the door in the bath panel is easy, screw a plate over it so you need a tool to get in, job done.
I like your thinking, is that if we have to get this PIR done? What about this spur, won't it fail on that?
the door in the bath panel is easy, screw a plate over it so you need a tool to get in, job done.
1992
just answer NO, we bought our house 2 and a bit years ago, the same questions asked by our solicitor.
we had a PIR done because it was a request/condition of the mortgage that it was done, and any code 1/2 acted upon, in our case it was just a new CU and bonding up to code.
the door in the bath panel is easy, screw a plate over it so you need a tool to get in, job done.
As for a warranty - what planet are the buyers on?
You've answered the Q about post-2005 electrical work truthfully.I like your thinking, is that if we have to get this PIR done? What about this spur, won't it fail on that?
Would you be interested in the fact that the process which led to the idea of Part P, and the consultation document for it being issued, kicked off in response to the Construction Industry Deregulation Task Force’s 1995 report which recommended amongst other things that the Building Regulations should address electrical safety and that the administrative burden on builders should be rationalised? And that the Government at the time (led by a chap called Major, who was not, I believe, a Labour politician) responded to these recommendations by agreeing to review the case for new requirements and how they might best be practically introduced?This is always more prevalent under a Labour government, something which we were forced to tolerate from 1997 to 2010.
Would you be interested in the fact that the consultation process, which described how the changes to the Building Regulations would work, and what benefits would accrue etc, ran from May to September 2002, predating the first entry of an Eastern Bloc country into the EU by about 2 years?Originally meant to prevent poorly-qualified persons from the old Eastern Bloc from working on domestic installations in this country,
Would you be interested in the fact that none of these highly qualified electrical engineers were actually electricians working in the domestic installation field?it ended up effectively preventing the highly qualified electrical engineers who write the IEE regulations from working on their own homes! And even mor galling (for them) they would have to pay good money to the local council for an inspection by Buildings Control, who are not even electricians!
Would you be interested in the fact that between 1997 & 2002 there were a few other distractions for the Government, like handing back Hong Kong, wars in Kosovo & Afghanistan and the run-up to the 2nd Gulf one, Scottish & Welsh Devolution, House of Lords reform, Foot & Mouth crisis etc, and that when a report produced after years of work by civil servants and industry experts telling you that painstaking and diligent research showed that this proposed legislation, supported by hundreds of relevant and expert bodies will save lives, that you tend to say "OK, we'll lay it before Parliament", because that's how governments work and that's what would have happened whoever had been in power?That fat bloke (name begins with a P (is that why it was called part P?) has got a lot to answer for!
Would you be interested in the fact that even if he had been responsible for Part P, that would be irrelevant?Strange how he abandoned his dislike of hte unelected upper house when he was offered "membership"!
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