Any thoughts from anyone who attended F3 re the presentation on regulation.
It left me with more questions than answers.
With no statutory framework in place and the courts as the "gatekeeper" (whatever that means), I am not sure how much is going to change. Can you be a government regulator when their are no legal regulations to enforce?
Also, £3000 over 4 years was quoted as the fee for acreditation. Can anyone find where these figures came from?
Any thoughts from anyone who attended F3 re the presentation on regulation.
It left me with more questions than answers.
With no statutory framework in place and the courts as the "gatekeeper" (whatever that means), I am not sure how much is going to change. Can you be a government regulator when their are no legal regulations to enforce?
Also, £3000 over 4 years was quoted as the fee for acreditation. Can anyone find where these figures came from?
My impression was that the £3k cost was just the inspection/certification fees to the accreditation body; of course that doesn't take into account the costs involved for initial implementation and maintenance overheads which will likely be more onerous for smaller firms. I would like to have discussed the impact on small business and barrier to entry in this regard also with Andrew Rennison but unfortunately didn't get the opportunity.