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new journeyman, confused

rotasol

New Member
Joined
Jan 31, 2013
Messages
3
Location
Canada
hello everyone

I'm a journeyman shovel operator.

the last few months have been puzzling to me, and I'm wondering if i could get clarification.


there are apprentices and people with less senority working. not only that, but they're in dozers n such.

I've been limited to a roller sometimes rock truck.

this doesn't seem right.

what can i do?

I was grandfathered into the local due to my 10 yrs previous experience with a non Union company, so I'm unsure as to the legality of it all.

thanks
 

Turbo21835

Senior Member
Joined
Oct 20, 2007
Messages
1,135
Location
Road Dog
Way to many vague questions to give you a solid answer. Have you contacted the person in your shop that is designated as a steward? If there is none, go up the ladder to your business agent/rep in your area.
 

rotasol

New Member
Joined
Jan 31, 2013
Messages
3
Location
Canada
ok.

sound there be apprentices working while journeyman sit at home?

should apprentices be operating Dozer while journeyman is on a roller.

sorry for being vague. just keeping from peeping eyes.
 

Buckethead

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2007
Messages
1,055
Location
Waterfront
Occupation
Operator
ok.

sound there be apprentices working while journeyman sit at home?

should apprentices be operating Dozer while journeyman is on a roller.

sorry for being vague. just keeping from peeping eyes.

I see it says you are up in Canada, I don't know how it works there. But I know around here there's no seniority(in outside construction anyway, maybe in a shop or plant?), so you can't make a contractor lay anyone off so you can take their job, even if you're more experienced. I second what Turbo says, it could not hurt to ask how things work.
 

Turbo21835

Senior Member
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Oct 20, 2007
Messages
1,135
Location
Road Dog
It also depends on the contract. The people you are working for may have a contract that states they have X amount of apprentices working. You should have the contract you are working under, if you do not, get a copy from your rep. Everyone involved has signed the contract, and therefore they should live and die by that contract. Not saying you will stay on if you rock the boat too much, but stick up for that contract and hold them to it.
 

cutting edge

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2010
Messages
575
Location
upper canuckistan
hello everyone

I'm a journeyman shovel operator.

the last few months have been puzzling to me, and I'm wondering if i could get clarification.


there are apprentices and people with less senority working. not only that, but they're in dozers n such.

I've been limited to a roller sometimes rock truck.

this doesn't seem right.

what can i do?

I was grandfathered into the local due to my 10 yrs previous experience with a non Union company, so I'm unsure as to the legality of it all.

thanks

Im gonna sound mean here, but maybe the problem is you.....or the quality of your work.

It wont hurt to ask if it is the case, and then work to improve things from there.
 

rotasol

New Member
Joined
Jan 31, 2013
Messages
3
Location
Canada
definitely not me. it's happening to a lot of journeyman there.cut hours, apprentices working before us. apprentices working in dozers while journeyman running rocktrucks and rollers, etc.
 

Scrub Puller

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 29, 2009
Messages
3,481
Location
Gladstone Queensland Australia
Yair . . . Could someone explain the terms "journeyman" and "apprentice" when it comes to heavy equipment please?

Maybe some Aussie's could chime in and clarify our situation but, as far as I know, we have no such designations in the industry here . . . maybe in the mines? Anyone?

Cheers.
 

TrentNz

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 28, 2012
Messages
220
Location
New Zealand
Where we are, NZ we usually go by experience, apprentices (trainees) get seat time now and then to get more experience etc etc but yeah the more experience the more trusted you are.
 

curb guy

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 7, 2010
Messages
191
Location
central ohio
Not to be an a-hole,just asking, are you currently working steady? Do you get paid the same whether you're in a hoe,dozer,truck,skid loader,etc.? If yes,I don't see what the problem is?
 

RollOver Pete

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 5, 2007
Messages
1,510
Location
Indio, Ca
Occupation
Operating Engineer/mechanic
Grandfathered......ouch.
If I were you, I'd keep that little bit of information to myself.
Also, if your local has a training site, use it and take advantage of it.

