
Electrical Performance Engineer I Ref 7204398924
This is a great opportunity for an entry-level engineer with an electrical engineering background. This person will support power plant performance, project execution, and data analysis across our generating fleet, including electrical and non-electrical systems. They will provide engineering support to a large coal-fired power plant and two simple cycle natural gas power plants.
Essential Duties and Responsibilities
Qualifications
Education: Bachelor’s degree required in Electrical Engineering.
Licenses and Certifications: Professional engineering certification or Engineer-In-Training certification, desirable.
Experience:
Abilities & Skills Required:
Physical Requirements
Frequent: Sedentary work, often standing or sitting for prolonged periods, close visual acuity, work with a computer, keyboard, communicate with others
Periodic: Lift objects of nominal weight. Work with hands and fingers; push, pull, reach, and lift objects; climb or balance; stoop, kneel, crouch, or crawl.
Work Environment
Travel out-of-office is required primarily within Ohio approximately 25% of the time and can include overnight stays.
By the 1930s, cities across the United States had been transformed into modern engines of commerce and culture thanks to electric service. But rural Americans remained in the dark.
That changed on May 11, 1935, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the Rural Electrification Administration, which sought to expand electric service beyond the country’s metropolitan areas. From this action arose Ohio’s electric cooperatives, which rapidly signed up new members and built the needed infrastructure to serve farms and households across the state.
In 1941, Ohio’s cooperatives established Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc. - a statewide services organization to foster collaboration and to advocate on their behalf. And in 1959, they joined together to form Buckeye Power, Inc. - a wholesale power generation and transmission cooperative to supply members with affordable power.
Today, 25 electric cooperatives serve more than 380,000 homes and businesses in 77 of Ohio’s 88 counties — guided by the seven principles upon which they were founded.
Together, we are Ohio’s Electric Cooperatives.