by htg engineer »
Sun Feb 10, 2008 11:39 am
Read the article of 20th December 2007,
And I wouldn't expect anything less. You can't have people dying after gas appliances have been checked - a number of times on this occasion. And for no-one to be held accountable. With the gas appliance only being checked the day before the lady died, does cast doubt over what the heating engineer checked, and his competence.
I'm sure the courts will get to the bottom of it and decide whether it was human error, or accidental death. There could have been 10 other heating engineers there within a week - but it's the last heating engineer to attend that is responsible for the safety of that appliance.
Will it turn out to be a heating engineer that has sat a Fast Track Gas training course ? If it is - I hope lessons are learnt from this and they scrap the fast track courses.
I have a found a number of articles on the net - aimed at plumbers,bathroom and kitchen fitters, saying that with training they can become CORGI registered after 4 weeks training.
I had to complete a 4 year apprenticeship, NVQ 2 & 3 Plumbing, whilst working with heating engineers and plumbers. 1 year Gas training, 5 day intensive training before sitting CCN1 assessment. Then 5 Day intensive training, and 5 days assesments for CEN1, HTR1, CKR1, WAT1, DAH1 - before I qualified.
I have heard Britich Gas offer these fast track courses - and they advertise with NO experience necessary - not even plumbing. I know people that have completed the BG course - and I wouldn't let them work in my house.
One person that's a service engineer (trained with BG), I have been to the same job within 2-3 days because the boiler has gone off - and put his work right, from gas escapes to ignition faults etc that should be part of the annual service - had a word but took it no further (gave him a chance) other engineers have done the same (with the same service engineer) haven't had any problems for a couple of months now, if we get anymore though, should we report him ?