No perhaps not. But my experience shows that those above us need evidential statistics rather than qualified perception before they will support moves that often appear logical to the masses
Thanks Paul, your two posts have answered the question.
You have confirmed that the information would be invaluable and that better people than I can’t be bothered to record such valuable information in order to guide future inspection strategy.
The statistics could prove more than one point about the RRO, but if the information isn’t even being collected then all will continue to be rosy in the RRO garden, just like the CLG commissioned interim report says it is.
I think that enforcers should do a little more to target the weaker areas and support the professional assessors who at least have training and experience.
A very good point about where the line is drawn on complexity of buildings and in my opinion this is one area where there is such a void in definition and there always will be. Even the simples looking building on the outside could have very complex problems on the inside. Bad conversions of existing properties in to ‘lock up shops’ or ‘flats’ may have very complex fire stopping issues, which even trained assessors often miss. My thoughts are if you can risk assesses you can risk assess anything and unless the building has very complex and dangerous processes you should be fine doing an assessment, and you will also know your limitations, which is the most important thing.