Question is what is the best way to correct this? Thanks for any and all help
Answer: get the stupid mechanic back to fix it!

If you trust him to ever touch your boat again, that is. You let him get away without checking this? This is another reason I recommend that folks work on their own boats.
Here's an example of some work that took me a full day, but I got it done, and done right and never did it before, but I know it was done right. And I burped the engien after this, which is what led me to write the burping article, too:
http://c34.org/bbs/index.php/topic,3769.0.html
For those who claim "I dunno anything about electrical," or any other boating subject for that matter, I strongly urge you to start reading. There is so much out there, and you can either buy or library a book, or find it online.
I recognize that some folks don't have the time, can't make the time, or like our classmates in school some folks just don't get math & science, while I never "got" art. That said, I still believe that knowing your systems on YOUR boat and being able to troubleshoot and repair them is an important and very basic safety issue. No one says you need to know everything or be Mr. Toolman, but you can learn the basics to be able to work on the systems you have on your boat. It's wires and connections, or pumps and connections, or rigging and connections, and YOUR safety if things don't work. Much of it is actually simpler than the stuff we have in our homes. So, consider buying a simple book about boat electricity and other boat systems and read it every once in a while, and sooner or later some of it will get through.
I didn't know any of this stuff when I bought our boat in 1998. I started reading and DOING, how else ya gonna learn?