SignalsAZ.com Prescott News Podcast - Powering Prescott: Inside Yavapai Electric Services
Episode Date: April 3, 2026Send us a text and chime in!Yavapai Electric provides reliable electrical services across Prescott and the surrounding areas. The company focuses on safety, efficiency, and long-term performance. Whet...her you need residential wiring or commercial upgrades, their team delivers dependable solutions. In addition, they understand local energy needs, which helps them serve customers more effectively.#yavapaielectric #electician #yavapaicountry #prescott #prescottvalley #electricial Check out the CAST11.com Website at: https://CAST11.com Follow the CAST11 Podcast Network on Facebook at: https://Facebook.com/CAST11AZFollow Cast11 Instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/cast11_podcast_network
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, everybody. Welcome back to Signal's AZ News podcast. Today, I have Todd Schmidt, and you are the
owner of Yabapai Electric. That's correct. And tell us a little bit about your business. You're lucky
enough you get to work with your son, so that's cool. Tell us all about that. Yeah. So I've been an
electrician since 2002. I was working for a plumbing and electrical company in Washington State.
Okay.
And they got slow in plumbing, and they put me in electrical, and I was like, wow, I like this a whole lot better.
I would imagine.
If you can keep from getting shocked, it's got to be a lot cleaner, a lot easier.
Yeah.
Maybe not easier.
Yeah.
As a matter of fact, I was under a house.
Well, what happened is they had a mainline clog.
And so we had tried everything.
We tried snaking every toilet, and we had tried filling everything to capacity to put
the most pressure on the system, nothing worked. So the next step is the low guy on the totem pole
has to go under the house and cut the pipe open. And so I called my wife and I'm like,
sweetie, I think I'm going to quit. And she's like, I support you, whatever you need to do. And as I was
on the phone, it cleared. So I was like, oh. Yeah. But then, yeah, shortly after that, I got put in
electrical and I was like, well, this is better. My husband is a finished carpenter, was a finished
carpenter. He's changed careers of, you know, CDL driver and all that fun stuff. But I was always
the plumber. So, and when you have five kids, you don't call the landlord because then you, you have
to spend a day getting the house in order for the landlord to come in. So I always just learned how to do
stuff. I changed out a whole toilet the other day. Wow. Yeah. My son was helping me, but it was like
20 minutes. I was like, okay, I'm pretty much a. Yeah, you don't hear that every day. I know. It's actually
not that hard. And with YouTube, you could do. But electrical is something you don't.
Don't mess around with.
Well, I would say plumbing, too.
I mean, if you make a mistake with plumbing and now your floor is flooded, that's pretty bad.
But yeah, electrical, yeah, definitely, you know, we've seen a lot of handyman specials.
And it's pretty scary what we've come across.
You know, like you open something up and you realize that it almost caught on fire, that sort of thing.
you know where and and actually um i have seen it where it did catch on fire um i had one guy
who called himself an electrician um i dabbled in electricity yeah well he was actually working
for an electrical company but he he hooked something up in the attic he had no business i was just
way undersized and it got hot and it caught on fire and their attic caught on fire i was the guy
who had to go and um and kind of clean that
up and talk to the customers.
Low man on the totem pole.
No.
Oh, you had the business.
The trusted man, I guess.
So, yeah.
But yeah, we've seen a lot of handyman specials.
A lot of flying splices, they call them, where, you know, you've got a connection in a wall,
and then they just wrap some tape around it and throw it in the wall and cover it.
Of course.
That's a flying splice.
Junction boxes buried in walls.
Yeah, just poor workmanship.
We've seen a lot of that.
So tell me, we've got a new building that's being, we're getting ready to move into, but it's for my chair gym.
And they put new air conditioning in the building.
It wasn't going to have air conditioning.
So it was just going to be, I think mostly, I don't know what they're going to use it for, but eventually maybe it was going to have air conditioning.
But for us, they're like, oh, we'll do air conditioning for you.
Can't really do cheerleading without air.
So they're setting that up.
And then it was, uh-oh, you need a new transformer or trans?
May it be an electrical panel?
