Who's in Charge?

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  • Leecatt
    Silver Member

    • Jul 2008
    • 404

    #1

    Who's in Charge?

    I had a query the other day "Who do I go to for help if I suspect that my Electrical certificate is fraudulent?"
    I know that Mark Palmer was associated with the Department of Labour and offered a service and assistance in this regard but he has since resigned this position.
    So who do the dissatisfied customers turn to now?

    My answer was to phone the DOL and her reply was, "I cannot get them to even answer the switchboard!"

    So what is the answer?
    Are we working in a completely unsupervised industry now?

    To make a mistake is human, to learn from that mistake is knowledge and knowledge is strength.
  • ians
    Diamond Member

    • Apr 2010
    • 3943

    #2
    You learning fast Leecat.
    Comments are based on opinion...not always facts....that's why people use an alias.

    Comment

    • Leecatt
      Silver Member

      • Jul 2008
      • 404

      #3
      Originally posted by ians
      You learning fast Leecat.
      To be honest I think the writing is on the wall regarding a valid Electrical Certificate.
      The public has virtually no avenue of recourse now.
      I think that being involved in the issuing of these documents is eventually do one's company more harm than good due to the distaste it is already causing.
      To make a mistake is human, to learn from that mistake is knowledge and knowledge is strength.

      Comment

      • Dave A
        Site Caretaker

        • May 2006
        • 22810

        #4
        Originally posted by Leecatt
        To be honest I think the writing is on the wall regarding a valid Electrical Certificate.
        The public has virtually no avenue of recourse now.
        Look, it is the Department of Labour's responsibility to ensure there is adequate enforcement, and every now and then they do follow through. And as is the nature of these things of course, when they do, all hell breaks loose. More often than not, it doesn't make the headlines though.

        Originally posted by Leecatt
        I think that being involved in the issuing of these documents is eventually do one's company more harm than good due to the distaste it is already causing.
        I gently disagree with that. In industries where there is no policeman, reputation becomes a critical element in a client's decision making process when it comes to selecting a service provider.

        My experience is over time the same effect kicks in with industries where the "official policing" is not particularly reliable - recognising the fact that a person being registered/accredited is not a reliable indicator of actual competence and quality, people start paying close attention to the reputation of the service provider.
        Participation is voluntary.

        Alcocks Electrical Services | Alcocks Pest Control & Entomological Services | Alcocks Hygiene Services

        Comment

        • Yuri
          Full Member
          • Sep 2012
          • 39

          #5
          I heard there are only 3 AIA members registered currently.Only the AIA's evidence can be used agenst you it court. The owner of the instolation must give them permission to inspect it

          Comment

          • ians
            Diamond Member

            • Apr 2010
            • 3943

            #6
            To date, I have not had one customer go through with an investigation. They always tell me just to fix the f%^&* up. The sad part 80 % of electrical installation that I check are not legal after an COC is issued.

            You want to know the joke, the people who make out they would never do a kak installation or sign off an illegal COC are the biggest culprits.

            It seems if you are "connected" you can do what ever you want. I had a customer send me pics of a new installation completed and signed over in a multi million rand domestic property. My customer requested I fly to Cape Town to sit in at the meeting, because the contractor and Cape authorities where trying to bully them into accepting the crap illegal installation. Eventually the customer got me to find a reputable company in the Cape to fix the mess.

            I really enjoy those meeting where nobody knows who I am or what I do and only present in the meeting to verify if the contractors is trying to baffle with bullshit or if they are telling the truth. The last meeting I attended was rather entertaining, some people must think everyone is stupid. The contractor ended up having to fly teams down from JHB to carry out around R50 000 worth of fixing of a brand new machine installation. Sometimes it pays to get your ducks in a row and make sure that everyone attending the meeting is in fact just a bunch of mechanical engineers.
            Comments are based on opinion...not always facts....that's why people use an alias.

            Comment

            • Sparks
              Gold Member

              • Dec 2009
              • 909

              #7
              To answer your question, no-one is in charge.

              DOL are supposed to be but they are not taking charge.

              The Senior prosecutor was presented with his first and as far as I know only case years ago. It took him months if not a year to figure out that that was the case I was enquiring about. He has done absolutely nothing about it since, probably still in shock after discovering that he actually has to do something.

              The electrical contractor, Volta Electrical, is still operational and giving unsuspecting members of the public invalid COCs.

              I would love to see the: Senior prosecutor, the DOL officials who do not bother to push the prosecutor into action and the contractor all get electrocuted.

