If you are a student the standards are free to use.
If you are a business and you need these "tools" to make your business work and make money then you should have to pay for them. I'm not paying more taxes because the business world are unwilling to invest in the tools they need to do a job for me!
You don't get carpenters complaining about paying for saws, why would we complain about having to pay for our tools?
Fire alarm engineers also pay for their own tools and are quite happy to do so. But if you think the tools analogy is the one most people understand, then how about the following scenario:
A carpenters buys a saw and also has to buy a set of instructions on how to use the saw in the way which 'one body of people' suggests is necessary. These instructions cost £200. Well worth the money if they are valid, for say, ten years and they are the definitive instructions.
The carpenter is then told just a year or two later that the instructions have been amended and now he will have to buy those as well. However, he can't pay for just the ammendments he has to pay for everything all over again.
The carpenter then finds there is 'another body of people' who come up with further instructions that he is also expected to know about.
The carpenter then finds there is a 'further body of people' who think of something 'worth' adding to the instructions.
The carpenter then finds that all the instructions he has relates only to his saw and he also needs to buy further instructions for his hammer, plane, screwdrivers, bradawl etc etc.!!!!
My dream is of one body setting one set of rules and recommendations paid for out of taxpayer's money and available to those thet need them at production and distribution cost only.
This would apply equally to electricians, plumbers, builders, accountants, solicitors, waste disposal operatives etc etc. In fact, anyone who is expected to adhere to a set of rules and recommendations.
This system would ensure that there would never be any superfluous rules and recommendations and the costs would be kept at a minimum for everyone.
You must appreciate that these costs are currently being borne by every customer anyway. Who do you think ends up paying for all the guidance, instructions, training courses, third party inspections anyway? The government would like things to stay like this, because it appears that these costs are being levied by the service provider instead of the government. You tell a householder that a tradesman costs £40 an hour they gulp. They don't appreciate that 'overheads' swallows over 60% of this charge!
Obviously the tradesman who is paying for all the necessary guidance, standards, training courses and thirds party inspections has to pass the cost on to someone. Furthermore, he can't therefore be competitive in relation to those that don't! This means the government is complicit in the widespread nature of poor standards in many areas.
I know my dream will never happen, but we have to keep making sure people know about how the real world works and how they are paying through the nose for much that could be streamlined. In fact the government encourages it because it 'stimulates' the economy and produces tax income. The last thing they want is for people to have saved enough money to retire. The government policy is to 'make most of the population earn, pay taxes and then spend the rest ,until they die'!
All trades suffer from a plethora of costly rules and recommendations. Read what 'mike the boilerman' has to put up with:
www.miketheboilerman.com/newboilercost.htm