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Powerful Careers: Mitch DeJarnette
Mitch DeJarnette remembers as a boy riding along with his dad, who worked as a contractor clearing rights-of-way for electric cooperatives along the East Coast.
That impressed the young man enough to pursue his own career in line work — most importantly, at a cooperative.
“Coming out of high school, I just had a long list of things I knew I didn’t want to do,” DeJarnette says.
That’s when his journey began. He enrolled at Southeast Lineman Training Center in Dade County, Ga., a trade school that offers training and education in line work much like the Power Line Worker Program at Southside Virginia Community College.
DeJarnette learned the basics of line work, including pole climbing, and obtained his commercial driver’s license.
He joined the team as a groundman at Edgecombe-Martin County EMC in Tarboro, N.C. Education continued on the job, as he assisted the cooperative foreman and line technicians by gathering materials and wire for jobs and learning how to frame a pole. An apprenticeship with Central Virginia Electric Cooperative followed.
Today, as a journeyman line technician serving his hometown with Mecklenburg Electric Cooperative, DeJarnette has some leadership responsibilities and makes trouble calls alone.