People respect an operator who earns his journeyman status.
An operator who has earned his way ......often has little difficulty staying busy/working.
Those grandfathered/brought in by daddy or an uncle.......thats a different story.

fwiw, i'm not trying to pi$$ on anyone's cheeroes, i'm just telling you the way it is.
 

Scrub Puller

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Mar 29, 2009
Messages
3,481
Location
Gladstone Queensland Australia
Yair . . . RollOver Pete . . . or any one. Could you explain this quote . . . what does a hand have to to earn a "journeyman" status. I'm trying to get my head around these terms, they cut no weight with me.

People respect an operator who earns his journeyman status.

Cheers.
 

wannabe

Member
Joined
Jul 26, 2012
Messages
14
Location
Missouri
fwiw..... an apprentice is a learner,new to the job. usually the kid that gets the tools, shovels the dirt and cleans the mud off the machines and lowest paid .a journeyman is the next level,he can work all areas of the trade ,and travels or journeys from job to job and generally does the production work and gets paid a little bit better. a master is a journeyman who has proven to his brothers that he/she can do all the work and is proficient in all areas of the trade. this is most commonlly done by creating one piece of work in the most professional manner, known as a masterpiece and uses it to raise himself to the status of master When achieving master status , he is entitled to oversee journeymen and take on apprentices .A bit of history here. this is basis for our unions and comes from the old world of guilds where trade secrets where just that,trade secrets .no one knew things about blacksmiths except blacksmiths and they didn't know anything about masonry and they didn't know anything about cabinetry .
 

Scrub Puller

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Mar 29, 2009
Messages
3,481
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Gladstone Queensland Australia
Yair . . . wannabe Gotcha there mate, I understand all that. The part I don't understand is it an "official" system in the US. Can a young bloke sign on as an "apprentice" operator with proper documentation and accreditation after a given time?

Over here you can go to a training school and get a piece of paper that says you can legaly "drive" a given piece of equipment . . . whether you can "operate" it is a different thing entirely.

Cheers.
 

RollOver Pete

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Joined
Mar 5, 2007
Messages
1,510
Location
Indio, Ca
Occupation
Operating Engineer/mechanic
Yair . . . RollOver Pete . . . or any one. Could you explain this quote . . . what does a hand have to to earn a "journeyman" status. I'm trying to get my head around these terms, they cut no weight with me.



Cheers.

Hello Scrub Puller :drinkup

Before I go any farther,
I will admit that my choice of words or the way I come off in here even leaves me with doubts. :confused:
I have no problem when it comes to moving mountains or equipment but when it comes to choosing words...
Lookout :eek:
That said, If I have offended anyone in here, please accept my apologies.


My babbling here comes from my personal feelings and experiences.
Right or wrong, its where I've been.

I've been in the Operators since 1986.
Before being accepted into the apprenticeship, I had the opportunity to be brought in my 2 people who were high up with Massey Sand and Rock here in Indio, Ca.
I almost took their offer as I had been trying to join Local 12 for about 3 years. It would have been an easy way in but I would always have this idea in the back of my head knowing that I owed somebody or that I got a free ride.

We all know those operators on the job that make the big bucks because daddy got them into the Operators.
Regardless of weather they can cut grade, read plans or only run a roller, they are where they are because.....
membership has its privileges.

I didn't want that kind of label stuck to my hard hat and I'm glad that I didn't go that route.
When the apprenticeship opened up I went for it. Besides, I had no idea of how to check grade or read plans.

Long story short, I went to work after only 1 day at the training site. I was tested on just about everything they had and after the instructors were satisfied, I was cleared out on a 637 pp. 6000 hrs later I was a journeyman. This only took just under 3 years but you know what? I had the training, experience and confidence to do any job that I was cleared out to do. Unlike the bosses kid who despite not being able to hit the ground with the blade, he would remain on the payroll long after I was gone. All because membership has its privileges.
Free rides are something that will never sit well with me.
 