Maybe.
A transformer?
Maybe.
Well, I guess if you're, if you were going to have a greater draw of power, they might
need to up how much power the building's getting.
Okay.
So that's for real.
They're not just mess with me.
I don't know.
I'd have to.
But that I guess it would make sense if it was kind of like this is, we're going to have
some light bulbs and maybe this going on.
But now that you're running all these.
Yeah, I mean, air conditioning can use a lot.
of power for sure. All right. So that makes sense. All right. Yeah. Yeah. They're off the hook then. And I also
noticed you guys do you, let me see it. So you wire up all of the cool. So if you're doing like
home entertainment stuff, you guys can come along. Do you do like the speakers up in the ceiling?
Yeah. Yeah. We do both high voltage and low voltage applications. So we do the smart home technology,
you know, where you can use your phone and change the mood lighting in your entire house.
We do that.
We can do, certainly do audio.
And we can do, you know, basically anything.
We've done data lines, although that is kind of a thing of the past.
Back in the old days, yeah.
But we still do that.
You know, some people want the cat six run to a home office because they want that, you know, secure line or whatever it is.
So I was, you know, over Christmas, I,
we got really technology based and I've got an Alexa now so I can tell her to do stuff for me.
She'll send out the vacuum, which meant we had to get a vacuum for her to be able to send that out.
We did all the lighting and then realized that, you know, I didn't, I mixed up.
I got one set of lighting for this, but that one's a difference.
So they're not talking to each other anymore.
Or if I say turn everything blue, this is one color blue and that's a darker blue.
You could fix all that.
You know how to get me all.
I would probably defer to my son.
My son is more the tech head of our company.
I mean, I can mess around with it.
I might be able to figure it out, but he's definitely more mentally incapable for that.
We do.
We can't get the remote to work.
Josh, we can't get this to work.
Josh.
I was going to ask you because we touched a little bit about it as, you know, when we met.
And lots of electrical.
companies around town or around Arizona.
Tell me if you wanted to start an electrical business in Arizona, what do you need to do?
You mean coming from, like if you're coming from out of state?
Oh, if you just want to be an electrician here?
Yeah.
Well, you have to pass a contractor's exam.
Okay.
You need a bond.
You need a general liability policy.
and then you're good to go.
And how many people can you have working for you?
I don't think there's a limit, which is very different.
I started in Washington State where they were incredibly strict.
I had to log every hour I worked.
They were all supervised hours.
I had to test to even move up as an apprentice.
And then in Colorado was very similar.
So I as a master electrician could only have three people working under me and I had to supervise them as they were working.
They were in school at the same time.
Once they reached a certain amount of hours and they had passed their classes, then they could test to move to the next level, you know, whether that was like a journeyman or you could be a, I forget what they call it now, residential journeyman, I think.
think it was. Anyway, but yeah, you had certain levels that you could get to, but I could only
legally have three people working under me if they were apprentices and I had to supervise them.
If I wanted to grow my business, I had to actually hire a journeyman who could have three people
under him. So total, if I had a journeyman working for me, we could be a business of eight people.
You know, here in Arizona, I could have, I could have 1,500 people working for me. I don't have
to supervise them. They don't have to be electricians. They're not in class. Yeah, I don't,
I don't think that's a good thing. I think that means you're going to get poor quality
workmanship. I love this story. I saw a news article one time. This reporter was interviewing
this guy who his house was the only one that survived in this neighborhood after a horrible hurricane.
And they're like, so why are you so lucky?
What makes you so special that your house is still standing?
He's like, well, it's really quite simple.
We built it to code.
And so that, you know, the code, you know, it's a pain in the butt sometimes, but it makes sense.
You know, there's a lot of redundant safety systems built into it.
And just smart, like, you know, logical things about the code, you know.
Well, and I bring it up because it is.
Like, you know, if you do the things that you outlined that you need to do to be an electrician in Arizona.
Yeah.
You can hire anybody you want that hasn't had the training, but they're learning, but now you've hired 10 guys.
Right.
How are they getting trained correctly?
Right.
