Plumbing Are you looking for on-the-job variety? Do you like working with your hands and with machines? Are you disciplined and precise? Can you visualize detailed structures from drawings? Do you like dealing with people? Then, plumber may be the career for you!
What the work is like
Plumbers install, repair and maintain pipes and plumbing equipment used for water distribution and disposal. They are employed by construction companies, plumbing contractors and maintenance departments, or they may also be self-employed. Plumbers work mostly in the new home building and renovation, and institutional and commercial construction sectors.
Your duties
Plumbers usually specialize in either residential or commercial/institutional work.
As a plumber, your duties may include:
- Installing, repairing and maintaining domestic, commercial or industrial plumbing systems
- Marking positions for pipe connections and fixtures in walls and floors
- Cutting openings in walls and floors to accommodate pipes and pipe fittings
- Measuring, cutting, bending and installing pipes using hand and power tools
- Joining pipes using clamps, screws, bolts or cement
- Welding pipes
- Testing pipes for leaks
- Preparing cost estimates
- Reading and interpreting blueprints
Work conditions
The standard work week for plumbers is 40 hours (8 hours a day, 5 days a week). As with many careers in construction, there are peak periods that will require you to work overtime. The number of additional hours you work each week depends on the construction sector and region you work in, and will vary from one job to the next.
As a plumber, you may work outdoors and indoors, alone or with a team of other construction professionals. The work can be physically demanding—you may have to stand or crouch for long periods of time, and you may have to lift heavy materials.
As with all careers in the construction industry, safety is the top priority. Plumbers are trained to work safely, and take special precautions to protect themselves from injury.
Essential skills
Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (HRSDC) has identified nine essential skills that are necessary to succeed in the workplace:
- Reading text—extracting information from written material
- Document use—reading and interpreting documents to extract information
- Numeracy—working with numbers to perform calculations
- Writing—writing text in documents and on the computer
- Oral communication—conveying or exchanging information verbally
- Working with others—interacting with co-workers to get the job done
- Continuous learning—continuing to learn on the job
- Thinking skills
- Problem solving—coming up with solutions to challenges
- Decision making—making a choice among options
- Critical thinking—analyzing a situation and making an assessment
- Job task planning and organizing—working independently to plan and organize daily tasks
- Significant use of memory—performing tasks that call upon greater memory use than most jobs
- Finding information—locating information from a variety of sources, including text, people, computerized databases or information systems
- Computer skills—working with computers to operate machinery or to input/extract information
These skills provide the foundation for learning all other skills and are applicable to most construction careers. Best of all, you can learn and improve on these skills in school, on the job, and during your everyday life.
The most important Essential Skills for plumbers are:
- Numeracy—working with numbers to perform calculations
- Significant use of memory—performing tasks that call upon greater memory use than most jobs
- Working with others—interacting with co-workers to get the job done
Apprenticeship
Apprenticeship is one way of starting out in the construction industry. It involves both classroom studies and on-the-job training under the supervision of a certified plumber, called a journeyperson.
As an apprentice, you earn while you learn and are paid by the hour while working on the job site. Wages start at about 50% of a journeyperson’s hourly rate and increase during your apprenticeship, until you reach the full rate.
Entering an apprenticeship program
Requirements for plumber apprenticeship programs vary across Canada. In most provinces and territories, you must be at least 16 years old and have a Grade 12 education, or equivalent, to enter a plumber apprenticeship program. You must also have courses in math.
Some provinces and territories offer secondary school apprenticeship programs that allow high school students to work towards a career as a plumber.
Program length
Apprenticeship training programs for plumbers vary across Canada, but generally involve four 12-month periods, including at least 6,000 hours of on-the-job training, four 8-week blocks of technical training, and a final certificate examination.
Related work experience or completion of a plumber program at a college or technical institute can reduce the time required to complete your apprenticeship.
Certification
Plumber certification is required in some provinces, and is available but voluntary in most other provinces and territories. Even where certification is voluntary, it is still recommended. Certification tells employers and other workers that you are a skilled professional. It also helps you get jobs. To be certified as a plumber, you usually need to complete a four-year apprenticeship program. Once you successfully complete the on-the-job training, technical training and examinations required by the program, you are awarded a journeyperson certificate.
If you have over five years of construction experience and some high school, college or industry courses in plumbing, you may be eligible for plumber certification in some provinces and territories. As a certified plumber, you may attempt the Interprovincial Exam to qualify for the Interprovincial Standards’ Red Seal. With a Red Seal, you can work as a plumber anywhere in Canada.
Certification for plumbers is compulsory in British Columbia.
Where to study in British Columbia
In addition to the Canadian schools listed below, many employer and labour organizations offer training.
British Columbia Institute of Technology Kwantlen Polytechnic University Camosun College North Island College Pacific Vocational College The University College of the Cariboo Thompson Rivers College Pacific Vocational Institute UA Local 170 Training Centre College of New Caledonia Okanagan College
SALARY RANGES
JOURNEYPERSON
HOURLY SALARY RANGE
ANNUAL SALARY RANGE**
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APPRENTICE
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HOURLY SALARY RANGE
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LOW
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HIGH
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YEAR 1 – 50 %
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$ 13.00
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$ 17.50
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YEAR 2 – 60 %
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$ 15.60
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$ 21.00
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YEAR 3 – 70 %
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$ 18.20
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$ 24.50
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YEAR 4 – 80 %
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$ 20.80
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$ 28.00
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In addition to their hourly rate, many construction workers receive statutory holiday and vacation pay. Depending on the contract, you may also receive benefits such as group insurance for health, dental and vision care, retirement packages, and training benefits up to 30% of your hourly rate. If you are self-employed, it’s up to you to arrange your own benefits.
* Wages vary across Canada, among labour organizations locals and among open-shop construction contractors.
** Most construction work involves overtime, so your annual salary will vary depending on the number of hours you work. The salary range listed above represents the annual salary range for full-time journeyperson plumbers across Canada, based on a 40-hour work week, without taking overtime into account.
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