Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
construction, installation, and maintenance of electrical
facilities and for the performance of electrical work.
E. The Board hereby adopts and incorporates
herein the Standard Practices for Good Workmanship in Electrical Contracting,
American National Standards Institute/National Electrical Contractors
Association 1-2006, as the guide for the quality and the standard of
workmanship in the installation of electrical equipment.
F. This rule does not include any later
amendments or editions of the standards incorporated by reference.
G. Copies of these standards incorporated by
reference can be viewed in the offices of the Electrical Division or can be
obtained by contacting the following:
National Fire Protection Association
1 Batterymarch Park
Quincy,MA 02169-7471
1-800-344-3555
www.nfpa.org
010.13-009 Definitions
A. The various classes of licenses shall be
defined as follows:
1. "Master electrician"
shall mean an individual with an unlimited license classification and who is
authorized to plan, lay out, and supervise the installation, maintenance, and
extension of electrical conductors and equipment.
2. "Journeyman electrician" shall mean an
individual who is limited by license classification to install, maintain, and
extend electrical conductors and equipment. A journeyman electrician cannot
contract with the general public to plan, lay out or supervise the
installation, maintenance and extension of electrical conductors and equipment
without employing at least one (1) full-time master electrician.
3. "Residential master electrician" shall
mean an individual who is limited by license classification to performing
electrical work for single family dwellings, duplexes or two-family dwellings,
triplexes or three-family dwellings, and quadruplexes or four-family dwellings,
including planning and supervising the installation, maintenance and extension
of electrical facilities. A residential master electrician may perform
electrical work on a commercial or other project under the supervision of a
journeyman electrician or master electrician in the same manner and with the
same ratio as an electrical apprentice.
4. "Residential journeyman electrician" shall
mean an individual who is limited by license classification to install, alter,
repair, maintain, or renovate electrical facilities for single family
dwellings, duplexes or two-family dwellings, triplexes or three-family
dwellings, and quadraplexes or four-family dwellings under the general
supervision of a residential master electrician or a master electrician. A
residential journeyman may perform electrical work on a commercial or other
project under the supervision of a journeyman electrician or master electrician
in the same manner and with the same ratio as an electrical
apprentice.
5. "Air conditioning
electrician" shall mean an individual who is limited by license classification
to the installation, maintenance, and extension of electrical conductors and
equipment solely for the purpose of supplying heating and air conditioning and
refrigeration units.
6. "Industrial
maintenance electrician" shall mean an individual who is limited by license
classification to the repair, maintenance, alteration, and extension of
electrical conductors and equipment for electrical power and control systems on
or within industrial, manufacturing, or similar type facilities. For employees
of industrial facilities, it is not necessary to possess this or any other
class of license. See Ark. Code Ann. §
17-28-102(a)(2)
and Rule 010.13.010(A).
7.
"Specialist Sign Electrician" means any individual who is limited to a license
classification possessing the necessary qualifications, training, and technical
knowledge for installing, maintaining and repairing electrically illuminated or
operated signs and gaseous tubing for illumination, making all connection to an
approved outlet of sufficient capacity within twenty-five (25) feet of the sign
to be connected. A specialist sign electrician may also maintain and repair
parking lot lights with a special endorsement to his or her
license..
B.
"Board" shall mean the Board of Electrical Examiners of the State
of Arkansas.
C.
"Director" shall mean the Director of the Division of Labor,
Arkansas Department of Labor and Licensing.
D.
"Electrical Apprentice" means
any person whose principal occupation is the learning of and assisting in the
installation of electrical work under the supervision of a journeyman
electrician or master electrician.
E.
"Electrical work" means:
1. As defined by Ark. Code Ann. §§
17-28-101(4) and
20-31-102(5):
a. Installations of electric conductors and
equipment within or on public and private buildings or other structures,
including recreational vehicles, and floating buildings, and other premises
such as yards, carnivals, parking and other lots, and industrial
substations;
b. Installations of
conductors that connect to the supply of electricity; and
c. Installations of other outside conductors
on the premises.
F.
"HVACR" shall mean heating,
ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration.
G.
"Manager" shall mean any
employee:
1. whose primary duty consists of
oversight of the technical and business functions of the electrical company in
which he or she is employed; and
2.
who customarily and regularly directs the work of one or more other employees
therein; and
3. who has a good
working knowledge of electrical theory, electrical materials and equipment, and
electrical installation procedures; and
4. who customarily and regularly exercises
discretion and independent judgment; and
5. who has the authority to hire or fire
other employees, or whose suggestions and recommendations as to the hiring or
firing and as to the advancement and promotion or any other change of status of
other employees will be given particular weight; and
6. who normally maintains oversight of the
electrical work performed by the electrical company in which he or she is
employed during such time that company holds itself out to perform such
work.
