The construction body said that protection of title is vital to protect consumers across Scotland. It pointed to a recent consultation in which 90% of respondents said they were in favour of the measure.
The initial consultation was led by by MSP Jamie Halcro Johnston and closed in November. It received 141 submissions, 121 of which were fully supportive, 10 partially supportive, one neutral, three partially opposed and only three opposed. A second consultation on regulation, launched by minister for business, fair work and skills Jamie Hepburn, closes on 12th February.
Fiona Harper, secretary of the SJIB, said: 鈥淚t was heartening to see such a high level of responses from a wide cross-section of the industry and to see so many organisations and individual electricians taking a real interest in the future of our industry.
鈥淚t was equally pleasing to see that the vast majority of the responses have been positive about the need for some form of regulation, and that there is overwhelming support for protection of title for the profession of electrician.
鈥淭he responses show that there is a real appetite to deliver a bill through the Scottish Parliament as soon as possible to secure the safety of consumers and the integrity of the electrical sector in Scotland.鈥
Harper, who is also director of employment & skills at trade association Select, also urged electricians to take part in the consultation closing next month.
She added: 鈥淭hese consultations are a major step towards a safer industry and we look forward to welcoming a new dawn for electricians and their customers in Scotland.
鈥淎t present, anyone can claim to be an electrician and work on an electrical installation. It cannot be right that those who have completed a full apprenticeship and who work in the industry in a safe and competent manner, can be compromised by those who call themselves electricians but who have no or inadequate qualifications.
鈥淚ndustry research suggests that the net benefits to Scotland from proper regulation of electricians will total around 拢58 million. We would also benefit from higher electrical standards, a reduction in the number of injuries and deaths, better functioning installations, less need for call backs or for poor/unsafe work to be repaired, leading to improved customer satisfaction.鈥
The first consultation was set up by Halcro Johnston in a bid to present a case for regulation in advance of a proposed Holyrood Member鈥檚 Bill. The Bill would be the culmination of a long-running campaign by the SJIB, Select and other industry bodies.聽
In its own response to the consultation, the SJIB said regulation would 鈥渟ignificantly enhance consumer, client and public protection and safety while deterring unqualified individuals鈥.
The body, which sets the standards for employment and apprentice training in the electrical contracting sector, also said any new scheme would bring significant economic benefits and would assist in the drive for a 鈥渟ustainable skills base鈥.
In the response, Harper said: 鈥淭he promotion and utilisation of registered electrical contractors with industry-recognised qualifications would address the scale of poorly installed, defective and unsafe electrical work.
鈥淭he SJIB already administers the ECS [Electrotechnical Certification Scheme] which accommodates and recognises the diverse array of electricians operating within the electrotechnical industry. With some additional safeguards, the SJIB could develop a very robust scheme at little additional cost.鈥
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