Waldorf, ย MD— The average house in the United States is 43 years old. The average age of an electrician is 56. Trends are changing with a push toward renewable, efficient energy and solar power, while older homes need renovation to support todayโ€™s technology. Skilled electricians are needed for all of it.

โ€œThe industry is at the tipping point,โ€ David Quatela, brand strategy manager at Siemens, a manufacturing and electronics company, said during a recent presentation to members of the electrical construction program at North Point High School. โ€œYou guys will be on the front lines. There is lots of work for you.โ€

North Point was named an SIschool, one of seven in the country to offer hands-on training in the field of low-voltage electrical engineering training. Siemens provides residential electrical equipment for students to practice advanced wiring skills while becoming familiar with technologies used in the electrical engineering field.

โ€œThe technology is always evolving,โ€ said Valerie Schicho, a Siemens representative. โ€œWe look at whatโ€™s going on in the market and work on solutions to help meet the needs.โ€

There is a push to renovate older homes โ€” houses not equipped to handle big screen televisions, computers and the household appliances of the 21st century. โ€œThis is the stuff weโ€™re running into,โ€ Schicho said. โ€œPeople canโ€™t microwave and watch TV at the same time without tripping [the electrical system].โ€

The 28 electrical construction students at North Point have already started working on the Siemens donated equipment. Some students will likely go further with the knowledge they gain in the program; others will go into other lines of study. Joel Mulbah, a senior, said he is interested in owning his own business, but doesnโ€™t know exactly what he wants to do. He was interested in learning about the trends in the construction business. โ€œIโ€™d like to be involved in everything,โ€ Mulbah said.

โ€œYouโ€™re just starting out,โ€ Keith Gascon, electrical construction teacher, said to his students. โ€œOur program is designed to get you started. Weโ€™re trying to expose you to all the different places you can go. Youโ€™re learning the basics. But thereโ€™s a whole heckuva a lot more to learn.โ€

The trends point to builders focusing on renewable and environmentally sound energy. โ€œBut they have no one who knows how to install it properly,โ€ Schicho said. โ€œWeโ€™re coming into a field of growth that we have never seen before. Electricians and plumbers are in the highest demand in construction right now. The jobs are there, and they pay good.โ€

Jim Lawson, a sales manager for Shepherd Electric who works with Siemens, agreed. Based in Frederick, he sees how the local market is booming.

โ€œIn the Baltimore-Washington, D.C., area โ€” we donโ€™t make anything here, except laws,โ€ he said. โ€œBut we have hospitals, universities, the federal government. Thereโ€™s a lot of baby boomers and not a lot of you guys. Your generation has to pick up where we left off.โ€

โ€œIf we donโ€™t have people to do the work, the work is not getting done,โ€ Schicho said.

โ€œThe world is wanting for whatโ€™s running through your heads,โ€ said Lawson, adding that many advances in the field of electrical engineering come from the people doing the work on job sites. โ€œThe industry is waiting to hear your ideas.โ€