H.
"Superintendent" shall mean any employee:
1. whose primary duty consists of oversight
of the electrical work performed by the electrical company in which he or she
is employed; and
2. who has a good
working knowledge of electrical theory, electrical materials and equipment, and
electrical installation procedures; and
3. who customarily and regularly directs the
work of one or more other employees therein; and
4. who has the authority to hire or fire
other employees, or whose suggestions and recommendations as to the hiring or
firing and as to the advancement and promotion or any other change of status of
other employees, will be given particular weight; and
5. who customarily and regularly exercises
discretion and independent judgment; and
6. who normally maintains oversight of the
electrical work performed by the electrical company in which he or she is
employed during such time that company holds itself out to perform such
work.
I.
"Dwelling":
1. means a building
or other structure designed and constructed for residential purposes;
2. includes a building or other structure
that houses a home office or other business activity if the business activity
does not require commercial-grade electric conductors or equipment;
and
3. does not include a mixed-use
building or other structure that requires commercial-grade electric conductors
or equipment for any part of the building or other
structure.
010.13-010 Construction and Exemptions
A. The licensing requirements of Ark. Code
Ann. §
17-28-101
et seq.
shall not apply to the following:
1. The
construction, installation, maintenance, repair, or renovation by any public
utility, as that term is defined by Ark. Code Ann. §
23-1-101 (4)(A),
by any rural electric association or cooperative, or by any municipally owned
utility, of any transmission or distribution lines or facilities incidental to
their business and covered under other nationally recognized safety standards,
or to any other such activity when performed by any duly authorized employee,
agent, contractor, or subcontractor of any such public utility, association,
cooperative, or municipally owned utility;
2. The construction, installation,
maintenance, repair, or renovation by any industry of any electric conductors
or equipment or facilities incidental to their business and covered under other
nationally recognized safety standards, or to any other such activity when
performed by any duly authorized employee of such industry;
3. The construction, installation,
maintenance, repair and renovation of telephone equipment, computer systems, or
satellite systems by a person, firm, or corporation engaged in the
telecommunications or information systems industry when such activities involve
low-voltage work exclusively for communication of data, voice, or for other
signaling purposes; including fire alarm systems, security systems and
environmental control systems that are not an integral part of a
telecommunications system;
4. The
construction, installation, maintenance, repair or renovation of any
nonresidential farm building or structure;
An applicant for an electrical contractor's license shall
submit to the Board the following:
1.
an application on a form approved by the Board; and
2. proof that the applicant is a licensed
master electrician or employs a licensed master electrician; and
3. if the applicant is not a master
electrician, a statement from the master electrician, under oath, disclosing
the master electrician's affiliation with any other electrical contractor and
verifying that the master electrician is employed as the superintendent or
manager of the applicant contractor.
H.
Apprentices
1. Upon employing an electrical apprentice to
work at the trade, the electrical contractor/master electrician shall within
thirty (30) days register such apprentice with the Board, the Arkansas Office
of Skills Development, Department of Commerce, and the U.S. Department of
Labor, Employment and Training Administration, Office of Apprenticeship (OAT).
The apprentice must begin school no later than the first full semester
following the date of hire. In the event that school begins more than ninety
(90) days from the hire date, the employer shall, in the interim, provide the
apprentice with technically related instruction pursuant to the guidelines of
the U. S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, Office
of Apprenticeship (OAT).
2. An
applicant for registration as an electrical apprentice shall submit the
following:
a. an application on a form
approved by the Board;
b. a
registration fee often dollars ($10.00);
c. satisfactory proof that the applicant is
enrolled in and attending a school or training course for electrical
apprentices certified by the OAT.
3. Apprentice registration certificates shall
be valid for one (1) year. They shall expire on the last day of the month, one
(1) year from the date of issue.
4.
Apprentice registration certification may be renewed by payment of a ten dollar
($10.00) renewal fee and submission of satisfactory proof of current enrollment
in and attendance of a training program approved by the OAT.
5. An apprentice who has successfully
completed a certified school or training program and has been released for
testing may continue to renew his or her apprentice registration card, if
otherwise qualified, without enrolling in a school or training program. Such an
apprentice may work as a fourth year apprentice for the purpose of Rule
010.13-013(H)(6) for a period of six (6) months. If an apprentice has not
passed the journeyman electrician examination within six (6) months of
completing apprenticeship school, the apprentice shall be subject to the same
supervision as a third year apprentice pursuant to Rule
010.13-013(H)(6).
