- Location
- Bremerton, Washington
- Occupation
- Master Electrician
Wearing your license does seem ridiculous.
The State of Seattle does its own permits and inspections and probably have not adopted the administrative rules of WAC 296-46B.
Wearing your license does seem ridiculous.
Then you should pursue the exact same pathway they did, especially with there being a precedent.
When the law changed, and now required us to wear licenses visible on our bodies, I can remember one of our guys piping up, after the inspector asked why he wasn't wearing a visible license. He asked why the inspector wasn't wearing his license where it was visible too??
My understanding was that it was to help stop unlicensed work by allowing the Inspector to see if you were licensed without having to ask for your card Which never really made sense to me as we can ask for a card anytime
I'd still be asking him for some sort of credentials as well as verification of his identity before producing anything for him, at very least if it were first time we met.The requirement is to visibly display your certification when working in the electrical construction trade. Inspectors are not working and don't have to display.
And how does he verify the document displayed belongs to the individual "using it"? Or is that written into some of the finer print of the law?The original requirement was to have your certification in your possession, so having it locked in your glove box met the intent. The stated reason for the requirement was to enable the inspector to go on the job site and at a glance see who is certified, who the electricians are and the trainees are, journeylevel, specialty, and trainees have different colors on the cards. There were reports of too many trainees for the supervising electrician.
Sure, but having that license revoked could end up being a very painful experience. :ashamed1:Can one tattoo whatever certification is required on their chest, and when asked just lift their shirt and say "here you go".![]()
Someday we will need to have a bar code or chip planted on us anyway - then person needing to identify you can just scan you and their device looks in database to find if you comply with whatever they may be looking for:blink::blink:Sure, but having that license revoked could end up being a very painful experience. :ashamed1:
I'd still be asking him for some sort of credentials as well as verification of his identity before producing anything for him, at very least if it were first time we met.
And how does he verify the document displayed belongs to the individual "using it"? Or is that written into some of the finer print of the law?
Seems easy on a large project to check out "certification" first thing in morning along with PPE, tools, supplies, etc. as guys come onto job site.
when california passed this, it was at the behest of
"collective bargaining units".
...
in truth only reason for this was to attempt
to reclaim work that they had freely given away over the
previous three decades, in an arrogant spate of entitlement.
Fort Lee was doing that in eighties for traffic and really got bad during the first desert storm bush snrFWIW, at least no catch 22 in WA-, not required to violate OSHAhmy:
good ol' mammy state here.... BTW, plumbers are 'encouraged' to wear......
OTOH, when I walk thru the gate of many companies worldwide the company or visitors badge is required to be visible. In EU they often require you to leave your passport (or color copy) at the company gate when on production area properties.
WAC 296-46B-940(3): The certificate may be worn inside the outer layer of clothing when outer protective clothing (e.g. rain gear when working outside in the rain, arc flash, welding gear, etc.) is required. The certificate must be worn inside the protective clothing so that when the protective clothing is removed, the certificate is visible. A cold weather jacket or similar apparel is not protective clothing.
The certificate may be worn inside the outer layer of clothing when working in an attic or crawl space or when operating
equipment (e.g. drill motor, conduit threading machine, etc.) where wearing the certificate may pose an unsafe
condition for the individual. The certificate must be immediately available for examination at all times. When working as
a certified electrician, the electrician must not display a training certificate. When supervising a trainee(s), the
supervising electrician’s certificate must be appropriate for the work being performed by the trainee(s).
Any person working as an electrician or trainee must also possess government issued photo identification and
immediately present that identification when requested by the inspector. Visibly displaying your certificate while
performing an electrical installation allows the public, customers,and other workers to have the knowledge that properly certified persons are the ones doing the work.
This type thinking is sometimes taken to extremes - a co-worker I was riding with got a traffic ticket at an air force base for not wearing his seat belt - he neglected to turn off the car engine when he removed his seat belt to get his wallet out for ID at the gate.
All that to say I don’t think it’s right that unions can manipulate legislation for thier benefit when it effects the rest of us so negatively.
When I was an apprentice and a former director was still an inspector, he asked to see my apprentice card. He then told my boss he didn't need to see his license because he wouldn't have gotten a permit for the job we were on if he didn't have a current license. Guys that use common sense and/or don't get a big head when they have a position of authority are slowly disappearingI’ve been asked twice to show a license. The first was when the Chief Electrical inspector asked for it when he happened to have the new State Director riding along. They both had a good chuckle at my expense when I couldn’t show it. I had already known the CEI for close to ten years by then and he knew very well who I was.
When I was an apprentice and a former director was still an inspector, he asked to see my apprentice card. He then told my boss he didn't need to see his license because he wouldn't have gotten a permit for the job we were on if he didn't have a current license. Guys that use common sense and/or don't get a big head when they have a position of authority are slowly disappearing![]()
The State of Seattle does its own permits and inspections and probably have not adopted the administrative rules of WAC 296-46B.
.I thought about this a little more. I had two lanyards I wore on site.
As I mentioned before, one was my site safety passport. Photographic ID, passport number and company details.
The other was my Eaton ID. Again, photographic ID, company address, and business contact details.
No problem with either as far as I was concerned. The customer ought to know who is in his facility/property. Some of our customers were military/naval. Getting into Portsmouth dockyard was like getting into Fort Knox.
Not sure you would by with that here. With events like the Sandy Hook disaster it surprises me too that you could there..
I never worked on high security projects but did schools etc. Wear a tool pouch, act like you belonged there, and seldom if ever questioned who, what, why.
Where’s the girls locker rooms?
Second hall, right, two more, then left.
Always amazed me, even then.