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Birch Electric lights up the Key Pen
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
The owner of Birch Electric
epitomizes the old adage, “Local kid makes good.” Kevin
Canavan is a Key Peninsula native, and his wife and
business partner, Miranda, grew up in Port Townsend.
Canavan’s father, a retired electrician, provided a
sound backdrop for his son to enter the field 22 years
ago. Today Canavan holds a Washington state master
electrician’s license.
What began as young Canavan’s first
job working for other electrical companies and
contractors evolved first into a fledgling husband and
wife team consisting of an old Chevy pick-up (which they
still have), a telephone, and a willingness to be
available when needed by local citizens and businesses.
Since that modest beginning in 1998, the Canavans have
expanded the business to nine trucks employing 12
fulltime electricians year-round, all living on the Key
Peninsula or in Gig Harbor. Canavan says that,
collectively, he and his crews have over 200 years of
residential, new construction and commercial electrical
experience. “All of our electricians are top-notch,” he
says.
The company prides itself in a
short response time, creative design work, and an honest
work ethic.
“Birch
Electric was built on the Key Peninsula,” he says. “It
was built on honesty, and will always be a business that
caters to the needs of this community.” His wife, who
now handles permitting, incoming phone calls, and in the
early days also met with crews, adds that when their two
daughters were toddlers, “they thought they had 12 more
daddies.” Intentionally run “family-style,” Birch
Electric provides benefits to employees, and offers a
paid apprenticeship through the union.
The Canavans support local
community outreach in tangible ways that make a
difference. Every year for the last three years they
have joined with their suppliers (CED and Rainier
Lighting & Electric) to donate materials and labor for
two Habitat for Humanity houses on the peninsula. They
contribute electrical services for the auction at Vaughn
Elementary, where their girls attend, and provided the
new lighting service for Volunteer Park several years
ago. It is one thing for a small business owner to
donate his own time and labor, but cognizant of this,
when Canavan hasn’t time to execute a donated project
himself and uses a crew instead, he bills himself and
pays his crew as on any other job.
Three years ago, Birch Electric
expanded capacity with two field supervisors, Greg
Hanson and Brian Nearland, who coordinate crews,
troubleshoot, and assist new homeowners with pre-wiring,
framing-stage lighting walk-throughs. Canavan meets with
prospective customers to assess needs and provide
estimates. It makes no difference to him whether the
appointment he goes out on is to a homeowner requesting
a new circuit breaker installation, or a commercial
building developer shopping for an electrical
contractor. Everyone is treated the same.
“I would not have been able to get
where I am,” he says, “without the people of the Key
Peninsula supporting local businesses.”
Canavan says the economy is good
right now for craftsmen. He and his crews could “work
seven days a week for as many hours as we can stay
awake.” Booking for a springtime job is already one to
two weeks out, and their summer job load is “slammed.”
Eighty percent of Birch Electric’s business is existing
and new residential construction, and local service
calls. The other 20 percent are commercial projects,
including the electrical systems for Blondie’s. All
calls are radio-dispatched, and they attempt to adhere
to a one-hour callback. Canavan pays attention to the
details. When Birch Electric needed sign work done, he
used a local company. “We all need to support local
businesses,” he says. “That’s what keeps our community.”
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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