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The Independent Electrical Contractors’ Class of 2021 Enter Job Market with Job Security and ZERO Debt

Montana IEC campuses are in Bozeman, Billings, Great Falls, and Missoula

Montana IEC trains electrical apprentices at Bozeman, Billings, Great Falls and Missoula campuses

Learn more at www.myelectricalcareer.com

Janet Martin

Janet Martin, 2021 President of the Independent Electrical Contractors trade association. Janet is one of the first women to head a male-dominated construction industry trade group.

SHARP CONTRAST: Generation Unemployed and She-Cession vs. Guaranteed Jobs and No College Debt

Electrical contracting and renewable energy offer job security. This is NOT a boring or mundane field.”
— Janet Martin, 2021 IEC National President

BOZEMAN, MONTANA, UNITED STATES, May 6, 2021 /EINPresswire.com/ -- On May 14, the IEC Montana Chapter will honor the men and women who have completed their required four-year apprenticeship training program. The ceremony will be held at the Hilton Garden Inn in Bozeman. Janet Martin, IEC National 2021 president, will deliver the keynote commencement address. Martin is one of the first women in the U.S. to head a male-dominated construction industry trade association. The graduation ceremony starts at 11:30 am.

May is National Electrical Safety Month and no one knows the importance of safety better than the Independent Electrical Contractors’ (IEC) apprentice graduating class of 2021. Across the U.S. hundreds of IEC apprentices will graduate in May through early July. All graduates have a job, zero post-secondary education debt, and rigorous training in safety on-the-job.

The job market is starting to roar back, but for anxious college seniors it’s a different reality altogether. It is well known that many are struggling to find jobs and are carrying mountains of college debt. “The electrical contracting industry, deemed essential throughout the pandemic, represents a stable, sustainable opportunity for all job seekers,” says Martin. “In fact, our industry sector has a critical shortage of workers, pushing wages higher in the skilled trades and making these jobs even more attractive.”

The electrical contracting sector represents a stable, sustainable opportunity for all job seekers: graduating high school students, military vets, women, minorities, and people seeking to make a career change. In Montana, independent (merit shop) contractors train 72 percent of the State’s electrical apprentices.

IEC offers careers in electrical contracting that are more than just working at a jobsite. “Electrical contracting and renewable energy offer job security,” says Martin. “This is not a boring or mundane field. Recent technology evolutions combined with the push for climate friendly renewable energy and the increased electrification of buildings and transportation make the start of the new decade one of the most exciting times ever to be an electrical contractor.”

Smart Buildings and homes, drones, artificial intelligence, 5G, 3D Building Information Modeling, image recognition, prefabrication and advanced levels of workplace safety technology are rapidly evolving. “This new, evolving technology is the sexy part of the business and one that IEC trains its students to understand and use,” Martin continued

The problem for college students is that youth unemployment remains stubbornly high. Though much better than the 27.4% rate in April last year, the unemployment rate for those ages 16-24 ticked higher, to 11.1% in March. That was significantly above the overall unemployment rate of 6%. *

Job seekers can get a head start on considering this opportunity at www.myelectriccareer.com

Conventional wisdom says we cannot function in a world without electricity. “This translates into career security and living wages well into the future,” emphasizes Martin. “There is no question that electricians power this new world. We power people’s lives. We power our quality of life. And electricians power the forces and infrastructure of strength, vitality, safety, and security for us all.

* Source: US Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, April 2021

About IEC Montana
Montana IEC, established in 2001, is Montana’s only chapter of the Independent Electrical Contractors, the industry’s premier national trade association. The Montana IEC chapter offers in-class apprenticeship training in Bozeman, Billings, Great Falls, and Missoula as well as online apprenticeship training. This IEC chapter trains 72 percent of Montana’s electrical apprentices. Learn more at https://www.montanaiec.org/about/

About Independent Electrical Contractors
IEC is a nonprofit trade association federation with 52 educational campuses and affiliate IEC local chapters across the country. We represent over 3,600 member businesses employing more than 80,000 electrical professionals throughout the United States and educate over 14,000 electricians and systems professionals each year across America. Since 1957, we’ve trained close to 300 thousand apprentices in the U.S. IEC contractor member companies are responsible for over $8.5B in gross revenue annually and are some of the premier firms in the industry. Learn more at https://ieci.org

Deborah Radman
Radman Communications LLC
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