(a) No person shall engage in, practice or offer to perform the work of a crane operator, except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, who is not the holder of a valid license issued by the board. Each licensed crane operator shall carry his or her license on his or her person when operating a crane. No person may engage in, practice or perform the work of a crane operator apprentice unless he or she has obtained a certificate of registration from the board. An apprentice’s certificate may be issued for the performance of work of a crane operator for the purpose of training, provided such work may be performed only under the direct supervision of a licensed crane operator and is in compliance with the provisions of section 29-224c. No crane owner may operate or permit the operation of any of his or her cranes in this state unless he or she has obtained a certificate of registration from the board. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to require a hoisting equipment owner to obtain a certificate of registration from the board.

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Terms Used In Connecticut General Statutes 29-224

  • apprentice: means a person who is not licensed under this chapter, who has filed an application for a license with the board and whose employer has registered him or her with the board to learn crane operations or hoisting equipment operations under the direct supervision of a licensed operator in accordance with section 29-224c. See Connecticut General Statutes 29-221
  • Board: means the Examining Board for Crane Operators established under section 29-222. See Connecticut General Statutes 29-221
  • crane: means power-operated equipment that can hoist, lower and horizontally move a suspended load and which has a manufacturer's maximum rated hoisting or lifting capacity exceeding two thousand pounds, including, but not limited to: (A) Articulating cranes such as knuckle-boom cranes, (B) crawler cranes, (C) floating cranes, (D) cranes on barges, (E) locomotive cranes, (F) mobile cranes such as wheel-mounted, rough terrain, all-terrain, commercial truck-mounted and boom truck cranes, (G) multipurpose machines when configured to hoist and lower, by means of a winch or hook, and horizontally move a suspended load, (H) industrial cranes such as carry-deck cranes, (I) dedicated pile drivers when used in construction, demolition or excavation work, (J) service or mechanic trucks with a hoisting device, (K) cranes on monorails, (L) tower cranes such as fixed jib hammerhead boom, luffing boom and self-erecting, (M) pedestal cranes, (N) portal cranes, (O) overhead and gantry cranes, (P) straddle cranes, (Q) side boom cranes, (R) derricks, and (S) variations of such equipment. See Connecticut General Statutes 29-221
  • Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.

(b) The provisions of subsection (a) of this section shall not apply to: (1) Engineers under the jurisdiction of the United States, (2) engineers or operators employed by public utilities or industrial manufacturing plants, (3) any person operating either a bucket truck or a digger derrick designed and used for an electrical generation, electrical transmission, electrical distribution, electrical catenary or electrical signalization project, if such person: (A) Holds a valid limited electrical line contractor or journeyman’s license issued pursuant to chapter 393 or any regulation adopted pursuant to said chapter, or (B) has engaged in the installation of electrical line work for more than one thousand hours, or (C) has enrolled in or has graduated from a federally recognized electrical apprenticeship program, (4) persons engaged in the recreational boating or fishing industry, except when engaged in construction-related work, or in agriculture or arboriculture, (5) persons engaged in activities, or using equipment, excluded under section 29-221a, or (6) persons operating equipment, except a tower crane, that can hoist, lower and horizontally move a suspended load and has a manufacturer’s maximum rated hoisting or lifting capacity exceeding two thousand pounds but not exceeding ten thousand pounds who, pursuant to federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration Standard 1926.1427, are (A) certified by an accredited crane operator testing organization, (B) qualified by an audited employer program, (C) qualified by the United States military, or (D) licensed pursuant to this chapter.