Industrial Training (Engineering Board) Order 1964

JurisdictionUK Non-devolved
CitationSI 1964/1086
Year1964

1964 No. 1086

INDUSTRIAL TRAINING

The Industrial Training (Engineering Board) Order 1964

14thJuly 1964

22ndJuly 1964

23rdJuly 1964

The Minister of Labour (hereinafter referred to as "the Minister") after consultation with organisations and associations of organisations appearing to be representative respectively of substantial numbers of employers engaging in the activities hereinafter mentioned and of substantial numbers of persons employed in those activities and with the bodies established for the purpose of carrying on under national ownership industries in which the said activities are carried on to a substantial extent and by virtue of the powers conferred on him by section 1 of, and paragraphs 1 and 7 of the Schedule to, the Industrial Training Act 1964(a) (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") and of all other powers enabling him in that behalf hereby makes the following Order:—

Citation, commencement and interpretation

1.—(1) This Order may be cited as the Industrial Training (Engineering Board) Order 1964 and shall come into operation on 23rd July 1964.

(2) The Interpretation Act 1889(b) shall apply to the interpretation of this Order as it applies to the interpretation of an Act of Parliament.

Establishment of Industrial Training Board

2. An industrial training board to be known as the Engineering Industry Training Board (hereinafter referred to as "the Board") is hereby established to exercise in relation to the activities specified in Schedule 1 to this Order as the activities of the engineering industry the functions conferred on industrial training boards by the Act.

Membership and proceedings of the Board

3. The provisions of Schedule 2 to this Order shall have effect in relation to the Board.

Joseph Godber, Minister of Labour.

Dated 14th July 1964.

(a) 1964 c. 16.

(b) 52 & 53 Vict. c. 63.

SCHEDULE 1

THE ENGINEERING INDUSTRY

1. Subject to the provisions of this Schedule, the activities of the engineering industry are the following activities in so far as they are carried out in Great Britain:—

(a) the manufacture of—

(i) any article wholly or mainly from metal or any combination of metal and plastics material;

(ii) any vehicle body;

(iii) any aircraft, helicopter, glider, hover vehicle (that is to say, a vehicle designed to be supported on a cushion of air) or guided missile;

(iv) any article embodying a lens or prism;

(v) any primary cell or battery or electric accumulator;

(vi) any electric cable, electric filament lamp, electric discharge lamp or photographic flashbulb;

(vii) any thermionic, cold cathode or photo-cathode valve or tube, cathode-ray tube, electric capacitor or resistor, any device using ferrite for electrical purposes or any semi-conductor device;

(viii) any pattern for the purpose of engineering;

(b) the installation, testing, inspection or repair of any article (whether or not so described) specified in sub-paragraph (a) above;

(c) the production of any non-ferrous metal or semi-manufactured sections from such metal, including the operations of smelting, refining, casting, rolling, drawing, extruding or forging;

(d) the erection of—

(i) steel or other metal framework of buildings; or

(ii) structures made wholly or mainly of steel or other metal (not being electric lines or structures designed for the support thereof, fencing, hoarding or scaffolding);

(e) electro-plating, anodising, polishing, burnishing, tempering, case-hardening, annealing or any other metal finishing process;

(f) the machining of graphite;

(g) the preparation of any engineering drawing;

(h) when carried out in conjunction with any of the foregoing activities, any of the following activities, that is to say—

(i) research, development, design or drawing;

(ii) operations in connection with sale, packing, warehousing, distribution or transport;

(iii) work done at any office or laboratory, at any store, warehouse or similar place or at a garage;

(i) any other activity of industry or commerce carried out at or from an establishment engaged mainly in one or more of the foregoing activities.

2. Notwithstanding anything contained in this Schedule, there shall not be included in the activities of the engineering industry:—

(a) the activities of any establishment engaged wholly or mainly in the activities following, or any of them, that is to say—

(i) the processing of plastics material;

(ii) the manufacture or repair of any of the following articles or any article similar thereto, that is to say, artificial flowers or teeth, ball-point or fountain pens, belts, braces, brooms, brushes, clothing, document cases or covers, eye-glasses, footwear, handbags, jewellery, jewel cases, lampshades, pencils, purses, spectacles, straps, suitcases, toys and games or wallets;

(iii) the manufacture of paint;

(iv) the production of iron or steel by any process or, when carried out in association with such production, the casting of iron or steel by any process, the production of any iron or steel forgings or the annealing or heat treatment of steel;

(v) the rolling with or without heat of iron or steel products for the purpose of reducing the cross-sectional area thereof;

(vi) the production from iron or steel of bright bars, hot...

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