Emergency HVAC technician

They are especially at risk, because it can be difficult for geriatric citizens to easily locate a local HVAC company, in the first place

In today’s weird global climate, it seems like jobs are extremely polarized. Either you are an unnecessary worker and you have to stay at home, far away from the public and your normal line of work… Or you are an essential worker, and you’re being shoved to the forefront of the coronavirus outbreak. There is a shortage of essential workers available, so every day you’re hearing about recent graduates becoming medical doctors before finishing their internships, nurses being withdrawn from retirement, and police officers working overtime. That being said, the new recruitment for employees has not stopped at medical and emergency professionals. It has spread to the HVAC industry as well. In my county, there is apparently a massive shortage of certified heating, cooling, and ventilation specialists. Without adequate air quality control technicians, people are being put into dangerous situations. Residential furnaces and air conditioners are failing and nobody can make a routine HVAC repair appointment, because all of the HVAC technicians are either quarantined or overbooked. Many of them are posted at local hospitals to keep their advanced air filtration systems and air temperature control plans in perfect working order during the overcrowding. In our area, the elderly are in danger of heat stroke if their air conditioning system stops working. They are especially at risk, because it can be difficult for geriatric citizens to easily locate a local HVAC company, in the first place. Therefore, all of the soon to be certified HVAC technicians in my class have been prematurely graduated from the ventilation specialist program. Now, we are out on the lines, forming the emergency air quality control unit to keep our residents safe and comfortable throughout this isolation order.

 

air conditioning business