J&B Solar, a utility-scale mechanical solar contractor, has launched The Renewable Revolution Apprentice Program (TRRAP), a workforce and compliance platform designed to meet the Inflation Reduction Act’s requirements while building long-term careers in utility-scale solar.
TRRAP is led by Casey Swindell, IRA compliance & labor relations manager for J&B, who spearheaded the effort in developing the program.
“Originally, we outsourced our apprenticeship program,” Swindell said. “Over time, it became clear that third-party solutions were expensive, reactive instead of proactive and limited in how quickly we could access or respond to critical compliance data. Bringing The Renewable Revolution Apprentice Program in house gave us control, speed and — most importantly — the ability to directly invest in our people.”
As IRA and apprenticeship requirements became more complex, Swindell identified a misconception that compliance is primarily about having apprentices on-site.
“In reality, compliance lives behind the scenes,” Swindell said. “It’s about preparation, documentation, internal tracking and validating every detail. Our previous provider tracked ratios and hours, but IRA compliance and full apprenticeship accountability still rested on us. We were already doing most of the work.”
Developing TRRAP required research into on-the-job training (OJT), related technical instruction (RTI), prevailing wages, apprenticeship ratios and IRA manpower calculations. By integrating systems built around these metrics into a centralized, real-time view, TRRAP can monitor compliance, adjust workforce plans and respond to changing project conditions without working in disparate platforms.
Candidates can apply to the program directly through the J&B Solar website. Once accepted, apprentices receive structured onboarding, orientation materials, RTI instruction and continuous guidance throughout their training. Each apprentice is paired with a journey worker leader on site and will be led through a solar-specific curriculum tailored to the actual work performed in the field.
“This program is rigorous by design,” Swindell said. “The expectations are clear from day one. It demands accountability, effort, and follow-through. That’s what turns a job into a career.”
TRRAP graduates earn formal certification, gain field experience, increase their earning potential and develop skills applicable to the utility-scale solar industry.
“This isn’t about expansion for expansion’s sake,” Swindell said. “It’s about developing confident tradespeople who know their craft, take pride in their work, and are willing to teach the next generation. That’s how standards are protected—and how this industry moves forward.”
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