New employees will be appointed at the first step in the pay range for this class.
Required Education:
High School
Internal Number: 7K01-20240916-OC-00
Announcement Date
09/16/2024
Close Date
10/11/2024
The City is hiring skilled Electricians with two years of experience learning the electrical trade as a helper or apprentice OR completion of a post high school electrical trades program. Apply your experience and make an impact on the City by submitting an application by October 11, 2024.
This is intermediate level electrical systems work in the alteration, installation, maintenance and repair of the City’s electrical infrastructure, wires, cables and lines. An employee in this class performs preventive maintenance of the systems, and repairs system components and equipment. Employees in this class gain experience and learn progressively more difficult and complicated maintenance and repair work necessary for advancement to the full performance Electrician 2 class. Work includes inspecting, testing, diagnosing and installing system components and equipment. Work is performed under the supervision of a technical supervisor and involves physical effort and exposure to disagreeable environmental conditions.
Two years of experience learning the electrical trade as a helper or apprentice.
Required Licenses & Certifications
Possession of a valid proper class motor vehicle operator’s license as issued by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania prior to appointment and during tenure of employment as an Electrician, if required by work assignment.
The mission of the Department of Public Health is to protect and promote the health of all Philadelphians and to provide a safety net for the most vulnerable.The history of public health in Philadelphia reaches back to the city’s beginnings. William Penn’s “greene countrie towne” was the first American city to provide free hospital care for its poorest residents at the Philadelphia Almshouse, built in 1732. Our city is home to the nation’s first medical school, children’s hospital, and eye hospital.The present Department of Public Health was created by an Ordinance of December 31, 1919 to succeed the Department of Health Charities.The history of public health in Philadelphia reaches back to the city’s beginnings. William Penn’s “greene countrie towne” was the first American city to provide free hospital care for its poorest residents at the Philadelphia Almshouse, built in 1732. Our city is home to the nation’s first medical school, children’s hospital, and eye hospital.The present Department of Public Health was created by an Ordinance of December 31, 1919 to succeed the Department of Health Charities.Learn more about the history of public health in Philadelphia.