HVAC apprentice hour log template for Nevada
Nevada HVAC apprenticeship programs are overseen by the State Apprenticeship Council, with journeyman-to-apprentice ratios required to ensure proper supervision, training, safety, and continuity of employment per state guidelines. No specific total hours, reporting frequency, categories, or required forms are detailed in the provided research sources. Mentions of 4-year programs exist for sheet metal/HVAC and related trades, but lack precise standards like OJT hours.
Requirements snapshot
- Ratio: A numeric ratio of apprentices to journeymen consistent with proper supervision, training, safety, continuity of employment and applicable provisions in collective bargaining agreements
- Board: State Apprenticeship Council
- Last verified: Apr 1, 2026
Sources
- Northern Nevada Sheet Metal & HVAC Apprenticeship Training Center
- Registered Apprenticeship Program
- TEN10-09.pdf - U.S. Department of Labor
- Bul2004-05-att2.pdf - U.S. Department of Labor
- TEN10-09a1.pdf - U.S. Department of Labor
- WIOA Annual Statewide Performance Report Narrative PY23
- Apprenticeship Reciprocity - STATE OF NEVADA
- Apprenticeship.gov: Homepage
- Energy Skilled HVAC Programs - Building Science Education
- Plumbing, Heating, Cooling Contractors of Nevada (PHCC-NV) Open Enrollment Flyer
- Registered Apprenticeship Announcements - Labor Commissioner
- Plumber/Pipefitter and HVAC Local 525 Apprenticeship Opportunities
Requirements can vary by program. Always verify with the Nevada licensing board.
How ApprenticeHourLog helps
- State-specific category templates for hvac work.
- One-tap export for boards and employers.
- Audit trail with timestamps and signatures.
Need signatures? See how signature requests work.
Common hvac categories
Your state board may require specific categories. Adjust these templates to match Nevada guidance.
Templates are a starting point. You can rename or reorder categories before logging hours.
For record-keeping only. Information is provided as-is; we are not liable for errors or omissions. Requirements change and may vary by program—confirm with the Nevada board.