Regardless, I'm still not convinced that accreditation is best done in this way. I have no doubt Sir Todd that you would be very thorough in your interview with an assessor. But how would you know if they had missed something fundemental?
Fair point MR!
My take on this is that an accompanied visit should be included on the initial assessment particularly as in the IFE scheme they don’t ask for the name or details of the buildings submitted.
This lack of traceability is obviously open to abuse and if an assessor is short on suitable reports to submit; what is to stop them submitting FRAs completed by another assessors.
If anything is dramatically wrong within the report what then? (No tractability = No accountability)
According to the Warrington scheme details: all reports submitted should have permission from the owner and have full contact details included. The owners also have to agree to provide confirmation that the person submitting the reports did actually complete it.
I do think an interview is a must along with a thorough look at the quality of reports a risk assessor produces, but to have an actual FRA on a building that the approval body has seen will give a far better indication as to the true qualities an assessor has.
How far these schemes go to determine the competence of an assessor will ultimately be determined by the industry it’s self; the more comprehensive schemes will cost more and the cheaper ones will be less thorough. The value to an assessor in terms of marketing themselves and the amount of work they receive through having it; will determine which level of register they go for.
YOU PAY FOR WHAT YOU GET!
At the moment there seems to be plenty of work for everyone registered or not.
Just off the topic, I heard that the IFE got a very public dressing down off the FPA recently, anyone know the details?