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California Law
Would  Raise the Bar for Electricians

from July/August 2002 IBEW Journal

A new law tightening standards for inside wireman electricians was signed by California Governor Gray Davis in May after both houses of the state legislature approved it with bipartisan support.

The IBEW and the National Electrical Contractors Association lobbied in favor of the bill requiring electrician certification, which will go into effect January 1, 2005. California joins 30 other states with minimum qualifications for electricians.

Today in California, professions such as manicurists, acupuncturists, locksmiths and even boxers need to be certified, but electricians who enter schools and other public places do not need to meet minimum qualifications. Unsafe electrical construction by an uncertified electrician resulted in the gruesome electrocution of a member of the public in San Diego three years ago. Low quality work by anyone in the industry taints everyone, bill supporters said.

"Now, a nonunion contractor can pull anyone off the street and call them an electrician," said Ninth District International Representative Gregory Teeple. "This bill will raise industry standards and make a safer product for the consumer."

Apprentices would be required to enter state Department of Industrial Relations-approved programs offered by community colleges and technical schools. Electrical apprentices would also need to complete 8,000 hours of on-the-job training, roughly the amount National Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee requires in its five-year apprentice program.

The law does not include a so-called "grandfather clause" that would exempt current electricians from its provisions, Teeple said, a fact that will probably attract some grumbling. But a similar law passed in Oregon shows that this requirement has a positive impact.

"Over time, it put everybody back into school two or three times a year to keep their licenses current," Teeple said. "Anybody that wants to do work in the electrical construction industry will have to take the test."

IBEW apprentices hit the books and computers as part of their rigorous training.

National Electrical Contractors Association (NECA)