Question which has posed an issue today and one I don't agree with.
For a number of years I have be working at a residential educational establishment as their main electrical contractor. For a number of years doing all work from maintenance to periodic testing or now EICR's. This year however my price was under cut by a big margin by a national who have never been to the college. Obviously to get a foot in the door. Now the work would of been good but I'm not prepared to drop my standards to match a price so I suggested to the site manager "let em do it" I know I have no issues on losing the regular stuff as I have 36 years knowledge of the college.
Today at 4pm I received a panicked phone call from the site services manager asking me to pop in this evening as the other company had just isolated a sub main DB serving bedroom and bathrooms etc and a summer group are arriving on Thursday who will be using all the affected bedrooms. The issue being heat damage to the DB. Obviously I had to go look.
The affected board is an old style Dorma Smith board approximately 50 year old. A central bus bar system board (like the Crabtree C50) but with a plastic bus bar shield (unlike the C50's of old). The plastic bus bar shield has slight signs of heat damage around the slots where the bus bar exits to mount the MCB on. Very slight although I agree heat damage. The MCB's have not been affected in anyway. The bus bar isn't heat damaged only the bus bar shield. The inspector has taken it upon himself to isolate the entire DB by pulling and blocking the incoming three phase supply. Leaving the entire floor out of action even though it is currently unoccupied as there are no students there currently. It also affects lighting to a main and emergency stairs on two other floors. One floor also has staff accommodation which is occupied. Obviously the emergency lighting will now be running down also.
This has left the college in a predicament on having remedial works conducted as a matter of urgency with out the ability to investigate or suggest a cause of action for themselves. Now my question is this,
What LEGAL right has an electrical inspector conducting a Periodic (sorry old school!) to isolate a supply in such circumstances or under what circumstances such action is justified? Is this justified?
I accept heat damage is a serious issue and I hope I would of noticed what is evident in the DB (I must stress it is slight) however I feel a more appropriate cause of action would of been in ask the site manager to view the issue as a college representative and discuss options and format their own risk assessment before isolating the entire system, or failing that to remove the plastic bulbar shield from within the board and so remove any possible risk of the problem escalating, label clearly on the outside of the DB that the protective shield has been removed and so exposing live bus bars and leave the board energised until such time remedial works can be undertaken in a reasonable time frame. I would not of had an issue removing the shield myself, after all C50's are no different. There would of been no risk to any occupants or users as the DB isn't accessible due to it being locked away in a cleaners cupboard and the exposed bus bar would not be accessible without removing the cover, as is the same with all boards?
What are our legal rights to take such action if there is a more amenable course open?
Your thoughts please.....................
For a number of years I have be working at a residential educational establishment as their main electrical contractor. For a number of years doing all work from maintenance to periodic testing or now EICR's. This year however my price was under cut by a big margin by a national who have never been to the college. Obviously to get a foot in the door. Now the work would of been good but I'm not prepared to drop my standards to match a price so I suggested to the site manager "let em do it" I know I have no issues on losing the regular stuff as I have 36 years knowledge of the college.
Today at 4pm I received a panicked phone call from the site services manager asking me to pop in this evening as the other company had just isolated a sub main DB serving bedroom and bathrooms etc and a summer group are arriving on Thursday who will be using all the affected bedrooms. The issue being heat damage to the DB. Obviously I had to go look.
The affected board is an old style Dorma Smith board approximately 50 year old. A central bus bar system board (like the Crabtree C50) but with a plastic bus bar shield (unlike the C50's of old). The plastic bus bar shield has slight signs of heat damage around the slots where the bus bar exits to mount the MCB on. Very slight although I agree heat damage. The MCB's have not been affected in anyway. The bus bar isn't heat damaged only the bus bar shield. The inspector has taken it upon himself to isolate the entire DB by pulling and blocking the incoming three phase supply. Leaving the entire floor out of action even though it is currently unoccupied as there are no students there currently. It also affects lighting to a main and emergency stairs on two other floors. One floor also has staff accommodation which is occupied. Obviously the emergency lighting will now be running down also.
This has left the college in a predicament on having remedial works conducted as a matter of urgency with out the ability to investigate or suggest a cause of action for themselves. Now my question is this,
What LEGAL right has an electrical inspector conducting a Periodic (sorry old school!) to isolate a supply in such circumstances or under what circumstances such action is justified? Is this justified?
I accept heat damage is a serious issue and I hope I would of noticed what is evident in the DB (I must stress it is slight) however I feel a more appropriate cause of action would of been in ask the site manager to view the issue as a college representative and discuss options and format their own risk assessment before isolating the entire system, or failing that to remove the plastic bulbar shield from within the board and so remove any possible risk of the problem escalating, label clearly on the outside of the DB that the protective shield has been removed and so exposing live bus bars and leave the board energised until such time remedial works can be undertaken in a reasonable time frame. I would not of had an issue removing the shield myself, after all C50's are no different. There would of been no risk to any occupants or users as the DB isn't accessible due to it being locked away in a cleaners cupboard and the exposed bus bar would not be accessible without removing the cover, as is the same with all boards?
What are our legal rights to take such action if there is a more amenable course open?
Your thoughts please.....................