Buckethead

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Joined
Apr 4, 2007
Messages
1,055
Location
Waterfront
Occupation
Operator
Free rides are something that will never sit well with me.

Pete, I don't think it's fair to categorize people as having gotten a "free ride" or being incompetent because they did not go through the formal training. (And I did go through the training program. And I had some laborer experience before, so I really learned both ways)

We all know those operators on the job that make the big bucks because daddy got them into the Operators.
Regardless of weather they can cut grade, read plans or only run a roller, they are where they are because.....
membership has its privileges.

It must be different on your side of the country. Around here, if a contractor wants you gone, you are gone from that job.

I didn't want that kind of label stuck to my hard hat and I'm glad that I didn't go that route.

Again, wow, things must be really different out there. Who goes around a job asking who learned where?
.
 

wannabe

Member
Joined
Jul 26, 2012
Messages
14
Location
Missouri
thank you *rolloverPete * you just described how the system is supposed to work and how it does work . I have the upmost respect for people like you that take pride in their work and their profession.To answer *scrub puller's * question, I think every state has it's different requirements and standards plus a fair amount of politicians wanting to get their hands on fee, registration and permit money. When I first got my commercial drivers license (CDL ) I passed all the tests and demonstated to the examiner, that I could shift gears and knew traffic rules, then my experience in the real world began. Believe me ,there is more to it than that . when I received that piece of paper that said I was a truck driver, was the farthest thing from the truth . it wasn't until a lot of seat time and miles later, that I could say to myself that I was one .
 

John C.

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Jun 11, 2007
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12,870
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Northwest
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Machinery & Equipment Appraiser
The terms "apprentice", "journeyman" and "master" refer back as stated to a guild system of craftsmanship. The unions in the United States used those same terms when they were in the labor supplying business. The system used to work by the employer needing skilled labor and contracting with the union hall to supply that labor. The union did the training of that labor and put up lists of available craftsmen. Those lists were always supposed to be based on seniority, meaning the highest on the list was most senior and had first pick of the available jobs being offered by employers. If the job required a "journeyman", then the highest seniority journeyman got to pick. The "master" part of the designation went away a long time ago. I've been on jobs where there was a pusher who was supposed to be a master but they were generally there to make sure the union workers lived up to the work ethic of the union.

What hasn't been stated yet is that there used to be provisions for an apprentice for every so many journeymen. The original thread was implying that there were more apprentices than should have been on that particular job site running machines that journeyman should have had preference on. Apprentices get paid a lot less than journeyman so the employer might be getting a labor cost advantage. One shop I worked at had a union contract that stated there had to be one apprentice for every four journeyman.

Now days in the US, union labor is designated on government contracts and I've heard Canada is more so than here. The non union part of the industry is probably based more on merit than at any time in history. Many of us here feel that the idea that a person achieved journeyman status without fulfilling the training and work time requirements needs to keep his mouth shut, do the work assigned and feel lucky that he has a job at all.
 

Scrub Puller

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Mar 29, 2009
Messages
3,481
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Gladstone Queensland Australia
Yair. . . Thanks fellers for the clarification. I have a bit of an idea how your system works . . . I sense this could be a fairly tender area so from my perspective anyway, I'll let it go at that.

Thanks again and cheers.
 

CascadeScaper

Senior Member
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Feb 27, 2005
Messages
1,162
Location
Lynnwood, WA
Occupation
2nd year Operating Engineer Apprentice
Apprentices are cheap labor and if they can do your job as well as you can and do it for less, you can do the math on that one. As a journeyman, you should be able to out-produce the apprentices. If you can't, either they are way talented or you're not up to par. There is no seniority written into the contract here to my knowledge nor do I believe in giving someone a seat just because they've been around longer although most contractors give the senior guys a seat first anyhow. I busted my ass to earn my journeyman book and if an apprentice can kick my ass out of a seat, more power to him.
 
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