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Saturday, November 23, 2024 at 1:51 AM
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BEC linemen keep the lights on

Most residents of Bandera County take reliable electricity for granted. BEC linemen work to keep residents’ air conditioners running and the lights on, even in violent winter and stormy spring weather.

Most residents of Bandera County take reliable electricity for granted. BEC linemen work to keep residents’ air conditioners running and the lights on, even in violent winter and stormy spring weather.

“Keeping the power on all the time for our members is one of the most important parts to our job,” said Jesse Salazar, BEC foreman.

Salazar, a 16-year veteran, extols the virtues of the job. He agrees that being a lineman has turned into a passion.

“I was working in construction but a buddy of mine asked me if I was interested in being a lineman. I had no clue, but I decided to take the opportunity to get in the door. From there it turned into a passion.”

He continued, “I call it my passion because I learned to do my trade well and feel that the majority of my adult life that is what I have been doing. It brings pride and it’s a commitment for me to bring reliable power to our membership.”

Springtime is the most active time for the linemen when storms roll through Texas.

Some of the things that challenge Salazar are particular to the job of a lineman. “

What really hit me was that you are on call 24/7. Even though you get paid to be on call, there are lots of truck accidents that take out poles, lightning storms that come in, sometimes you have to work overtime for the number of hours you put in in a week. Every day you will be at a different site. The poles may look the same, but they have different variables. It’s the little stuff that you have to consider.”

Safety is paramount for linemen.

“It is part of your life.” Linemen frequently attend safety meetings and “you have to remember to be safe,” he explained. “We were working at a site when a storm came north of Leakey and the rain was continuous. Sometimes you can wait it out in the truck, but this shower looked like it was going to be continuous all over Texas.”

“We had to go ahead and work through the rain and get used to it. Of course, there was lightning all around, so you always hear stories of people getting electrocuted in storms. Sometimes you just have to work through the rain to restore the lights.”

Salazar states “you can be working on a line that is de-energized, but lightning hits the line miles away and can travel through the line.” It goes without saying that being a lineman is a dangerous job.

Salazar notes that sitting behind a desk for long periods of time or wanting to get a four-year degree is not the kind of person who succeeds at being a lineman.

“You just have to want to get in there and get your hands dirty,” he states.

It took Salazar five years to progress through his apprenticeship to be a journeyman.

He related that it takes about a year to work through each step in the apprenticeship to become a journeyman.

After accruing eight thousand hours as a journeyman, you can turn that in to the Department of Labor and get a certificate to become a journeyman lineman throughout the nation.

“For me, I like the inside work in the mornings, then to be outside in the afternoon seeing the different types of scenery.

Living in the Hill


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