The LLMCC is a committee made up of both IBEW and NECA members to work together gathering ideas to benefit the electrical industry for our members. The Iron Range area LLMCC is the Local Labor Management Cooperation Committee that is proud of the partnership we have with the IBEW Local Union 294 electricians and the Union Contractors.
Our goal of the IBEW294-NECA team is to work together in creating the area's premier provider for electrical services. This partnership we have is a win-win for all of us, as the Union Contractors have the most highly skilled electricians and with Contractors and Union working together they will provide the best possible service for the customer with all work being done on schedule and most importantly the highest quality.
Our goal of the IBEW294-NECA team is to work together in creating the area's premier provider for electrical services. This partnership we have is a win-win for all of us, as the Union Contractors have the most highly skilled electricians and with Contractors and Union working together they will provide the best possible service for the customer with all work being done on schedule and most importantly the highest quality.
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The LLMCC (Local Labor Management Cooperation Committee) is a group of members of IBEW #294 / NECA and employers represented by the Twin Ports Arrowhead Chapter of the National Electrical Contractors. These two groups have a common interest to promote the unionized electrical industry by working together as a team to promote the industry.
Our contractors are business owners who understand the need to get a job done on time, on budget, and with the highest quality work. Like you, they work to keep their shops up to date with most reliable and state-of-the-art equipment. They know that high standards bring innovation, safety, and creativity to the design, manufacture, and installation of the most complex energy delivering systems.
Apprenticeships are industry-sponsored programs that combine on-the-job training with classroom instruction for people interested in entering a trade. An apprenticeship is not an internship. Internships are often short-term and are generally unpaid. Apprenticeships are an "earn while you learn" opportunity: apprentices get paid for their work during the day and see wage increases as they progress through the program.
Remember that an apprenticeship is an "earn while you learn" program. Go to school at night, get paid to work during the day. Apprentices will receive pay increases during the course of their apprenticeship based on the amount of work hours they have successfully completed in the program. This website is a partnership between IBEW Local 294 and the Twin Ports Arrowhead Chapter of the NECA.
The apprentice will learn the Trade by working with an experienced Journey Worker. The work itself will vary from day to day. Electricians work in all kinds of weather, inside and outside. You could be digging a ditch, handling heavy conduit, pulling heavy cable, or climbing in the steel.
On another, day you could be running small conduit and pulling small wire for lights and receptacles, or trying to find out why a motor doesn't run when the start button is pushed.The variety of work you may be expected to perform, and the weather and other conditions under which you may be expected to perform it, are almost limitless.
On another, day you could be running small conduit and pulling small wire for lights and receptacles, or trying to find out why a motor doesn't run when the start button is pushed.The variety of work you may be expected to perform, and the weather and other conditions under which you may be expected to perform it, are almost limitless.
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William Taylor
Apr 26, 2015
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