Showing posts with label CORGI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CORGI. Show all posts

Wednesday, 16 September 2009

HSE Warning on Gas Safety Following Prosecution

Home owners are being warned by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) to check that gas installers are properly registered and hold a current 'Gas Safe Register' identity card.

This warning comes after the prosecution of Mr Kevin Hall of Cannock, trading as Norfix Plumbing and Heating. He has been jailed for 84 days for breaching Health and Safety legislation.
Hall was sentenced on 9th June 2009 at Cannock Magistrates Court after pleading guilty to two counts of breaching Section 33(1)(g) of the Health & Safety at Work etc Act1974. He was carrying out gas work in contravention of a Prohibition Notice.

The HSE started an investigation into Mr Hall's work after receiving a complaint concerning gas work he'd undertaken in a house in Cannock in 2008. Mr Hall had replaced an old gas boiler, after falsely claiming that he was CORGI registered.

Before April 2009, when the Gas Safe Register was introduced, gas engineers were legally required to be CORGI registered. Mr Hall used another engineer's CORGI registration number on paperwork that he gave to the householder.

When inspected by a CORGI registered engineer, his work was found to be 'not up to current standards' although the work did not appear to pose any major risks to the occupants.

Mr Hall was issued a Prohibition Notice in July 2008, preventing him from carrying out any further gas installation work. HSE staff tried many times to contact Mr Hall, however he failed to respond. The HSE investigation uncovered further boiler installations in Cannock and nearby Brocton that had been completed in December 2008, after the Prohibition Notice had been served. At both of these addresses, Mr Hall had falsely claimed to be registered with CORGI and left the households with heating systems without hot water.

Although the installations were not immediately dangerous, the works carried out did not comply with the current standards, and households did not receive any paperwork to certify that the work had been carried out according to gas safety regulations.

Speaking after the case, HSE investigating inspector Andrew Bowker said:

"Kevin Hall continued to do sub-standard gas work without registration. The work has needed to be put right by registered engineers. Fortunately, in this instance, no one died or became ill. Such a blatant disregard for the law will not be ignored by HSE.

"By failing to be correctly registered with CORGI, Hall gained financial advantage over bona fide registered installers. However, the householders incurred additional costs in remedial work so their installations were a false economy.

"Every effort was made to contact Mr Hall in order to resolve the situation before proceedings were brought, so he was well aware that he was acting unlawfully.

"HSE would urge anyone having gas work undertaken to ensure that the contractor carries a 'Gas Safe Register' identity card. Tenants must also ensure that their landlord has provided them with a current gas safety certificate."

Gas Safe Register Replaces CORGI

The Gas Safe Register has replaced CORGI with effect from 1st April 2009, launching a campaign to make the nation 'gas safe'.

Research from the Gas Safe Register suggests Britons are far too trusting regarding gas safety, with over half those polled saying they never checked whether their gas engineer was registered.
From tomorrow the 'make Britain gas safe' message will be launched, to propound Brits to "be safe, use a registered engineer and always check the card". The Gas Safe Register say, with 14 people dying from carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning last year due to badly installed, repaired and maintained gas appliances, keeping the public safe is their top priority.

Pete Eldridge, chief executive of Gas Safe Register, said: "As the new hallmark for gas safety in Great Britain, Gas Safe Register will make it much easier for the public to be gas safe because in the wrong hands, gas can kill. Our message is simple. To keep you and your family safe, always use a Gas Safe registered engineer when you have any gas work done in your home.

"We will raise public awareness of the importance of always asking for the ID card and checking the unique licence number. Different types of gas work require different skills, so it’s important that you check the back of the ID card to make sure your engineer is qualified to carry out the work you want them to do."

Gas Safe Register say they will offer the public an improved service making it easier to find and check an engineer. Every Gas Safe registered engineer has a photo ID card with a unique licence number, and details of the work they are qualified to do.

The new register will aim to reduce the number of gas-related deaths and injuries every year caused by incorrectly installed, badly repaired and poorly maintained gas appliances, by raising awareness appliances should be inspected regularly by a qualified engineer. Some 19.05 per cent of households with a gas boiler had not had it serviced for at least three years, according to the research, rather than the recommended once a year.

Leaders Estate Agents, managing director, Paul Weller, said: "There is a risk that some landlords and letting agents may not be aware of these changes, and will continue to use CORGI engineers. If this is the case, the gas safety record issued by them would not be valid and the landlord would be responsible if anything went wrong during the tenancy.

"If your letting agent has not made you aware of these critically important changes, we would urge you to question whether you are using an appropriate agent, and strongly suggest you move to one who specialises in lettings, has decades of experience and is a member of the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA), and can keep you fully advised. Penalties for not complying with the Gas Installation (Safety and Use) Regulations 1998 for landlords are severe, and include imprisonment."

From April 1st 2009, all work on gas installations or appliances must only be carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer.