Well said. TW. Thing is you oldies have the experience to understand that. Its an ingredient missing a lot today. What people are calling common sense is actually something derived from experience. A lot of people (both consutants and inspecting officers) are very short of experience. Thats ok if they have supervisors who do have the experience because, after all, everyone has to start somewhere. In the absence of experience, then training is really important and education is even more important. People from other backgrounds can enter the world of fire safety, provided they are prepared to crawl before they walk and walk before they run. West Yorkshire have a predominance of non fire brigade inspecting officers, but they are not thrown out onto the streets to create mayhem. They have mentoring, training, supervision and a career progression. It is proof that it does not matter what the background is. But there are people out there selling services, and in some F&RS, without the requisite understanding of the subject matter. They have been trained to follow the guides, or have simply read what the guides say.
But the guides are not text books on fire safety. You need an understanding of the subject before you even read the guides, unless all you are going to do is follow them blindly. That might be ok for the rp, but will not help those who want to practise fire safety as a career. I am sure there are guides on frontal lobotomies, but you wouldnt want a house painter deciding that the credit crunch has reduced the demand for house decoration and that frontal lobotomies seems a good career to go into, so reading the guide and performing the operation. You would hope that the guide would be read and applied only by people with education in medicine.
Without education in the subject, you go back to prescriptive application of the guides, and no real understanding of fire risk.