I think the reason I wanted to bring it up was mostly because it's like, that's not how you do things.
No.
And when you're working on something that is, I mean, can start a fire or safety or, you know, again,
making sure it's up to code.
Right.
It matters who you hire for these types of things.
Yeah, absolutely.
Absolutely.
You know, we're a really small company.
It's myself, my son.
We have one full-time employee who's actually a friend of my sons.
And, you know, we're not opposed to getting bigger, but we want to do it slow.
We want to do it correctly.
We, you know, we want to make sure that the person that we're working,
with gets trained up right before we go and let him work in somebody's house. Not just in terms of
like his experience in the electrical field, but also knowing who he is, that he's not going to
go into somebody's house and, you know, swipe something or whatever, you know. So, you know, I think
it's smart. I think that some of these guys, you know, I think homeowners don't realize that legally
if you have a handyman working in your house or you have an electrician and he's got one of those
thousand guys working in your house and he's not carrying workers comp on them, if they fall off
a ladder and say break their neck, the homeowner is actually liable legally for that. So I carry
workers' compensation even on myself because if I get hurt on somebody's property, I don't want
them to be liable for me.
or if they can't afford to be liable for you and now you're trying to figure out how to take care of yourself
in that situation exactly yeah but yeah a lot of homeowners don't know that most people it's never
going to be an issue but what if it happens once you know it's electricity yeah yeah I had a friend
in Colorado who he was working on a deck he had to set up a ladder on a deck up on a and he was working
on kind of the roof or something.
And he had put the ladder on a piece of plywood because he did not want to scratch the deck.
And the plywood just went wink.
And he fell about 18 feet, busted himself up really bad.
The contractor did not have, he was just a subcontractor.
And so that's another thing.
If you hire a subcontractor, that subcontractor is supposed to have their own insurance.
They're supposed to carry their own general liability policy, their own workers' compensation.
If they don't have it, it's on the homeowner.
It's not on.
So it's, you know, hopefully it never comes to that.
It never comes to that legal thing, but it could.
How would somebody know?
So if I was looking to hire an electrician, I mean, do you ask those questions?
Well, yeah, the first thing you can do is they should have an ROC, a register of contractors' license.
And so you want to look for their license number.
Okay.
There's that bumper sticker you see on people's cars.
It says license contractors build confidence.
And so, you know, there's truth to that.
I mean, you can go on to the ROC.
You can look up their license.
You can see, do they have a bond?
Are they in good standing?
That's really important.
Are there any complaints against them?
Very, very important.
We had somebody in our business networking group,
and he was a contractor, and he wound up taking a whole bunch of money from this lady and then
never did the work. But on his website, there were complaints about him, but she had never
checked that. So, yeah, I mean, you can always ask, you know, if somebody comes to your house
to do work, do you have general liability and workers' compensation? You could ask him for policy
numbers if you wanted to. I've never been asked that, but
But you could.
You could.
Yeah.
Especially if you've got them doing a big job or your, you know.
Oh, sure.
Yeah.
That would make sense.
Yeah.
And another thing a lot of people don't realize, too, is that if a handyman is allowed to do up to $1,000 worth of work without a contractor's license.
But after $1,000, they actually are required to have a contractual.
If you start getting bills for $995 and I'll have to come back next week to do the other job.
Exactly.
That's kind of a little red flag there.
Yeah.
So if somebody, you're also doing the permanent lighting, which I wanted to touch on because that is.
Yeah.
I used to be the girl that I always made sure by like the middle of January because I wanted to keep my lights up as long as possible.
Right.
I was like, okay, I think we can get away for like two weeks in January, but then you got to take them down.
Sure.
It's everybody leaves their lights up now.
They have all the pretty lights now.
Well, it does look pretty tacky to have like the icicle lights on your house.
My neighbor.
Yeah.
We just recently started installing O-E-L-O.
It's called O-E-L-O.
They're out of Loveland, Colorado.
So it's an American company.
Yeah, I was told the stuff I bought was now.
And it's great.
You know, you can call them.
They answer the phone.
They speak English.
It's great.
