Norm Mugford said:
Aegis wrote:
"In a civil court, however, it may easily be found that the licensee should
be considered an 'expert' (as opposed to an 'uninformed consumer') in their
field which could increase their liability in suits related to what they
knew or SHOULD have known".
Let me analyze that:
If Frank is licensed, he is considered an "expert".....(I thought you'd like
that Frank)
and since Mr. Bass is unlicensed, he's "uninformed" and
could increase liability related to what he knew or
should have known, such as selling monitoring without
a license and leading people to believe he does not need a license.
Heh... As much as I'd like to agree with you Norm, I can't. I've talked to
security professionals around the world (some work in jurisdictions in which
licensing is not required). I can't attest to their expertise (neither
could you), and I don't think you can simply say a license is any indicator
that the individual is an "expert" (besides which, Robert *was* licensed at
one time). In the lower mainland a few municipalities (Vancouver included)
require fire alarm technicians that perform annual testing on equipment to
be certified through ASTTBC. The certification in the opinion of the Surrey
Fire Marshal (and many others) is a joke. A lot of the "old hands" look on
it as a "money grab" (you have to pay to renew the certification on an
annual basis). I've personally seen many systems "pass" the annual test
when in fact they shouldn't. Most of the ASTTBC techs I've actually worked
with don't even know how to properly test the system battery (or calculate
the stand-by time based on the panel's current draw and battery size).
There's a procedure for testing fire extinguishers that actually requires
them to be *removed* from the wall bracket. I've actually seen a supposed
"tech" remove the old inspection tag and put on a new one with only a glance
to make sure the gauge is "in the green".
The only "positives" with respect to industry licensing and certification
(in BC at least) that I can see is that the company has to maintain the
required insurance and bonding and that security tradesmen are screened by
the RCMP and are required to sucessfully participate in an apprenticeship
that lasts three years before they can obtain a Technical Qualification
(TQ).
I have a stronger word for Mr. Bass than "uniformed", but it
is Friday. And I have experts I'd rather read posts from.
)
Frank Olson
http://www.yoursecuritysource.com