05/16/2026
Today’s Wire Off Competition is moving into motor controls.
This is where training gets technical.
Our apprentices are being tested on the kind of work that takes focus, accuracy, safety, and real field understanding. Motor controls are used throughout the electrical trade to start, stop, protect, and control equipment in commercial and industrial settings.
This is not just about speed. It is about reading the problem, wiring it correctly, troubleshooting under pressure, and proving that classroom instruction and on the job training are connecting.
That is what Registered Apprenticeship is built to do. Paid work experience. Classroom instruction. Mentorship. Skill development. A nationally recognized pathway into the trade.
Today, that training is showing up in real time.
Sources: U.S. Department of Labor, ApprenticeshipUSA, Registered Apprenticeship model; OSHA, Electrical Safety and Control of Hazardous Energy guidance.
| myelectriccareer.com