jwelectric
Senior Member
- Location
- North Carolina
Here again we have a failure to communicate which I find typical with some inspectors.
In every state that I have had dealings with it is the JOB of the electrical inspector to see that the installation meets the requirements of the adopted electrical code. It is NOT the JOB of the electrical inspector to turn down an electrician for things that does not pertain to the adopted electrical code.
The placement of smoke alarms is not mandated by the National Electrical Code nor is the installation of bath fan vents. The IRC is a building code not an electrical code.
It is not the responsibility of the electrical contractor to mandate which room of a dwelling unit will be a bedroom and which ones will not be used as a bedroom. This is up to the person who is building the dwelling unit.
Should I install two smoke alarms, one in one room and one just outside that room on a one level house that has 50 rooms and the electrical inspector turned me down I would not call him or his director. My call would be to the ?Q? board to file a complaint against him or her.
If this dwelling unit needed more smoke alarms then the building inspector needs to contact the general contractor about the requirement of more not the electrical inspector turning down the electrician.
Most crossed trained inspectors don?t even know which book that they are to inspect from to start with. The IRC is a building code and the NEC is an electrical code, end of story.

In every state that I have had dealings with it is the JOB of the electrical inspector to see that the installation meets the requirements of the adopted electrical code. It is NOT the JOB of the electrical inspector to turn down an electrician for things that does not pertain to the adopted electrical code.
The placement of smoke alarms is not mandated by the National Electrical Code nor is the installation of bath fan vents. The IRC is a building code not an electrical code.
It is not the responsibility of the electrical contractor to mandate which room of a dwelling unit will be a bedroom and which ones will not be used as a bedroom. This is up to the person who is building the dwelling unit.
Should I install two smoke alarms, one in one room and one just outside that room on a one level house that has 50 rooms and the electrical inspector turned me down I would not call him or his director. My call would be to the ?Q? board to file a complaint against him or her.
If this dwelling unit needed more smoke alarms then the building inspector needs to contact the general contractor about the requirement of more not the electrical inspector turning down the electrician.
Most crossed trained inspectors don?t even know which book that they are to inspect from to start with. The IRC is a building code and the NEC is an electrical code, end of story.