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Building
Trades Division
MES
(Service) Division
Journeyman
Apprentice
Journeyman
Helper
Building Trades Apprentice Training
APPRENTICE
TRAINING
Apprentice training in Plumbers
Local Union No. 1 is not just a "job". It is a structured
learning system that leads to a career. The education and
experience received by an apprentice plumber is lifelong
training for a career in the Plumbing Industry. This has
been our tradition and it has continued to thrive, grow, and
expand over time. In ancient times apprenticeship was known
in relation to indentured servitude and the gradual exchange
of knowledge from Master to Apprentice. This relationship
and informal training continued into the modern era in the
skilled trades. Formal structured apprenticeship training as
we know it in the United States today was initiated by the
plumbing trade with the approval of the first nationally
recognized apprenticeship program.
From the mid-1800’s plumbers had struggled to formalize
rules regarding the training of new apprentices. Local
journeymen’s associations, master plumber’s societies, and
early unions established a variety of programs, but there
was great variation in methods and practices. In 1936, the
United Association of Journeyman Plumbers and Steamfitters
of the United States and Canada (as it was then known), and
the National Association of Master Plumbers, formulated and
jointly adopted a plan for a joint national plumbing
apprenticeship program.
The national plumbing apprenticeship program was approved by
the National Association of Master Plumbers at their annual
convention on June 25, 1936, and approved by the United
Association of Journeyman Plumbers and Steamfitters of the
United States and Canada on September 11, 1936. The United
States Department of Labor set up the “Federal Committee on
Apprenticeship Training” to act as a coordinating agency for
the plan. This Committee was given legal authority in the
following year as the “Bureau of Apprenticeship and
Training” by the National Apprenticeship Act of 1937,
commonly known as the “Fitzgerald Act”. All subsequent
national and state approved apprenticeship programs are
based on this model.
In 1936 the joint national plumbing apprenticeship program
was explained as follows:
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A standard 5 year apprenticeship, which
has been recognized by the plumbing trade since 1883 as the
desired period.
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Requirement of an “indenture” or
agreement, signed by the apprentice and the sponsor parties.
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Requirement of specific related school
instruction of not less than 720 hours.
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Provision of material for apprentice
classes through boards of education.
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Control of plumbing apprenticeship by
committees on which master plumbers and journeyman plumbers
are equally represented.
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Recognition of the fundamental principle
that plumbing work should be done only by properly qualified
journeymen plumbers, assisted by indentured apprentices,
employed by and under the supervision of master plumbers.
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Establishment of a permanent uniform
national plan of plumber apprentice training, remaining
under the control of the trade.
The Plumbers Local 1 apprenticeship program follows these
same principles today. We have updated and added hours to
our courses of study over the years, but we have not changed
what works. Our apprenticeship program, while modern in
application, is firmly rooted in the traditions of our past.
Our success speaks for itself. Our graduates are fully
qualified journeyman plumbers, armed with numerous technical
skills, and the documented certifications to prove it. We
also have initiated a program which will provide our
apprentices with the additional credential of an Associate
in Science degree from the State University of New York upon
completion of their apprenticeship.
Building Trades Apprenticeship Course Description
Building Trades Apprenticeship Course Schedule
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