Firstly I am not
a kitchen fitter and do not wish to be. As you know I deal with the carpentry and joinery side and use C&G tradesmen for the other tasks.
I object to having my kitchen unit/worktop installation skills assessed because I had these assessed when I did my City & Guilds, and passed the assessment. I have my papers to
say that I am competent in installing kitchen units and worktops to City & Guilds standards.
I feel sorry for people who get ripped off by poor kitchen fitters. However people get ripped off by unqualified painters, mechanics, builders even Harley Street doctors. It is down
to the consumer to do their homework when selecting someone to do a job for them. If they take on people who's qualifications, passed work, experience, reputation, liability
insurance etc they have not checked, then in my opinion. If they are that stupid, they only really have themselves to blame.
As for recompense, what about the small claims court or withholding payment.
Whilst there may be people working as kitchen fitters who have a relevent trade. They are still "jack of all trades" and working as such. I can do electrics and plumbing but
somewhere down the line I will come accross a problem that I cannot deal with because I do not possess the in depth knowledge or training that say, you have as a C&G plumber or my
electrician has as a C&G electrician. I hit problems with bespoke and mass produced units that I can deal with because of my training, but I bet a C&G electrician or plumber
or plasterer would be totally lost. Resulting in a botched job.
There has been questions on the forum from kitchen fitters and some of them concerning the carpentry aspect are so simple, but they are stuck.
You can create a title for kitchen fitters but they will still only be partly qualified in 3 or 4 trades. or. qualified in 1 trade and part qualified in the others. They are still
going to have kitchens where they are stuck and so have to botch to overcome a problem.
School leavers who wish to become electricians do need academic ability. If the electrical side of the kitchen fitters course is going to be so watered down that very limited academic
ability is needed then this is a dangerous way to go.
I must admit I would not mind training youngsters how to fit units etc correctly, especially for £30,000 odd a year plus the 11 or so weeks holiday a tutor gets.
So as I read it at the moment, all round kitchen fitters will have to be assessed and trained. Then they will have to pay to register, carrying on with yearly payments and
assessments? Teams who work together but only carry out tasks that they have C&G's in will not have to register? After all we are not kitchen fitters but a group of
professionally trained and qualified tradesmen who carry out a task to deliver an end product.
I know that someone who has no carpentry experience apart from a brief course on mass produced units will have a big problem dealing with a, top end of the market, bespoke kitchen.
If MR DIY can carry on installing his own units, then there will have to be some sort of wording in the legislation to allow him to do so. This is where we have our first loophole in
the system, allowing unqualified installers to carry on working. Even if it is on the unit side of a job.
As a tradesmen I would say that it is far easier for someone to check out the suitability of someone to fit there kitchen, than it is for a tradesmen to check if a customer is a good
customer or a cowboy customer.
Part p is coming out in 2005 1 year late because they can't decide who is going to run it. Electrical bodies want it, FENSA ( who do such a good job with the double glazing
companies!!!) want to run it even Zurich want to run it. Costs range from £900 per year plus cost of books updates assessments down to Zurichs cost, which was something like £50 per
year plus inspections and assessments
Part P is a good thing and can't come too soon. You only have to go on to ask-questions website to see why. Some of the questions from DIY'ers on there, are people waiting to kill
themselves or later house occupiers.
Maybe then, I won't see kitchens that have got un-earthed stainless 13amp socket outlets, stainless steel sinks with no earth bonding etc.
P.s
Don't suppose you need a carpenter/joiner on one of your DIY programmes?