next version of the standard in effect get to say what the law will be - and parliament think that sort of thing is their prerogative. They call such things ambulatory legislation and are keen to avoid it.  Parliament far prefers the option of seeing what the next version actually turns out like and then deciding whether to take it into law or not.

    It does rather back fire though when different pieces of legislation refer to different versions of the Wiring Regs though (I believe the ESQCR still refer to an even earlier version).

       - Andy.

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  • The lawmakers, or whoever collated the wording should have written- 'must comply with the Wiring regulations that are current at the time of the Inspection.'

    Apparently someone did raise that very point with those concerned - and it turned out it was a deliberate, principled, decision to specify a fixed version of the regs. The problem is that if the legislation says 'the current standard' then those writing that next version of the standard in effect get to say what the law will be - and parliament think that sort of thing is their prerogative. They call such things ambulatory legislation and are keen to avoid it.  Parliament far prefers the option of seeing what the next version actually turns out like and then deciding whether to take it into law or not.

    It does rather back fire though when different pieces of legislation refer to different versions of the Wiring Regs though (I believe the ESQCR still refer to an even earlier version).

       - Andy.

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