Yeah that’s what I’m afraid of, but it makes sense. Why would you want to pay for someone with a EC license unless you are partnering with them to start a contracting business.My previous employer would offer a dollar an hour increase for each license obtained, but I never saw it.
Ohio is a weird state. We don’t have a state journeyman or master license. The only license we have is an electrical contractors license. We call it a masters license but it’s not, it’s a contractors license. I plan on getting it either way, but it would be nice if it would give me a pay bump when I got it. Also hoping if I were to jump ship, that it would make me more valuable to company that needs a license. This would be a tricky position to find I imagine however.We worked nationwide, so some states required at least a journeyman’s license, so it was easier to send more help out of town if they were licensed. I have two masters and two journeyman’s licenses in four states. Two in the south, two in the north. They wanted me to get a Jersey license, but I told them I haven’t lost anything there! LOL!
Here you must have an EC license to be able to file electrical permits. Only exception is homeowners filing a permit for work in their primary place of residence.Yeah that’s what I’m afraid of, but it makes sense. Why would you want to pay for someone with a EC license unless you are partnering with them to start a contracting business.
In Ohio a persons license is what allows a company to do work and the license holder has to carry the insurance. Maybe the “employer” can pay for the policy. Once you leave a company you have to wait an allotted time to before reusing your license at a different company, to allow that company to get another license I presume. If you send a written forfeiture of you license signed by the company you can use it again right away.If a company owner doesn't hold an EC license, then they can't file permits, that would make that license worth a little something I would think. I know I wouldn't be letting some "employer" file permits under my EC license without being compensated fairly well. You also have to have insurance on file with the AHJ to file for permits (other than the homeowners) not sure just how that works out if you are the license holder but are essentially filing for some employer. Something tells me that probably doesn't happen all that often. What maybe does happen is an EC license holder may have some sort of a sub contract with said "employer" but the EC license holder still carries the insurance at least to the required levels to satisfy the AHJ for issuing permits.
Did they help when switching companies when negotiating salary?never got a dime for any of them.
But they kept me employed for 46 years so I won't complain.
Strange you can’t wear tools, even if you want to, as a master.In MA you can pull permits and operate as a 1 man show (no employees in the field) with a Journeymen so I dropped my Masters. In MA you have to hold a Journeyman to use the tools. A Master cant do any work just run a business in MA
That was the old way. MA started licensing electricians in 1914. In 1915 my grandfather was licensed in MA. He had a pretty low license number. I think he was around 21 years old at the time. Never met him. Someone turned the power on when he was working in 1930 so that was that.Did they help when switching companies when negotiating salary?
Strange you can’t wear tools, even if you want to, as a master.
Not sure if it changed in Philadelphia but back in thex1970 & 80' s both companies that I worked for paid $500 for company employees perform electrical work without pulling permits or have it inspected. Might have been the same with plumbing. One company jnstalled over halve a million dollars in water & air pollution systems without a permit.In MA a factory for instance can hire a JM who works for them as an employee and he can do any electrical work needed onsite only. They don't need permits but must notify the inspector and must keep a log book of all electrical work they do on site. The electrical inspector.has the right to inspect at any time
Thanks kinda cool-In MA a factory for instance can hire a JM who works for them as an employee and he can do any electrical work needed onsite only. They don't need permits but must notify the inspector and must keep a log book of all electrical work they do on site. The electrical inspector.has the right to inspect at any time
Some places could install an entire line of production equipment, discover it isn't working for the bean counters for various reasons and remove the line before any inspection ever occurred. Some will do such things just to see if an idea will work or not. If it does work there possibly could be further expansion to that idea or even additional production lines built or even take the idea to other locations and put a line there.In MA a factory for instance can hire a JM who works for them as an employee and he can do any electrical work needed onsite only. They don't need permits but must notify the inspector and must keep a log book of all electrical work they do on site. The electrical inspector.has the right to inspect at any time