They have a really nice quality product.
It actually comes in a very nice track.
so all the lights are perfectly separated.
And whereas some of the products you're getting out of China, it's like a stick and clip or something like that.
And I don't know.
I just don't think those products are going to last very long.
The OLO product is they guarantee, they have a five-year guarantee on it, which is really good.
Industry standards one.
So five-year guarantee is good.
They're estimating their lights are going to burn.
for 100,000 hours, which is eight hours a night for 35 years.
That's all I need it for.
They're dark sky compliant.
And I put them on my house.
Absolutely love them.
Really cool.
I didn't go crazy.
I didn't wrap the house.
I just did the front.
But yeah, it looks really nice.
It's kind of a nice accent.
You can do different holidays.
So I just did St. Patty's.
I had green on my house.
You did that.
So I like it.
So far, the HOA hasn't said anything.
I hope they don't.
But there are other people in the neighborhood doing the same thing.
We live out in Annalop Meadows, so our HOA never doesn't do much.
But the other night I had party time.
So I have like floodlights and I just set it to party time.
And the whole house is just.
Yeah.
It's fun.
I kind of like it because I think it kind of looks festive.
I think it actually can set off the neighborhood.
I think it can bring it up.
Yeah.
And I love the white, clear lights when you have those on.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It looks so pretty.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But yeah, there's certainly like leaving your Christmas decorations up or your Christmas lights
up certainly looks tacky.
I don't take them down.
Yeah, I don't think that's a good thing.
But you have to.
Yeah.
And now I'm like, we don't have to do that anymore.
You can set them.
But yeah, the icicles, you got to take those down.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
So, okay, so we've covered that.
Mm-hmm.
So you'll, if they call you, you can come out and you'll instill.
install those lights for them and you can set them up on the phone. Absolutely. I can give them a free
estimate and they'll know what they're getting into. That's awesome. If somebody who was looking to
hire great qualified electrician who is going to stand by their work, how they get a hold of you,
Todd? Well, we are Yavapai Electric so they can look us up online, yavapaielectric.com.
Yep. I can give you a phone number. I don't know. That would be great. Yeah. So it's a 9-7.000.
770 3407088.
I have 928.
I'm sorry, 928-340.
It's 970, Colorado.
That's where I came from.
928-340-7088.
And if you call 970, some guy answers.
Well, that's my son, actually.
He's got the 970 number.
Call either one.
Also, you have a quote on here on your website.
God, literally quoted on your website.
What does it say?
You have a quote, let there be light.
Yes.
That was so cute.
I have that on my license plate too.
That is awesome.
Yeah.
It's like God.
That's perfect.
So perfect.
So 928 or 9703407088, you have a pielectric.com.
Not just a regular electrician, but we'll install lights, set up your all your cool stuff, recess lighting, all kinds of awesome stuff.
Something's not lighten up.
Give you a call.
Yeah.
And we do residential.
We do commercial.
We've done like North Face stores, T-Mobile stores.
So we're not opposed to-
Oh yeah, we do.
I've done so many ceiling fans.
I've probably done 10,000 ceiling fans.
I think as we get older, we get smarter.
I'll still change out of toilet, whatever.
But my husband, I was like, we need new ceiling fans.
He's like, I'm going to call a guy.
I was like, the ceiling fans, right?
Just open it, take off.
He's like, mm-mm.
Yeah.
I'm not going to do it.
Some of them are getting a little bit more complicated.
I don't, you know, I never understood that in the end.
industry, like you've got a really good design and then you change it. Why do you do that?
You know, I don't understand. And they make it more complicated or it's fussy. Yeah, that happens
all the time, especially with ceiling fans. And sometimes with light fixtures, too, especially
coming out of China, a lot of them are a pain in the butt to install. So, yeah. And I don't think the stuff
from China is going to get any cheaper anytime soon. So, yeah, all right. So yavapaielectric.com
928-3407088.
And thanks for doing what you do.
And thanks for coming in.
Well, thanks for the interview.
I appreciate it.
All righty.
We'll see you guys next time.
Okay.
Thank you.
