I’m sorry you suffered this horrid invasion of your privacy and can understand how upset you now feel. I would too.
I use heating engineers a lot (to attend my rental properties) most companies make it a condition of the booking callout that (a) the engineer will not be left alone on the property, and (b) they will not attend if the person on the property is under 18 years old.
This causes minor problems since tenants are reluctant to take time off work to be at home for these essential repairs until I explain it’s for their own protection as well as the engineers who risk unfounded allegations against them (unlike your situation where you say you have video evidence).
Personnally I would never leave a tradesman in my home without my being there mostly because I like to make sure they’re doing the job properly.
You've made your complaint to the business and you’ve been told that the engineer won’t be placed in a situation where he could do that again. You’ve possibly prevented others from suffering a similar fate.
I’m not familiar with criminal law but the court decides what sentence should be given not the victim, although remorse and/or an apology is sometimes taken into consideration. In this case the business decided what they felt was the appropriate action to take, presumably knowing if this was the first or one of many complaints they had received about the engineer.
Have you paid the business for this boiler job, and are they a member of any trade body which has a complaints procedure?
Di
I use heating engineers a lot (to attend my rental properties) most companies make it a condition of the booking callout that (a) the engineer will not be left alone on the property, and (b) they will not attend if the person on the property is under 18 years old.
This causes minor problems since tenants are reluctant to take time off work to be at home for these essential repairs until I explain it’s for their own protection as well as the engineers who risk unfounded allegations against them (unlike your situation where you say you have video evidence).
Personnally I would never leave a tradesman in my home without my being there mostly because I like to make sure they’re doing the job properly.
You've made your complaint to the business and you’ve been told that the engineer won’t be placed in a situation where he could do that again. You’ve possibly prevented others from suffering a similar fate.
I’m not familiar with criminal law but the court decides what sentence should be given not the victim, although remorse and/or an apology is sometimes taken into consideration. In this case the business decided what they felt was the appropriate action to take, presumably knowing if this was the first or one of many complaints they had received about the engineer.
Have you paid the business for this boiler job, and are they a member of any trade body which has a complaints procedure?
Di
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