🎓 Apprenticeship Programs in Construction
Apprenticeship is the backbone of skilled labor development in construction. Whether you're a union shop with mandatory apprentice ratios or an open shop building your own training pipeline, understanding how apprenticeship programs work is critical for compliance, workforce development, and controlling labor costs.
Apprentices are an investment, not cheap labor. Yes, they cost less per hour than journeymen. But they also require supervision, make more mistakes, and need time for classroom training. The real payoff comes when they journey out as loyal, skilled workers who know your systems and stay with your company.
What Is a Registered Apprenticeship?
A Registered Apprenticeship Program (RAP) is a formal, employer-driven training program that combines:
Component Details On-the-job training (OJT) 2,000–10,000 hours (varies by trade) of paid work under journeyman supervision Related Technical Instruction (RTI) 144+ hours/year of classroom education Progressive wage increases Pay increases as the apprentice advances through periods Mentorship Working under experienced journeymen Credential Nationally recognized journeyman certificate upon completion
Who Registers Apprenticeship Programs?
Level Agency Federal U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Apprenticeship (OA) State State Apprenticeship Agencies (SAA) — 25 states have their own California Division of Apprenticeship Standards (DAS) New York NYS DOL Apprenticeship Training
Types of Programs
Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee (JATC)
The most common model in union construction:
Feature Details Sponsors Joint labor-management committee (union + contractor association) Funding Training fund contributions from signatory contractors (per CBA) Facilities Dedicated training centers with classrooms, labs, and hands-on areas Curriculum Standardized by trade, national standards Dispatch Apprentices dispatched through the hiring hall Cost to employer No direct cost beyond apprentice wages and trust fund contributions
Non-union (open shop) apprenticeship programs:
Feature Details Sponsors Individual employer or group of employers Funding Employer-funded (internal training budget) Facilities Employer training rooms, community college partnerships, or trade school Curriculum Must meet DOL or state standards Selection Employer hires and enrolls apprentices directly Cost to employer Training costs, supervision time, wages, potential classroom tuition
Group (Non-Joint) Programs
Feature Details Sponsors Contractor association, industry group, or trade school Funding Employer fees, grants, association dues Example sponsors ABC chapters, NCCER, community colleges Benefit Smaller employers get access to structured programs they couldn't build alone
Apprentice-to-Journeyman Ratios
Why Ratios Exist
Ratios ensure:
Apprentices receive adequate supervision and training
Apprentices don't displace journeyman employment
Quality standards are maintained
Typical Ratios
Trade Common Ratio Notes Carpenter 1:5 (1 apprentice per 5 journeymen) Varies by state and program Electrician 1:1 to 1:3 IBEW programs often 1:1 Plumber 1:1 to 1:3 Varies by local Laborer 1:5 Generally more lenient Operating Engineer 1:3 to 1:5 Depends on equipment type Ironworker 1:3 Structural and reinforcing Sheet Metal 1:3 SMART/SMWIA programs
California Prevailing Wage Ratios
On California public works:
Requirement Details Minimum ratio Per the applicable apprentice standards for each craft Who must comply All contractors with apprenticeable crafts on the project Dispatch request Must request apprentice dispatch (DAS 142) even if you have your own Exemption Only if the apprenticeship program cannot fill the request
Failing to maintain apprentice ratios on prevailing wage projects can result in:
Civil penalties — $100/day per apprentice not employed
Back pay — At the journeyman rate for all apprentice hours that should have been filled
Audit findings — Often flagged during DIR investigations
Apprentice Wages
How Apprentice Pay Works
Apprentice wages are set as a percentage of the journeyman rate , increasing with each period:
Period Typical Hours % of Journeyman Example Rate ($52 JW base) 1st 0–1,000 45% $23.40 2nd 1,001–2,000 50% $26.00 3rd 2,001–3,000 55% $28.60 4th 3,001–4,000 60% $31.20 5th 4,001–5,000 65% $33.80 6th 5,001–6,000 75% $39.00 7th 6,001–7,000 80% $41.60 8th 7,001–8,000 90% $46.80
Percentages vary by trade and program. Always check the specific program standards.
