Pros
The work is easy to learn, and you gain good practical knowledge on how the electrical grid works day to day. The completion of jobs directly affects and helps those in the community, and the work is relatively low stress. 10 hour work days are offered so you have the ability to work Monday to Friday. This is a good entry level job for an engineer of any discipline.
Cons
The ceiling is very low at this company. In 3-4 years you can move up to and Engineer 2, but then if you are not looking to get into management, there will be at least 3-4 more years of working at that role. Even if you do move up into management, it seems as though less engineering is done and you are more of a babysitter making sure time is accounted for to bill our customer. There is very little engineering value in this job, and it seems like the more people try to get involved and make sense of jobs, the less they are rewarded. The office hours are particular and based on people signing up for 9 or 10 hour days, but working 8 hour days for 5 days a week is not even an option, and you cannot work on your own (i.e. WFH) in any capacity, although there is nothing holding you back from doing so. Once work is handed off to you, it's very possible to do the entire job from home, and personally I don't understand the need for the large offices they have in the state. Unfortunately, all of this adds up to feel as though you work at a daycare, but the design engineer is the child. The work gets old and you rarely employ any type of engineering though processes in your day to day here. Again, this is a great entry level position, but I don't think anyone with any engineering degree should work here for more than 1.5-2 years.