Some HPs went to college. It is assuredly the fastest path to becoming a Sr. HP. A two year degree from one of the many colleges, available online, will assure you a fast track to being a Sr. HP and collecting those pay checks. College people like other College people, who shared a similar experience.
Other HPs started in the nuclear Navy. The Navy has an incredible training program, and instills a great work ethic in young people. It is NOT a fast path, as the typical Navy commitment is 6 years for the nuclear training. However, later down the line, you will learn that the nuclear industry is full of ex-Navy people. Navy people like Navy people, who shared a similar experience.
The third path, the path few have chosen, is the slowest path of them all. The start at the bottom, and work your way up path. To be an ANSI 3.1 Sr. HP, without college or Navy time, you will need 156 weeks (3 years) of HP experience. That is 39 of the 4 week outages that we currently enjoy. If you work 24 weeks a year, it will take you 6.5 years of HP time to become a Sr. HP.
Be sure to read this article;
"Acceptable Experience and Training for HP Technicians at Nuclear Power Plants": http://www.nukeworker.com/forum/index.php/topic,4395.0.htmlIf you work 3 months as a deconner, and are meter qualified, you will get 3 months of Jr. HP experience. After that, you get nothing. You can work as a deconner for 6 years, and you will only get 3 months of HP experience.
Work no more than 3 months as a DECONNER, 3 months as a as a LAUNDRY MONITOR (Deconners often do this), 3 months as a CONTROL POINT MONITOR (JR HPs often do this), 3 months as a COUNT ROOM TECH (JR HPs often do this), 6 months as a DOSIMETRY TECH (JR HPs often do this), or 6 months as a RESPIRATOR PROTECTION TECH (Deconners/JR HPs often do this), after that, you will get NO HP credit.
First Year: So, to recap, work 3 outages ~ 3 months as a Jr. deconner, pulling trash and laundry. Make sure you get meter qualified and put on your resume that you were meter qualified (and used it, i.e. Operation of RO-2 and HP-210). Then work 3 outages ~ 3 months as a deconner either deconning respirators, or washing the laundry. Either way, make sure you operate the monitor and put on your resume that you monitored the laundry or respirators. One year has passed, you were a deconner, and you have 6 months of experience toward being an HP.
Year Two: You tell the recruiters that you will only accept a Jr. HP position, because you have maxed out your decon time towards being an HP. Spend 3 outages ~ 3 months as a control point monitor, and 3 outages ~ 3 months in a count room counting smears and air samples. Two years have passed, and now you have about 1 years of HP experience.
Year Three: You have to insist on doing real HP work, like routine surveys, etc. You will have ~1.5 years of HP time at the end of the third year.
Year Four: Same as year three, wash, rinse, repeat. Tag along with Srs, and help with job coverage. You will need the experience next year. You will have ~ 2 years of HP time at the end of the fourth year.
Year Five: Now you have to insist you will only accept 18.1 Sr HP slots. The older power plants can call HPs with 2 years of experience a Sr. HP. The newer plants require 3 years. You will get a lot of great experience at those plants, and the people are wonderful there. You will have ~ 2.5 years of HP time at the end of the fifth year.
Year Six: Same as year five, wash, rinse, repeat. You should be studying for the NRRPT (a national certification for HP techs), they require you have five years experience. Congratulations! At the end of the 6th year, you should have 3 years of HP time, and are a real live ANSI 3.1 Sr HP. Dont forget to apply for the NRRPT whne you have 5 years of experience.