Then it's the red tape of being allowed to use a soldering iron and the Weller desoldering station at work...
You mean you need a hot work permit for some soldering? Aren't you working at a broadcasting station? How has this place ever been put together?
These days, it's being put together by contractors, with their own liability
. Previously, it was a different time. The company saw fit to have broadly competent technical staff... And work has evolved. I'm these days mostly patching fiber cables (won't trust contractors with that, they don't care about cleanliness enough.) and typing commands on a keyboard.
Now, the insurance companies have, as they do, cartel'ed together a barrier of entry to work called just "
Hot Work". They do claim a 80% decrease in hot work related fires since 1990, though, so they just might be on to something.
It's permitted to work with soldering equipment (as in Weichlöten, not brazing) on a specific bench at the service department (the assumption being that the risk assessment and prevention measures have been taken care of, permanently, for that work position), but if you're taking the portable kit, you need to have a recent "hot work" training and know the procedures, both red tape ones and actual ones, the latter mostly being "this is how to turn off the fire alarm" which is important since there are detector trigged inert gas release systems in many technical spaces..