The American Reporter
Saturday, June 20, 2026
  • Login
  • World
  • National
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Technology
No Result
View All Result
  • World
  • National
  • Science
  • Business
  • Health
  • Education
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Technology
No Result
View All Result
The American Reporter
No Result
View All Result

Maine’s Solar Technicians Work Through Winter to Meet Growing Demand

Jennifer Ross by Jennifer Ross
December 11, 2025
in Business
Reading Time: 7 mins read
Industry 4.0: Transitions To Renewable Energy Technologies

The November wind off Casco Bay cuts across the rooftop where Yehuda Gittelson crouches, drill in hand, securing aluminum rails to the southern slope of a colonial revival home. Forty feet below, his company van idles in the driveway, its back doors open to reveal coils of wire, junction boxes, and twenty-four solar panels waiting to go up.

“Hand me the impact driver,” he calls down to his crew partner, who’s hauling equipment up the ladder.

RELATED POSTS

Best 8 AI Fleet Optimization Software Platforms

Ankur Bindal Highlights the True Cost of Turnover and Retention for Organizations

It’s 8:30 on a Thursday morning, and this is the second installation Gittelson has worked this week. The 28-year-old spent two years working for a wind farm development company in Aroostook County after earning his mechanical engineering degree from the University of Maine at Orono. Three years ago, he relocated to Portland and shifted his focus to solar installation.

The transition surprised some of his college friends. He had strong grades and job offers at engineering firms. Instead, he took a position that involves climbing ladders in all weather, drilling into stranger’s roofs, and troubleshooting electrical systems in cramped attics.

“I like seeing the thing get built,” he says during a mid-morning break, pouring black coffee from a battered thermos. “Wind projects took years. You’d work on permits and designs and then maybe, if everything went right, you’d see turbines go up two years later. With solar, you start on a Monday and the system is producing power by Friday.”

Maine passed legislation in 2019 setting a goal of 80 percent renewable energy by 2030 (https://www.maine.gov/governor/mills/news/governor-mills-signs-major-renewable-energy-and-climate-change-bills-law-2019-06-26). The state’s solar industry has expanded significantly since then. According to the Solar Energy Industries Association, Maine currently employs 708 people in solar-related jobs across 55 companies (https://seia.org/state-solar-policy/maine-solar). Installation companies across the state are hiring, but finding qualified technicians remains difficult.

The work requires a particular combination of skills. Gittelson spends his days calculating structural loads, navigating electrical code, and explaining kilowatt-hour projections to skeptical homeowners. He works with city inspectors, coordinates with utility companies, and occasionally negotiates with historical preservation boards when installing panels on older properties.

“You need to know your way around a roof,” he says, walking the ridge line to check his measurements. “But you also need to understand electrical systems, building science, weather patterns. And you have to be comfortable explaining all of it to people who just want to know if this thing is actually going to save them money.”

The homeowners on this job, a retired couple, are inside reviewing paperwork with the company’s sales representative. They’re installing a 7.2-kilowatt system that should cover roughly 80 percent of their annual electricity use. The total cost runs near $20,000 before federal tax credits, a number that makes many potential customers hesitate despite long-term savings projections.

Gittelson doesn’t handle the sales side. His job begins after contracts are signed. He shows up, assesses the roof structure, maps out the optimal panel layout, and gets the system operational. On a good day, the work has a satisfying rhythm. On difficult days, he’s troubleshooting unexpected roof damage, dealing with outdated electrical panels, or working through weather delays.

The pay sits around what he’d make in an entry-level engineering office job, though the ceiling is lower. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, solar installers earned a median wage of approximately $23.46 per hour in 2023. Experienced installers with NABCEP certification can earn significantly more, particularly in supervisory or specialized roles. Gittelson has his certification and has turned down offers to move into project management positions at his company.

“Maybe eventually,” he says, securing another mounting rail. “But right now I like the work. You’re outside, you’re solving problems, you’re building something physical.”

He shares a converted warehouse loft in East Bayside with two roommates. Most of his income goes toward expenses and a savings account for a cabin purchase in western Maine. The plan shifts depending on his mood. Some weeks he’s certain he’ll leave Portland within a year. Other weeks, after discovering a new restaurant or catching a show at a local venue, staying in the city seems preferable.

The afternoon brings the crew to the panel-lifting stage. Each one weighs about forty pounds and must be secured with precision. The angle matters. The spacing matters. A poorly installed system underperforms, and homeowners notice immediately when their electric bills don’t drop as promised.

