San -Brooke
Member
- Location
- USA
This puzzles me and I am hoping someone could enlighten me.Different States have different policies for Electrical Inspections. Whether it is how local inspectors are chosen. How many per jurisdiction, do they work for government or are they a private company delegated by a municipality, etc…
My question is why aren’t insurance companies involved in this process. It seems that it would be in their best interest to have stringent guidelines on electrical installation considering that there is probably a very high cost annually for faulty and improper installations.
One of the problems we have in my state is the inconsistency with inspections. Some counties have one private inspector who is appointed by the county judge executive and handles maybe one or two counties and works as a private company and gives a small percentage of his fees to the county. Other counties are open counties and contractors can choose any state certified electrical inspector to do his inspection. Another scenario is certain countieswhere the county judge executive has appointed numerous people to do electrical inspections and they compete against each other to get the inspections.
Many of these policies in my opinion run contrary to what the position is specifically designed for which is the protection of life and property. I am no large fan of Insurance companies but in this situation it seems that they would be in the position to get legislation implemented to ensure consistency and credibility to the process.
My question is why aren’t insurance companies involved in this process. It seems that it would be in their best interest to have stringent guidelines on electrical installation considering that there is probably a very high cost annually for faulty and improper installations.
One of the problems we have in my state is the inconsistency with inspections. Some counties have one private inspector who is appointed by the county judge executive and handles maybe one or two counties and works as a private company and gives a small percentage of his fees to the county. Other counties are open counties and contractors can choose any state certified electrical inspector to do his inspection. Another scenario is certain countieswhere the county judge executive has appointed numerous people to do electrical inspections and they compete against each other to get the inspections.
Many of these policies in my opinion run contrary to what the position is specifically designed for which is the protection of life and property. I am no large fan of Insurance companies but in this situation it seems that they would be in the position to get legislation implemented to ensure consistency and credibility to the process.
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