On 7/24/2015 4:41 PM, John H. wrote:
On Thu, 23 Jul 2015 20:27:02 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 7/23/2015 8:15 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 7/23/15 8:12 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 23 Jul 2015 18:57:37 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:
Adding "more slots" requires spending millions more on facilities,
training trainers, paying trainers, and much more. It takes three to
five years to properly train in the classroom and on the job a
qualified
journeyman or woman. You apparently think the training is done via some
sort of rump group on the job site before work begins each morning.
Well, maybe that works for stick builders in your part of Florida, eh?
Slow learners, huh?
No just that throttling I was talking about.
A lot of guys will just go get a "helper" job for a contractor and be
ready to sit for the journeyman exam in a year or two if they are
willing to do some book work at night.
We had a little study group on the old Prodigy BBs and several of us
got our inspector certifications for free. Fortunately one of the guys
was Joe Tedesco, a road warrior for IAEI and he pitched us his whole
road show, along with practice questions and assignments. All of us
smoked the IAEI tests and I also knocked out the ICBO and SBCCI
(residential, commercial and plan review)
I was standing in the parking lot in 45 minutes on the 3 hour
residential SBCCI test (100 questions) but it was the 3d time I had
taken that same basic test in less than a year. ;-)
Other guys got their contractors licenses or became inspectors, two
did both.
Old Joe was a "Bastin" guy from up in your neck of the woods.
None of that has anything to do with being able to weld the piping for a
pharma manufacturing facility, as just one example.
Harry, there are many ways in which one can become certified at
different levels of welding, including a nuclear certification.
Same holds true for boiler makers, pipe fitters, electricians,
carpenters, plumbers and virtually all trades at all levels.
You don't have to be union to become certified or licensed.
I'll bet the Navy has experts in all of those areas, and none of them went through a
union apprenticeship.
Surprising what one can learn in eight weeks.
I wasn't thinking of the Navy when I posted the above, but you are
certainly correct. Some of the best tradespeople are military trained
.... Navy SeaBees is an excellent example. I worked with them for a
while doing electrical work. I am sure the Army and other service
branches have excellent schools and training programs as well.