There could be a few reasons why you would want to join one of these schemes:
1. Because it’s mandatory;
2. Because customers ask for it;
3. Because you believe it’ll get you work, giving potential customers confidence in your abilities, or;
4. Because it’s become ‘best practice’ and all your biggest competitors have joined.
I am missing something here?? Surly it’s none of the above. It’s about attaining a 3rd party recognised competency standard from the formed body of the Fire Risk Assessment Competency Council. This was established due to a lack of confidence in the industry due to the number of poor, inadequate or inconsistent FRAs that are being produced.
The most common breach of the RRFSO is under Article 9 – failure to conduct a suitable and sufficient FRA either by the RP or an external company. We all know there are good and bad assessors out there like there are good and bad builders, electricians etc. These schemes are an attempt at eliminating some of the bad and an attempt at ensuring a common competency standard to work to like so many industries have out there, why should the fire industry be any different?
It also ensures that skills are kept current and up to date as assessors are reviewed periodically. Assessors range from non-fire service backgrounds, retired fire officers that retired pre the RRFSO coming into force and have only known the FP Act right through to serving fire safety officers working part time. Whether we get any work from it or not is irrelevant and would not be my main motivation for going through the process. I would be more interested in achieving a recognised (UKAS accredited) competency standard that is independent of the risk assessors’ registers we currently have. I am on the IFSM risk assessors register but I don’t feel that goes far enough to demonstrate competence.