Part P
The
Building Regulations are managed by the Department for Communities and
Local Government (DCLG). Part P is an amendment of the Building
Regulations introduced by the government, effective from January 1st 2005.
The Part P requirement is that “Reasonable provision shall
be made in the design and installation of electrical installations in
order to protect persons operating, maintaining or altering the
installations from fire or injury.”
In short, electrical installations must be safe! Part P applies to
fixed electrical installations in dwellings (including gardens and
shared amenities in blocks of flats) and affects many of the typical
jobs undertaken by electrical contractors, particularly work carried
out in kitchens and bathrooms.
Work affected by Part P is subject to notification to, and
inspection by, building control bodies. However, calling in a building
control officer takes time and costs money. The solution to this
problem is self-certification.
Part P Competent Person Schemes like ELECSA were introduced
at the same time as Part P to permit firms that had been assessed as
sufficiently competent, to self-certify that their work complies with
all applicable requirements of the Building Regulations.
Self-certification benefits the householder because by using a
Competent Person they don’t have to pay building control fees or submit
a building notice. In addition, householders have the important
reassurance that by using a Competent Person, they are using a firm
that has been independently assessed and certified as competent to
carry out the work.
In addition, all authorised Competent Persons schemes are required
to give the customers of their registered installer firms the
opportunity to purchase an insurance backed warranty against the risk
that the work carried out does not comply with the Building Regulations.
For the firm registered with a competent person scheme such as
ELECSA, notifying the work to building control is done through their
scheme provider. The contractor provides the details of the work done
to the scheme provider who then notifies the local building control
department and issues a building compliance certificate to the
householder.
e backed warranty against the risk
that the work carried out does not comply with the Building Regulations.
For the firm registered with a competent person scheme such as ELECSA, notifying the work to building control is done through their
scheme provider. The contractor provides the details of the work done
to the scheme provider who then notifies the local building control
department and issues a building compliance certificate to the
householder.
Choose Henton Electrical as your approved Part P Electrical Contractor