Gittelson works methodically, checking each connection twice. He’s installed enough systems now that the process feels automatic, but he’s seen what happens when installers rush. Loose wiring. Inadequate weatherproofing. Panels that rattle in wind storms.

“This system is going to sit on this roof for twenty-five years,” he says, tightening a final bolt. “You want to do it right.”

The sun is angling low over the bay when the installation is complete. Gittelson runs a final systems check, confirms everything is producing power, and walks the homeowners through their new monitoring app. Tomorrow he’ll be in Scarborough. Next week brings maintenance calls on systems installed last year.

The work isn’t glamorous, and it won’t make him wealthy. But on clear winter days, standing on a roof with the ocean visible in the distance and panels humming with production, the job has compensations that office work doesn’t offer. For now, that seems to be enough.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

From Turbines to Rooftops

Next Post

AIX Incubator Secures U.S. SEC Filing Approval and MSB License, Advancing Its Global Compliance Strategy

Jennifer Ross

Jennifer Ross

Jennifer has been a part of the journey ever since The American Reporter started. As a strong learner and passionate writer, she contributes her editing skills for the news agency. She also jots down intellectual pieces from health category.

Related Posts

How Taxi Dispatch Software Is Reshaping Fleet Operations in 2026?

Best 8 AI Fleet Optimization Software Platforms

by Jennifer Ross
June 12, 2026
0

Fleet operations generate more data than ever before. Vehicles continuously transmit location information. Dispatch systems track assignments in real time....

The Key Benefits of Implementing Salesforce for Small Businesses

Ankur Bindal Highlights the True Cost of Turnover and Retention for Organizations

by Jennifer Ross
June 10, 2026
0

Employee turnover and retention are vital issues for organizations of all sizes, impacting everything from productivity to profitability. High turnover...

Small Stages, Bigger Risks: James Simon, Producer, Shines a Light on Where Theater Becomes Brave Again

Small Stages, Bigger Risks: James Simon, Producer, Shines a Light on Where Theater Becomes Brave Again

by Jennifer Ross
June 10, 2026
0

Small theaters across America are shaping the next era of live performance. While the spotlight often falls on large, established...

Joel Freedman Discusses Viewing Financial Planning as an Ongoing Process, not a One-Time Event

Joel Freedman Discusses Viewing Financial Planning as an Ongoing Process, not a One-Time Event

by Kyle Matthews
June 6, 2026
0

Joel Freedman, CFP®, CPWA®, serves as Managing Director at Eclipse Private Wealth Management, and his work with individuals and families...

Inside the Shift That Challenged Biologics Manufacturing Norms

Inside the Shift That Challenged Biologics Manufacturing Norms

by Kyle Matthews
June 5, 2026
0

In biologics manufacturing, inefficiency rarely announces itself loudly. It settles in quietly, becomes routine, and over time, starts to look...

Next Post
AIX Incubator Secures U.S. SEC Filing Approval and MSB License, Advancing Its Global Compliance Strategy

AIX Incubator Secures U.S. SEC Filing Approval and MSB License, Advancing Its Global Compliance Strategy

The Marco Pharma International Perspective: What COVID-19 Revealed About Natural Health Awareness

The Marco Pharma International Perspective: What COVID-19 Revealed About Natural Health Awareness

Latest News

Positioning Sequoia Zanubrutinib in Treatment Algorithms for CLL/SLL

Positioning Sequoia Zanubrutinib in Treatment Algorithms for CLL/SLL

June 19, 2026

Optics, Space, and Surveillance: How Paras Defence is Positioning in High-Precision Defence Subsystems

June 18, 2026

The Long Road to Recovery After a Brain Injury

June 17, 2026

Banking Enters the “Agentic AI” Era – Explained

June 17, 2026

Will SpaceX’s Share Price Fall – When?

June 17, 2026

Why Stock Exchanges Are Becoming Technology Companies?

June 16, 2026

Is Corporate America Becoming Too Dependent on Subscription Revenue?

June 16, 2026

The Last Sanction Standing: Why Canada Refuses to Follow Its Allies on Igor Makarov

June 15, 2026

Hamid Taherypour’s Sculpture Built from a Sound

June 15, 2026

Best 8 AI Fleet Optimization Software Platforms

June 12, 2026

A Closer Look at the Two-Post Auto Lift

June 11, 2026

Is the Stablecoin Market Quietly Becoming a Shadow Banking Industry?

June 10, 2026
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Use of Cookies

© 2019 - The American Reporter

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Use of Cookies

© 2019 - The American Reporter

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.