Discuss Empoyees tools what should i supply in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

I always supplied my own hand tools as did everyone I went to college with and worked alongside, bosses supplied everything else.

I've a lad starting on Tuesday and that's how it will be with him.
 
Hand tools looked after and used properly last forever, I go through screwdrivers because I'll use them for prying and bashing. My choice my responsibility. Power tools have to pay for themselves over the course of their life, a certain amount on every job allocated for paying and replacing of power tools. Employers nowadays won't supply anything, i supply my own gear, like saws sds etc because I don't like begging off the next guy. But employers have come to expect the employee to supply without a suitable rise in wages to cover tooling. While taking profit from the work done. Not a rant, just how I see it nowadays.
 
Employer should provide van, SDS drill and PPE. Employee should provide combi drill, impact etc (Get a quality kit with jigsaw, grinder etc in for about £700), own hand tools, own rods, Hoover etc.

In my opinion and that's what I own/ was given
 
One solution might be if the employee is good in other respects is to get a list written down once of what she / he wants, buy it in and if it is breaks then has to be be demonstrated as duff to you. When the employee leaves at end of contract, deduct at list cost any company items not returned. All power tools issued to a named member of staff. You could ask why they are going missing and ask if he wants a new tool box with padlock.
 
I trained with an electricity board in the early 60s, no tools were supplied. Power tools as such were a rare thing indeed, the first electric drill being shown off by another lad who of course had bought his own. Apart from obvious specialist tools I feel each person should provide their own tools, these are always cared for much better than those bought by an employer. We've come a long way from fibre rawlplugs a hammer and a rawlplug tool, or if the wall was soft enough a hand drill and masonary bit - thank goodness. We even had someone come in to demonstrate how good a new type of screw was, the posidrive, slotted up till then.
 

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