For job obtainability with a specified educational path, the best thing to do is to look at currently advertised job descriptions. I looked at a few today for “electronic engineering technician.” On the first two screens that came up on an Indeed.com search, I found 5 electronics technician jobs that didn’t require experience, at least not if the candidate has an “Associate’s degree” or “2 years of technical education” or is a “graduate of accredited technical school, college or military school.” I also looked at a few openings that required experience. One of these stipulated “technical school” or military school. This suggests there is very little preference for vocational-technical school over an associate’s degree from a community college…
At San Joaquin Delta College’s website I don’t see an associate’s degree in electronics engineering technology being offered, although I do see three other associate’s degrees with engineering in the title (https://www.deltacollege.edu/dept/ar/catalog/current/index.htm). However, electronics technology is offered in the (lesser) certificate program (which my little research indicates wouldn’t be good enough.)
In the job descriptions I saw MUCH discussion about specific skills. I suggest looking at the required skills listed in the descriptions of jobs that interest you. Then look at the degree programs of the schools applicable to your objective. For each, find out what courses are included in the program and look at the descriptions of the courses to see what skills you will learn. Obviously, you want a match of what skills you’ll get with what skills you want. (Don’t trust the system to develop you in the optimal way.)