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The rigorously trained and highly skilled members of the
United Association of Plumbers, Pipe and Refrigeration
Fitters, UA Local 246, are part of the backbone of the
Central Valley building industry.
Organized in Fresno in 1901, roughly a generation after
the city was founded in 1872, UA Local 246 has played a
significant role in the bricks-and-mortar construction
of the area from its early days. Few industrial or
commercial buildings in this area have been built
without the members of UA Local 246 on the job.
1901
Charter Approval
The organization, founded at the turn of the century
with just 10 members, has experienced a growth pattern
that reflects the activity of the building industry in
the area. In 1908, UA Local 246 had 25 members and sent
its first delegate, L.L. Babcock, to the national
organization's annual convention.
On September 28, 1940, parent Local 246 established a
branch (Local 246B) consisting of general Pipe Fitters.
By 1943, the Fresno group had grown to a solid 157
members. Over the next 17 years, the membership soared
dramatically as the post-war years of prosperity brought
new construction to the area.
Today, UA Local 246, headquartered at 1303 North Rabe
Avenue in Fresno, has 600 members from the four counties
it covers in the heart of the San Joaquin Valley -
Fresno, Madera, Kings and Tulare.
The key to UA Local 246's success is the
professionalism, experience, expertise and comprehensive
training available to apprentices and journey-persons.
One of the many projects that UA Local 246 has played an
important part in the construction of is the Balsam
Meadows hydroelectric plant at the John S. Eastwood
Power Station at Shaver Lake, located 40 miles northeast
of Fresno. The successful completion of this Southern
California Edison facility, which required the
construction team to work at a depth of 1,000 feet, is
considered a monument to the talents of the area
building industry. Edison publicly recognized UA Local
246 for the superior workmanship and outstanding
performance of its members on the project.
Throughout its history, UA Local 246 had leased office
space and held membership meetings at numerous sites
throughout the city, including the Union Labor Hall on K
Street, the Boiler Tenders Hall, the Moose Temple on
Broadway, and for two decades the organization operated
on East Shields Avenue. But, in the fall of 1993, UA
Local 246 moved into a facility of its own, a new 18,000
square foot building on Rabe Avenue in the Las Palmas
Industrial Park. The new facility contains the Union
Offices, Meeting Hall and the Training Center. The new
facility, costing one and one-half million dollars, was
paid for the day the facility opened, thus showing that
UA Local 246 reflects the union's long and fruitful
history and the organization's future place in the
Fresno community and that it expects to remain a
critical part of the San Joaquin Valley construction
industry. UA Local 246 has a long and successful history
and expects to live up to it for a long time to come.
In 1901, the ten
Charter Members and Early Members of Local 246 were:
| Card
No. |
Name |
15958
15959
15960
15961
15962
15963
15964
15965
15966
15967 |
E.
Brood
A.M. Forrest
Sam Berla
Edward J. Corbett
W.H. Dolzell
B.A. Newman
J.A. McDonald
Jas. H. Puntice
A.W. Gearhart
Jas. E. Cusick |
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