Please read the definition of NEXT before you talk about wires near ballasts, dimmers etc causing noise in cat5.
At the termination ends are your wire twists maintained very closely?. The noise cancellation ability of quality cat5 is very good as long as the twist is maintained. Twisted wire cancels extraneous signals, but small lengths of untwisted wire picks up noise readily.
Personally with the tester you have, I would worry only if your tests pass intermittently on the same wire. I had situations where the Next was just barely passing, on a redo of the test the test would fail. I would re-terminate the wire.
Rarely have I seen this over multiple wires in an installation, the worst I have come across was an installation which was wired with PVC cat5 from HomeDepot, probably just a batch of crap wire. By redoing the terminations I was able too get the wires passing, on multiple tests per wire
From a previous post I made at another forum.....
Worried about emf pulses from nearby lightning strikes, power lines, lighting fixtures affecting cat5 wire...
I have a client where very high current welding proceeded for 1 week, no more than 6 feet from a bundle of 28 cat 5 cables( in an unshielded wood raceway), much of the welding occurred within 12 inches. The server was also within 6 feet. End result, not one computer in the system had any machine or program lockups, no data errors.
This situation occurred in an office structure built on a large steel barge, located in the New York harbor. The wire were running parallel, for the full length of the structure, to the welding. Every monitor in the building was suffering from the constant emf pulses from the welding arcs, the screens would actually become unreadable. The owner became worried about the monitors fading in and out. After 4 days of welding, he called me to the site.
If I was asked about the situation before the welding started, I would have advised him to close shop for the week. But after 4 days, I actually had full faith in the wire twist cancellation; I was more concerned with the monitors surviving the week.