As of 05/09/12 this text is published on a professional roofing contractor's website. I reprint it here in hopes that someone can possibly point out to me what on earth this individual might be "thinking".
" Roof Reports and Roof Repair Estimates are usually issued
on the same day of the inspection. Our
repairs are performed only by license-quality repairmen, and not by
minimum-wage journeymen, who claim to be experts, but in reality have little or
no roofing experience. "
Now wait a minute.
Has anyone EVER seen a minimum wage
journeyman? Of course you haven't, because there is no such thing, never has been and never will be since minimum wage, and journeyman are at opposite ends of the trades food chain. It's like saying "that white piece of black paper."
And quite obviously anyone with even the slightest trade
experience knows that it is not possible to be a journeyman with little or no
experience in the trade, since journeyman means
that you have achieved the highest level of trade experience possible.
I'm telling you I just don't get it. Can someone please shed some light on this? Why would one print something like this and make himself look so foolish?
This
individual's verbal shell game seems to know no bounds.
What is a journeyman?
Journeyman Roofer, as defined by CSLB:
A journeyman is a person who has completed an apprenticeship
program or is an experienced worker, not a trainee, and is fully qualified and able to perform a specific trade without
supervision. But, that person does not have a license and is
not able to contract for jobs that value more than $500 in labor and materials.
Hmmm. That really sounds like a repairman that is good
enough to be licensed but isnt.
Or Wikipedia:
In the United States, employment in the building trades,
such as an electrician or plumber or carpenter, usually requires that a person
holds a state or local (city or county) license as a journeyman or master.
The journeyman license certifies that the craftsman has met
the requirements of time in the field (usually
a minimum of 8000 hours) and time in an approved classroom setting (usually
700 hours).
A journeyman has the responsibility of supervising
workers of lesser experience and training them, in addition to having the
qualifications (knowledge and skills) to work unsupervised himself.
A journeyman is commonly expected to have a wide range
of experience, covering most fields of his trade. For example, a non journeyman worker of some 20 or 30
years experience may have most or all of
his experience in only residential, commercial or industrial applications. A journeyman however, has a broad field of
experience in residential, commercial, and industrial applications.
Wow, again that sounds like a craftsman that is good enough
tradewise to be licensed but isn't.
So apparently, according to the definitions accepted by
the entire rest of the world (with the exception of the wisdom in blue above) it is
actually requires a broader range of actual trades experience to be a
journeyman than it does to be a contractor. The main difference being that a
contractor has an actual license that can be held accountable in the event of a
problem.