Operating Engineers Local 150 Embraces Aerial Work Platform Program

Words: Dan Kamys Operating Engineers Local 150 Embraces Aerial Work Platform Program

??

The International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 Training Center, located in Wilmington, Ill., recently joined the International Powered Access Federation (IPAF) and became an American Work Platform Training (AWPT) training center so they could offer training on the safe use of aerial work platforms (AWPs) to their membership. AWPT is the North American IPAF subsidiary whose training programs meet OSHA requirements and ANSI standards. They are based on IPAF’s proven program, which is certified as conforming to ISO 18878 and is used in many countries throughout the world.

??

Whether working as heavy equipment operators, heavy equipment mechanics, or other allied jobs, operating engineers are found on any project using construction equipment. And among the many types of equipment used on a jobsite, AWPs are rapidly becoming one of the most common. The expanded use of these machines by 150’s members in large equipment maintenance, municipalities and general industry recently has grown exponentially.

??

After looking at a number of training methods and talking with other people in the industry, Local 150’s Apprenticeship and Skill Improvement Program (ASIP) concluded that the programs offered by AWPT were the most thorough and provided their organization with the tools they needed to integrate aerial work platform training into their certification protocols.

??

AWPT offers the internationally recognized PAL Card (Powered Access Licensed-registration) to people who successfully complete a training program on a class of work platform equipment. They also provide a logbook for listing specific machine familiarization so union members have a way of showing that they had been trained on a particular piece of equipment. After joining IPAF and becoming an AWPT Training Center, Local 150 now has more than six AWPT-approved instructors on board, and they are beginning to offer training to their membership.

??

Local 150’s training center is situated on more than 300 acres, has a 342,000-square-foot space housing 30 classrooms, an indoor training area, 200-seat auditorium, more than 200 pieces of heavy equipment, testing labs and much more. It serves union members throughout Northern Illinois, Eastern Iowa and Northern Indiana, and offers a variety of apprenticeship programs designed to provide journeypersons and apprentices with the necessary skills to acquire and maintain jobs in the many industries they serve. The site is open on a year-round basis and has full-time instructors available to the members six days a week, Monday through Saturday.

What Mason Contractors Don't Know Is Costing Them Money
July 2026

Most mason contractors can tell you exactly what a job should cost before it starts. Bid labor hours, material takeoffs, and crew rates per square foot. The numbers are on paper, and they look right. What most can't tell you is whether those numbers held

Preserving Masonry Aesthetics with Concealed Lintel Systems
July 2026

Masonry has long been valued for its ability to create buildings with character, permanence, and visual appeal. Features such as arches, deep reveals, corbelling, and decorative brickwork continue to be popular design elements in modern architecture. Howe

The Sync Up: Aligning Schedule, Labor, and Logistics in Masonry
July 2026

A masonry contractor is only as good as the crew standing on the staging. You can source the highest-grade block, line up the perfect mix, and have every submittal approved weeks in advance, but production ultimately depends on the stamina, skill, and phy

Color Trends Shaping Today’s Masonry Projects
July 2026

Homeowners today are coming into projects with a lot more opinions than they used to have. Between social media, home shows and contractor sites, most customers already have a look in mind before you even quote the job. For masonry contractors, having a