              Comment

              • AndyD
                Diamond Member

                • Jan 2010
                • 4946

                #8
                Originally posted by Sparks
                .......I would love to see the: Senior prosecutor, the DOL officials who do not bother to push the prosecutor into action and the contractor all get electrocuted.
                Electrocution as a punishment is pretty much out of the question nowadays due to the cost of electricity and the extra strain on the grid would probably require load shedding every time it was metered out
                _______________________________________________

                _______________________________________________

                Comment

                • Sparks
                  Gold Member

                  • Dec 2009
                  • 909

                  #9
                  Unfortunately you are probably right again Andy.

                  Comment

                  • ELECT 1
                    Full Member

                    • Dec 2013
                    • 78

                    #10
                    I am from Cape Town. We have to go into the DOL offices in the center of the City.
                    I was shocked to find a filthy set of office suites with no one in it.
                    I went from dirty office to another untill i saw a sign on the door, contractors registration.
                    A very nice lady came to assist, i handed in my ID, she said i needed a certified one from the police.
                    Huh!! i now had to make another trip the following week with the certified copy. I didnt read properly, it did say so.
                    Any way, she said do i want to be registered for one, two or three years....i can pay proportionately.
                    I thought about it "corruption came to mind" and i took the two year offer as who know what and where we will be in three years.


                    The impression i get of the DOL its just there to collect, i doubt that they have the teeth to fight anything, i mean a few bucks changing hands, and the documents disappear.

                    Comment

                    • Sparks
                      Gold Member

                      • Dec 2009
                      • 909

                      #11
                      Originally posted by ELECT 1
                      i doubt that they have the teeth to fight anything disappear.
                      Sez who?



                      Comment

                      • ians
                        Diamond Member

                        • Apr 2010
                        • 3943

                        #12
                        This is one of the reasons...you can do a 8 hours course on gate automation and become a qualified technician in 1 day, which entitles the company to charge more per hours for their "technicians" than an electrical company can charge for a master electrician, or better still a camera installer, you don't even need any qualifications and you can right a hole in the customers backside so big that he will have to use his entire Christmas bonus to install 4 cameras, which by the way only cost a couple hundred rand not thousands of rand (not talking about IP cameras) and the cable is just as cheap. The "technician" is normally just some person who has a little more experience than yourself, believe me you don't need to be a brain surgeon or even an electrician for that matter to install cameras, so you have to ask yourself why do they get paid twice the rate...mmm.

                        The day the DOL starts prosecuting registered people for illegal installations and illegal COC's will be the day the electrical contractor will start charging a living wage. It is just too easy for any Jacob, Julius or Tutu to do electrical work and get away with it. No matter how much electrical contractors squeal at meetings and on social media nothing is going to change until all the contractors stand together and say F&^* it enough is enough, but until such time get smart and do what the Africans do in Africa, who cares about earthing a couple plugs, it means less profit because you have to use an earth wire.
                        Comments are based on opinion...not always facts....that's why people use an alias.

                        Comment

                        • ians
                          Diamond Member

                          • Apr 2010
                          • 3943

                          #13
                          Elect 1, I had the same issue when I went to the DOL, they don't even have a copier, clearly the office is just a front to make money. Ask yourself a simple question in Durban they are located in a small poky office in most expensive building in Durban...The Royal hotel. makes you think doesn't it ? I was told to go to the post office. The reason they don't have a copier is because I don't think the person who is taught step by step what to do knows how to use a copier, not part of his job description.

                          I got a person to call someone else in the same building who gave them a bullshit stories to allow me to get a copy done in another department, went down 2 floors and got my copies and had them certified by the same person who did the copies for me.

                          It is a scam.
                          Comments are based on opinion...not always facts....that's why people use an alias.

                          Comment

                          • ians
                            Diamond Member

                            • Apr 2010
                            • 3943

                            #14
                            The department of labour has proved that all electrical contractors are a bunch of idiots who are so gullible that they will even pay a fee to some department which has absolutely no powers to enforce any laws, not only because they are incompetent and uneducated but because they actually don't have the manpower to enforce any of the laws they try make you abide by. So what they do is give one of the contractors powers and let them fight with each other. Mark Palmer come to mind...so does AIA and so forth.

                            I cant believe (or should I can say) that there is over 1000 contractors out there allowing a small minority of people dictate to them, so long as you bend over and allow it, it will just become like the etoll, shut up and pay.
                            Comments are based on opinion...not always facts....that's why people use an alias.

                            Comment

                            • Yuri
                              Full Member
                              • Sep 2012
                              • 39

                              #15
                              I had a nice chat with Nico van den Berg the AIA in gauteng. He told me that the proses to become a AIA is so difficult that only 3 guys have dun it. The other thing is that thy can only inspect properties that the owner or DOL gave them permission to inspect

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