6. Ratios and
Supervision
a. No journeyman or master
electrician shall employ or supervise electrical apprentices at a ratio greater
than three (3) apprentices to one (1) journeyman or one (1) master electrician
on a single electrical job.
b. An
apprentice electrician shall not engage in electrical work unless he or she is
supervised by a master electrician or a journeyman electrician.
c. Observation of apprentices' work. The
supervising electrician shall observe the work of an apprentice electrician in
person at regular and reasonable intervals. "Regular and reasonable intervals"
shall mean a minimum of the following:
i. For
work on 1-4 family dwellings:
A. an apprentice
in the first 90 days of employment shall be under the direct, immediate, and
continuous supervision of the supervising master or journeyman; and
B. an apprentice employed from the 91st day
of employment through 2 years shall have his or her work observed by the
supervising master or journeyman every 2-3 hours and before the work is
operational, before it is considered complete, and before it is
covered.
ii. or work on
all projects other than 1-4 family dwellings:
A. For a first year apprentice, the
supervising electrician shall observe the apprentice's work on a direct and
continuous basis;
B. For a second
year apprentice, the supervising electrician shall observe the apprentice's
work every 30 minutes to 1 hour and before the electrical work is operational,
before it is considered complete, and before it is covered;
C. For a third year apprentice, the
supervising electrician shall observe the apprentice's work every 2-3 hours and
before the work is operational, before it is considered complete, and before it
is covered; and
D. For a fourth year
apprentice, the supervising electrician shall observe the apprentice's work
before the work is operational, before it is considered complete, and before it
is covered.
d.
Proximity to apprentices. The supervising electrician shall remain within
reasonable proximity to an apprentice electrician while electrical work is
being performed. The proximity of the supervising electrician to the apprentice
electrician is reasonable if:
i. The
supervising electrician is:
A. within the line
of sight of the apprentice electrician; or
B. at the same street address at which the
apprentice electrician is working; or
ii. The job site is not a single-family
residence, requires a contractor's license, and the supervising electrician is
within the line of sight of the apprentice electrician.
e. The responsible master electrician is
responsible for all the electrical work performed by an apprentice. This means
that it is the supervising electrician's initial responsibility and ultimately
the responsible master's obligation to ensure that all electrical work
performed by the apprentice is performed in compliance with the standards
adopted by these rules.
7.
Classroom Study
The Career Education and Workforce Development Board, through
the Arkansas Office of Skills Development, shall oversee related classroom
study of apprentices.
8. A
certificate of registration may be revoked by the Board for cause. This
includes, but is not limited to the following:
a. Expulsion from or dropping from the
training program approved by the OAT.
b. Performing electrical work which is not
performed under the supervision of a licensed master or journeyman electrician;
or
c. Performing electrical work
outside the employment of the apprentice's mentoring or sponsoring electrician
or electrical contractor.
9. A licensed electrician shall verify the
work hours of any apprentice who has been in his/her employ the previous four
(4) years at the request of the Department of Labor and Licensing; the Arkansas
Office of Skills Development, Department of Commerce,; the Office of
Apprenticeship; and any local apprenticeship committee. Failure to comply with
such a request may result in the assessment of civil money penalties and the
revocation or suspension of a license.
I.
Temporary licenses
1. The Board shall issue a temporary license
as a master electrician or journeyman electrician for a period of six (6)
months, upon submission by the applicant of the following:
a. A temporary license fee in the amount of
$50 for a master electrician and $25 for a journeyman electrician;
b. A completed application on a form provided
by the Board; and
c. Evidence that
the applicant holds a current license of the same classification issued by
another state or has otherwise met the experience qualifications established in
Rule 010.13-012(B) or (C).
2. A temporary license may be renewed one (1)
time only for industrial projects, upon submission by the applicant of the
items listed in Rule 010.13- 013(1)(a) above.
3. The Director of the Division of
Occupational and Professional Licensing Boards and Commissions may renew a
temporary license as a master electrician or journeyman electrician issued by
the Board for more than one (1) additional period of six (6) months, if;
a. The renewal is for work to be performed on
a specific industry project;
b. The
Director of the Division determines that the additional renewal is necessary
because actual construction will exceed one (1) year and an insufficient number
of licensed electricians is available to perform the necessary work;
c. The temporary license is restricted to the
industry projects for which it is issued; and
d. A temporary license fee in the amount of $50 for a master
electrician and $25 for a journeyman electrician is paid.
4. The Board may issue and renew a temporary
license as a master electrician or journeyman electrician for regularly
scheduled or emergency maintenance work or shut-downs of not longer than six
(6) weeks on industry projects as defined by Ark. Code Ann. §
17-28-102(f).
010.13-014 Revocation, Suspension, Surrender and Denial
of Licenses
A. Authority of
Board
The Board shall have the power to revoke or suspend any license
or registration