The range statement relates to the unit of competency as a whole. It allows for different work environments and situations that may affect performance. Bold italicised wording in the performance criteria is detailed below. Add any essential operating conditions that may be present with training and assessment depending on the work situation, needs of the candidate, accessibility of the item, and local industry and regional contexts.
Property or facility information may include information relating to: | agreements building codes company services construction costs current and planned property, facility or site developments deposited, survey and other plans depreciation schedules land and water rates land title documentation leasing rates legal documentation licences management policy and procedures marketing services occupancy rates operating costs permits sales information specifications taxation tenancy and other contracts utilities usage. |
Status of property or facility may relate to: | financial situation legal ownership location by lot location by section number occupancy. |
Purpose of inspection may: | be defined through a contract between enterprise providing inspection service and legal entity commissioning the service form part of internal procedures of property management organisation. |
Relevant people may include: | agents clients colleagues government personnel legal representatives management members of industry associations property owners site personnel supervisors tenants. |
Organisational requirements may be outlined and reflected in: | access and equity principles and practice guidelines business and performance plans complaint and dispute resolution procedures goals, objectives, plans, systems and processes legal and ethical requirements and codes of practice mission statements and strategic plans OHS policies, procedures and programs policies and procedures in relation to client service quality and continuous improvement processes and standards quality assurance and procedure manuals. |
Clients may include: | agents building supervisors government and legal instruments or agencies managers project managers property and facility agents property and facility owners tenants. |
Contingencies may include: | budget constraints building delays competing work demands of contractor environmental factors, such as time and weather industrial disputes non-availability of resources and materials public holidays and shut-down periods equipment and technology breakdown unforeseen incidents workplace hazards, risks and controls. |
Business equipment and technology may include: | computers data storage devices email facsimile machines internet, extranet and intranet photocopiers printers scanners software applications, such as databases and word applications. |
Legislative requirements may be outlined and reflected in: | Australian standards, and quality assurance and certification requirements award and enterprise agreements codes of practice covering the market sector and industry, financial transactions, taxation, environment, construction, land use, native title, zoning, utilities use (water, gas and electricity), and contract or common law environmental and zoning laws affecting access security, access and property use general duty of care to clients home building requirements local regulations and by-laws privacy laws applying to owners, contractors and tenants relevant federal, and state or territory legislation that affects organisational operation, including: anti-discrimination and diversity environmental issues EEO industrial relations OHS strata, community and company titles tenancy agreements trade practices laws and guidelines. |
Variations may include: | alternative suppliers changes to fittings and fixtures changes to inspection schedules work outside or producing results outside the terms and conditions of contract. |
Inspection processes may relate to: | complexity of construction statutory limitations timeframe type of construction type of job. |
Conditions may include general state of repair and condition of: | ancillary structures current ownership structures evidence of pre-existing or potential issues affecting quality of the environment financial claims over property or facility fittings and fixtures observable external or internal defects or non-compliance with regulations service and ground improvements to original property or facility signs of pest infestation. |
Features may include: | associated structures formal and informal inclusions modifications to building approvals modifications to original property or facility physical aspects of land and buildings. |
Specialist advice may be sought from: | architects bankers and financiers builders business consultants colleagues government officials investment consultants members of industry associations OHS representatives planners real estate agents solicitors subcontractors supervisors technical experts valuers. |
Feedback may be sought from: | clients, supervisors and colleagues formal and informal performance appraisals workplace assessment. |
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