AZ ROC Announces Hard Hat Helmet Design Competition for Arizona High School Students

Hardhat with ROC Seal
March 1, 2021
Category

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 1, 2021

CONTACT:
Breanna Bang, Public Information Liaison

AZ ROC Announces Hard Hat Helmet Design Competition for Arizona High School Students

Phoenix, Ariz., (March 1, 2021) — Arizona Registrar of Contractors (AZ ROC) is announcing the first AZ ROC Hard Hat Design Competition for Arizona high school students. 

Students in grades 9, 10, 11 and 12 are invited to design art to be placed on a commemorative hard hat. 

The contest is free to enter and submissions will be accepted between March 1 and April 5, 2021. The full rules and submission form can be found here (this link is no longer available).

The submitted designs will be reviewed by AZ ROC and the top designs will be voted on for a winner between April 12 through April 18, 2021. A winner will be announced between April 19 and the end of the month.

The winning hard hat design will be placed on a hard hat that AZ ROC awards to individuals in the State of Arizona who demonstrate a commitment to promoting integrity within the construction science technology professions. 

Contact Information
Questions about the competition can be directed to:

Jessie Winter, Public Information Liaison
[email protected]

Breanna Bang, Public Information Liaison
[email protected]

Who We Are
The Arizona Legislature established the Registrar of Contractors in 1931. AZ ROC licenses and regulates residential and commercial contractors. AZ ROC staff investigate and work to resolve complaints against licensed contractors and unlicensed entities. 

The mission of the Arizona Registrar of Contractors is to protect the health, safety and welfare of the public through a regulatory system designed to promote quality construction by Arizona contractors.

Careers in Construction Science Technology
Construction science is an essential industry in Arizona and offers opportunities to anyone wanting to have a meaningful career and earn high wages without the debt associated with a four-year degree. In fact, there are many apprenticeship programs that offer training and on-the-job experience while earning a paycheck at the same time. It is projected that Arizona will need 155,000 additional construction science technology professionals by September 2022.

 

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