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Elevator or Escalator Installer/Repairer

Interviews

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Here's an elevator myth -- when an elevator is caught between floors, it could plummet to the ground. The passengers should get out at all costs!

This is one of the most common myths about elevators, according to the Elevator Escalator Safety Foundation (EESF). Ronnie Race says it's time to put this myth to rest. "We've had a couple of what you'd call entrapments, where people are stuck and you have to get them out. It's not dangerous for me, and it's not dangerous for the people who are stuck because they're just in a box. They're not going anywhere." The EESF says that an elevator is designed as a "safe room."

Race is an elevator technician. For him, elevators just made sense. "I've always been interested in electronics and electrical engineering and mechanical objects. Elevators just intrigued me," he says.

According to Race, a love of electronics is essential for this kind of work. After completing his formal education in electrical engineering, Race went straight into elevator repair.

Elevator repair technicians must harbor a little knowledge about all of the trades. "We have a saying in our business," says Race, "that you have to be just about every trade with the exception of air conditioning."

Ideally, an elevator repair technician is innovative, crafty and capable of working with multiple tools. "You have to be a plumber. You have to be a carpenter. You have to be an electrician," explains Race.

"Elevators incorporate a little bit of all the trades. We have to run pipe, like a plumber. We have to build frames out of wood. When we're installing the elevators, it's electrical."

Charlie Murray is a member of the International Union of Elevator Constructors. He says elevator repair is incredibly tough physical work. Frankly, he says, grim working conditions will turn people off of this job.

"And that goes the same for both genders," he points out. He says that a significant percentage of optimistic women and men enter this field and discover quite quickly that it's not what they want.

"It's very, very, very heavy work," says Murray.

"If you're unloading an elevator off the truck, the guide rails weigh over 200 pounds. It's very cold. We've had numerous apprentices start here, but before they served their time to join the union, they decided it wasn't the career they were looking for."

Race agrees that the biggest disadvantage in this line of work is the grueling physical labor. "Heavy lifting, the weights," he says. "A lot of stuff weighs a lot. You have to exert yourself to move it around."

Murray offers a mild warning for would-be elevator repair technicians who've never lifted a finger. "We've had a lot of young men in the last 12 years that come out of high school....They get into December when it's minus 25, with a wind chill of perhaps minus 40. And they're working on a building with no window, no heat, nothing. They say, 'Listen Dad, get me outta here, I'm going back to university!'"

Murray adds that this type of scenario is common for both men and women who enter the field.

Patty Ryan is an elevator inspector. She acknowledges that the business of actually repairing elevators is new for women. "It's always been a male-dominated industry," she explains. Ryan suggests that women need to think of elevator repair as a realistic career option; there is no reason why they shouldn't make up a higher percentage of the technicians.

Ryan explains that many people are simply unaware of the opportunities in elevator repair because so little attention is given to the field. "We're a small-niche market in comparison with computers or any other field. Usually, people get into this trade by word of mouth. I think people, male and female, are not aware of the opportunities available in this trade."