Apprentice Fringes
Fringe Component Prevailing Wage Rule Union Rule Health & Welfare Usually same as journeyman Same as journeyman (most programs) Pension Same as journeyman or apprentice-specific rate Per program standards Vacation Varies Per program standards Training Same as journeyman Same as journeyman
The Cost Advantage (and Limitation)
Worker Hourly Cost (Wages + Fringes + Burden) % of Journeyman Cost Journeyman Carpenter $125/hr fully burdened 100% 4th Period Apprentice $85/hr fully burdened ~68% 1st Period Apprentice $65/hr fully burdened ~52%
Apprentices Lower Your Average Labor Cost
On prevailing wage projects, using the maximum allowed apprentice ratio can reduce your average labor cost by 10–20% compared to an all-journeyman crew. This is a legitimate cost advantage — as long as you maintain the required ratios and the apprentices are properly registered.
Starting an Apprenticeship Program
For Union Contractors
If you're a signatory contractor, you're already participating through the JATC:
Trust fund contributions fund the program
Apprentices are dispatched through the hall
Your obligation is to provide OJT hours and proper supervision
For Non-Union Contractors
To start or join a Registered Apprenticeship Program:
Option A: Join an Existing Group Program
Contact your local ABC chapter , AGC chapter , or NCCER sponsor
Pay annual sponsorship fees
Recruit and enroll apprentices through the program
Provide OJT hours on your jobsites
Apprentices attend RTI classes through the program
Option B: Create Your Own Program
Contact your state apprenticeship agency or DOL regional office
Develop apprenticeship standards (OJT outline, RTI plan, wage schedule)
Submit application for program registration
Get approved (takes 2–6 months)
Recruit and register individual apprentices
Provide both OJT and RTI (or partner with a school for RTI)
Consideration Join Existing Create Your Own Setup time 1–2 months 3–6 months Admin burden Low (program handles most admin) High (you manage everything) Cost Annual fees + apprentice wages Development costs + ongoing admin + apprentice wages Flexibility Follow program standards Design your own curriculum Best for Most contractors Large contractors with specific training needs
Apprenticeship Compliance on Prevailing Wage Projects
Federal (Davis-Bacon) Requirements
Requirement Details Only registered apprentices Must be enrolled in a DOL or state-registered program Apprentice rate Pay per the registered program's wage schedule (% of journeyman) Certified payroll Report apprentice classification, period, and program on WH-347 Unregistered "apprentices" Must be paid full journeyman rate
California Requirements
Requirement Details DAS 140 File within 10 days of contract award DAS 142 File request for apprentice dispatch at least 72 hours before needed Approved programs only Must use California DAS-approved apprenticeship programs Ratio compliance Maintain required ratios throughout the project Apprentice PW rate Pay the apprentice prevailing wage rate per the determination Penalties $100/day per violation + journeyman back pay
Documentation to Keep on File
Benefits of Apprenticeship Programs
For the Contractor
Benefit Impact Workforce pipeline Solve the skilled labor shortage with homegrown talent Lower labor costs Apprentice rates are 40–90% of journeyman Loyalty Workers you train tend to stay longer Company culture Embed your standards and methods from day one Tax credits Federal and state tax credits for employing apprentices Prevailing wage compliance Having apprentices meets ratio requirements
For the Worker
Benefit Impact Earn while learning No student debt — paid training Wage increases Progressive raises every 6–12 months Industry credential Nationally recognized journeyman certificate Career path Journeyman → Foreman → Superintendent → PM Benefits Health insurance, pension (especially union programs) Portability Credentials transfer anywhere in the country
Tax Credits
Credit Amount Eligibility Federal Up to $1,000/year per apprentice (proposed — check current status) Registered apprentices California $1,000–$2,000/year per apprentice State-registered apprentices in certain trades State varies $1,000–$5,000/year depending on state Check your state's program
Common Apprenticeship Mistakes
Mistake Consequence Using "apprentices" who aren't registered in a program Must pay journeyman prevailing wage rate Not filing DAS 140/142 in California Penalties + ratio violation findings Exceeding the allowed ratio (too many apprentices) Excess apprentices must be paid journeyman rate Not advancing apprentices when they earn enough hours Back pay at the correct period rate Counting classroom hours as OJT Audit finding — RTI hours don't count toward OJT requirements Not supervising apprentices properly Safety risk + quality issues + potential program audit findings
Resources for Apprenticeship Programs
Finding Programs
Resource URL DOL Apprenticeship Finder apprenticeship.gov California DAS dir.ca.gov/das NCCER (National Center for Construction Education and Research) nccer.org ABC Apprenticeship abc.org/workforce-development Local union JATC Contact local union halls