Hello everybody, nice to see the site up and working again.
With regards to the UK fire industry, I am interested to know the status on the ground (the real world) of Engineering Technicians (EngTech) professionals in the United Kingdom.
For example, is an EngTech most times a preferential person to employ over those who are not, and do they enjoy a higher salary, or is experience in a particular product and years on the job more the deciding factor? Those of you who own your own businesses; do you sit up and take a bit more notice when you see ‘EngTech’ on a CV?
My suspicions of this is that it is less of a factor ‘back home’ and more of a factor for companies sending people out to work in historically well established British trade areas, like the Middle East for example?
Also, how many EngTech are there on the forum, Incorporated Engineers and Charted Engineers? Did most of you register with the IFE, some perhaps with the IET or perhaps even an electrical route especially in the detection side, or mechanical on the sprinkler part of the industry?
To start the ball rolling, I am not an EngTech, and the questions are to satisfy personal curiosity only,
this is NOT associated with any institution or body.
For those who have an interest, I am a British Citizen who lives in South Africa, many of our standards are direct copies of the BS, with slight changes on the main related to the type of cables we use (due to cost).
In SA there are very few barriers of entry into the industry, outside of the normal business registration requirements and compulsory registration with a Statutory Body here called the Private Security Regulatory Authority, our fingerprints are taken and kept on a database, ethical business practices are enforced and audits are conducted by this authority, but they are mostly concerned with the regulation of firearms in our very large private security industry. As I am not in that line of work we don’t see them that much, besides the occasional inspection of our business systems such as invoicing etc.
An attempt was made some time ago to introduce an Artisan training scheme in the mid 90’s which culminated in a one year certificate course at a local Technicon (Polytechnic University). Before that in the 80’s there was also a qualification here called ‘Alarm Artisan level 1 and 2’ that was run from Dept of Manpower approved training centres, smoke detection systems was a part of the trade test. These were both for installers on smoke detection systems.
There is currently a new intuitive underway to introduce a compulsory registration but it is an upward battle, and wars are declared, fought and peace sued for in less time than the government takes to decide such matters. If it happens we will have a person deemed ‘Competent’ on much the same line as a Registered Lift Technician who would have to sign off a job, and have legal liability. Unlikely in my opinion, but who knows.