As someone who used to do a lot of fire risk assessments on a commercial basis (albeit a long while ago) but who now works for an ‘RP’ who sometimes employs people to do fire risk assessments, I’m rather confused by the state of play as regards certification of fire risk assessors! Let’s see if I’ve got things right...
It seems to me that there are a number of schemes either in existence or in the pipeline & there’s currently a bit of a ‘gold rush’ where more or less every organisation with ‘Fire’ in its title is looking to set something up?
Only one is currently UKAS accredited (generally recognised as being the UK’s ‘gold standard’ as regards certification bodies) & this is based upon requirements they developed themselves, in line with the FRACC framework?
We have this BAFE SP 203 which is, in essence not a scheme in itself but is a standard for setting up a scheme, which people who wish to ‘certify’ fire risk assessors can use if they want to, but certification schemes run to its requirements don’t ‘certify’ individual risk assessors, only companies. The Companies using this Standard may or may not be UKAS accredited (their choice)?
Most schemes seem to incorporate the FRACC framework requirements, but not all?
It’s certainly a mess, but perhaps that’s the way it should be, in a country where we like industries to be self-policing & there is competition between the bodies that the industries can use to support this? Perhaps it’s a good thing to have different schemes, with different requirements competing for the business of those who wish to ‘advertise’ and support their ability to offer fire risk assessment services? Sure, it’ll be confusing for some RPs in the short term, but in the medium-to-long term I imagine many/most of the schemes will fall by the wayside & by a winnowing process only the ‘best’ will survive & thrive.
I’d observe that we’ve had product certification in the fire industry for years, provided by different certification schemes with completely different technical requirements (LPCB, CERTIFIRE, TRADA etc...) & they compete without there being any apparent safety compromises or any particular confusion amongst specifiers. In fact, the competition is a healthy thing, because it stops any of them becoming over-zealous in their requirements, or from charging outrageous prices. Perhaps, once more mature, the risk assessment certification market might reach the same state of affairs?
I’ve no axe to grind – I’m unlikely to join any scheme & I don’t know enough to even begin to guess who’s ‘best’ (whatever that means). I do think, though that maybe, instead of seeking consistency at this relatively early stage, & potentially backing the wrong horse, we should just let Darwinism rule for a while & see what evolution produces..?