Reason prevails in mech services licence saga

After signs that air conditioning and refrigeration technicians in New South Wales could be excluded from key work when the new mechanical services licence goes live in March 2023, the government has confirmed that the scope of work for air conditioning and refrigeration technicians will not change with the introduction of the new licence. It…

After signs that air conditioning and refrigeration technicians in New South Wales could be excluded from key work when the new mechanical services licence goes live in March 2023, the government has confirmed that the scope of work for air conditioning and refrigeration technicians will not change with the introduction of the new licence.

It has been a difficult wait for air conditioning and refrigeration stakeholders in NSW, since industry first became aware of the new mechanical services licence. Despite positive meetings between NSW Fair Trading and industry bodies including AIRAH, AMCA Australia, the ARC and RACCA, it appeared that the installation, maintenance and repair of all pipework on hydronic HVAC&R systems would be made the exclusive domain of mechanical services licence holders. This would have excluded air conditioning and refrigeration licence holders from doing such work, as a Certificate III in Plumbing (Mechanical Services) is required to obtain a mechanical services licence.

AIRAH CEO Tony Gleeson, M.AIRAH, says that through consultation with members, it was clear that HVAC&R contractors would be severely affected.

“When we communicated the situation to our members, a number stepped forward to tell us what the changes would mean for their businesses,” he says. “Across those companies, job losses could have been in the hundreds. It would have also driven up costs for customers.”

Now, the NSW government has moved away from defining detailed scopes of work for each licence class and has confirmed that section 15A of the Home Building Act allows a person who holds an air conditioning and refrigeration licence to do work that falls within the definition of mechanical services and medical gas work where that work is authorised within the scope of their existing licence.

Gleeson says that although the clarification from NSW Fair Trading comes as welcome news, the underlying issue has not been rectified.

“Unfortunately, the problematic amendment to the Home Building Act is still there,” he says. “AIRAH will be advocating for this to be changed as part of the NSW government’s longer-term review of building regulations.

“Moreover, we are disappointed that the regulations behind the new licence were developed without any consultation with the HVAC&R industry. We believe that only through collaboration between all trades can we truly strengthen the building and construction industry.”

For more information on the mechanical services and air conditioning and refrigeration licences, see the NSW Fair Trading website.


Comments

  1. Michael Hannan

    It is good to see that sanity is starting to prevail, but as mentioned above, the broader issue needs to be resolved.

    The Mechanical Services is a very broad brush and covers many aspects of the HVAC&R, but also the wider commercial and industrial industry. Does this change in the legislation cover lift mechanics, mechanical fitters, welders, metal fabrication etc. The changing out of pumps and or fans, motors, coils etc. generally fall under the roles of mechanical services, and not necessarily under taken by Air Conditioning and Refrigeration mechanics. Most plumbers would not have a clue how to under take a lot of these duties.

    We need to ensure we are not cutting off our noses to spite our faces. Why are referring the Home Building Act, were moist of the impact will be in the commercial and industrial sections of the mechanical services. keep the medical gasses section as a separate issue, remove the remaining mechanical services out of the legislation and leave it alone.

    We need to ensure that the industry has input to any future changes and to ensure that we are not railroaded into silly legislation just to appears a small section of the community.

    1. Greg Allen

      Well said Michael

    2. John M

      Unfortunately this story appears to be just that, received an email today from NSW Fair trading that I would need to apply for a mechanical services and medical gas license (excluding medical gas ) even thou I currently hold and have held a contractor’s license since the 80’s as a Airconditioning / Refrigeration / Electrical contracting license and have completed dual trades in Airconditioning / Refrigeration / Electrical and worked for many companies in this field. As I haven’t completed a Cert 3 in plumbing I will no longer be able to install splits, ducted systems or work o commercial A/C systems from the 3 March 2023

      Seems the only ones to win from this will be plumbers as has happened in the past re installation of refrigerant lines, hydronic

    3. Jak

      Not sure about your comment there about most plumbers .
      I am a mech plumber/ type b industrial gas fitter and I can tell you I seen lots of fridgies not knowing how to change a pump or Bering .I worked on anything from large solar thermal plant, trigen, steam, geothermal, process drying, combustion, bio gas , hydrogen and most people think the is Notting to plumbing . Wrong !!!
      To go further most of fridgies work on hydronic systems without any idea about positive pump heads, flow rates , pressure loses, tank stratification to name some, and trying to rectify building issues without the proper training .
      Some even try to fix boilers without a ticket .

      Fact is, the is limited number of plumbers with that knowledge as you have to get your experience with the right employer .
      I work for a HVAC company now and to be honest after 7 years in industrial combustion and automation I think a fridgies in commercial air condition is not that exciting.
      Industrial refrigeration may be a different story but you quickly get over the call outs / constant over time .

      I just hate how the plumbing trade is always view as crap where in fact it’s very technical, requires years of experience and training It takes at least 6-7 years to work in industrial combustion and fuel. And that’s only a starting point .

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