View Full Version : Talking Out of Both Sides of Their Mouth
LadyLeatherneck
June 18th, 2008, 01:23 PM
Locating companies will tell their locators not to carry personal items in their trucks. UNDERSTANDABLE! In an accident, anything loose inside a truck becomes a projectile. The companies also tell locators not to carry any form of cutting equipment in their trucks for the same reason. And yet, they tell you that you have to mark in areas that are impossible to get into without it being cleared first. Years ago the utility owners were responsible to clear their facilities for ease of access by locators. Should still be. Is it or should it be a locator's responsibility to maintain and keep up a utility owner's equipment? And, how can you clear around pedistals if you have no equipment to clear with. Those bidding contracts should consider this when agreeing to utility owners demands. Also consider the lack of productivity while you are taking care of someone else's stuff. And who suffers?
Another beef, pot holing! Is that not the "power of the paint"? Is that not the contractor's job? How much time is wasted with a shovel in hand while the contractor sits and watches? WHY ARE THESE THINGS HAPPENING?:mad:
Goldenboy
June 18th, 2008, 01:50 PM
I carry shovels,pruners,and branch cutters in my truck. I've never been told not to. Like you stated some of the areas we mark in you can't even open the peds without cutting away branches.
LadyLeatherneck
June 18th, 2008, 02:14 PM
It seems the companies tell you one thing and require you to do something else.
LadyLeatherneck
June 18th, 2008, 03:20 PM
You won't believe it but the locators got in trouble for not making enough money for the company today! How can they when they have to clean around pedestals and mark utilities for free to appease the contractors and mark huge areas on one ticket, etc. Wake up Supervisors!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Stop copping attitudes with the locators when YOU ARE CAUSE YOUR OWN HEARTACHES. Why would anyone want to put up with being yelled at constantly when they are just doing what you have told them to do.
SORRY MY ATTITUDE IS SHOWING!!!!!!!!!!! OH WELL, WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO FIRE ME??????????????? YOU DON'T PAY ME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
yahoo
June 18th, 2008, 11:44 PM
whoa........that sounds like a major problem..... i carry all that type of equipment in the back of my truck also.....we have got to have it....potholing is a whole another subject....very sore for all of us..... good topic though...
2RUDE
June 18th, 2008, 11:48 PM
.
yahoo
June 19th, 2008, 12:09 AM
and at the end of that day ........you raised your life insurance..hahahhah ....remember you can't play dead in front of a black bear....there's some things that i don't do....mess around with bears is on the top of list
underground quester
June 19th, 2008, 01:30 AM
How about gas line ROWs where the brush is 7' high? I came face to face with a 400 lb. black bear a couple years ago while marking a 6" gathering pipeline through brush that was taller than I am (And I'm 6' 3") , luckily it didn't have any cubs (At least none that I saw) and it bolted the other way. I wish they'd start maintaining their f@cking ROWs again... Many of them haven't been brushed in 10-15 years....What a load of horseshit.
I have noticed up here they are not clearing their ROW like they used to. Have not had your bad fortune but I certainly worry about it when I am working a rural area alone. Especially pipeline ROW where we also have Moose. A full grown Moose can be bigger than a freekin horse. Came across one of those once but he just stared me down then walked away.
Goldenboy
June 19th, 2008, 02:02 AM
I guess I kind of forgot they used to clear the high pressure main easements. As far as I know they haven't cleared the easements in about 7 or 8 years. It really sucks locating in these easements now because they are so overgrown. It's funny when you mark and flag something and you turn around and look and can't even see a flag.
underground quester
June 19th, 2008, 02:07 AM
I guess I kind of forgot they used to clear the high pressure main easements. As far as I know they haven't cleared the easements in about 7 or 8 years. It really sucks locating in these easements now because they are so overgrown. It's funny when you mark and flag something and you turn around and look and can't even see a flag.
Last Summer, I was locating 2 parallel H.P. gas mains that had become so overgrown I was making no headway locating. So, I called the team leader who drove down to my area to meet up with me. He "miked" me on his phone and could hear the beep but could not see me. We were about 20 feet apart!
We laughed about that one for a while!
UULC
June 19th, 2008, 02:12 AM
You walk through an area and then you can not see the flags and forget about the paint. THEN the contractor comes in and clear cuts the area. He could not do that before he called in an locate. After he clear cuts the area they want a remark. You tell them to call another ticket in that you have photo's of the brush.
sprayandpray
June 19th, 2008, 02:18 AM
My rule #1 : I do not Pot Hole - it wasn't taught in class
My rule #2 : I do not locate in grass, weeds, or anywhere else I cannot see where my feet are stepping.
I tell the contractors if they want an area located it is up to them to make it safely reachable. Period.:scold::rules:
underground quester
June 19th, 2008, 03:39 AM
My rule #1 : I do not Pot Hole - it wasn't taught in class
My rule #2 : I do not locate in grass, weeds, or anywhere else I cannot see where my feet are stepping.
I tell the contractors if they want an area located it is up to them to make it safely reachable. Period.:scold::rules:
Spray:
Great post, I am going to print it off and put it on my clip board. Next time I get a locate request in pampas grass or brush, I will read them rule number two.:rules:
ThanX
big boots mcghee
June 19th, 2008, 03:56 AM
As far as I know it's on the contractor to first make the dig site safe and accessible for locating. Beyone that, if a facility is unable to be located due to inaccessibility, or safety, it needs to be escalated to the facility owner to make arrangements to get the site cleared. It's one thing to get behind a bush or some thick brush to get to a ped, it's another to spend our time hacking down tons of foliage to get a site located, especially when, in all likelihood, that foliage will be cleared prior to any excavation anyways, rendering our time spent locating in it useless.
LadyLeatherneck
June 19th, 2008, 03:45 PM
Ya'll need to inform the lead locators, supervisors, and dm's of this information because apparantly they think it is OUR JOB to make production while cleaning up all the areas we locate! If you don't, it's your job. I don't know how some of these people became chiefs, not to mention how they stay that way! They seem to forget the locators pay their salaries and if the locators are doing busy work they are not making money to go in their paychecks! :bonk:
Sorrrrrrrrrrrrrry! There I go venting again! :complain:
Mr Blunderbuss
June 19th, 2008, 09:45 PM
As far as I know it's on the contractor to first make the dig site safe and accessible for locating. Beyone that, if a facility is unable to be located due to inaccessibility, or safety, it needs to be escalated to the facility owner to make arrangements to get the site cleared. It's one thing to get behind a bush or some thick brush to get to a ped, it's another to spend our time hacking down tons of foliage to get a site located, especially when, in all likelihood, that foliage will be cleared prior to any excavation anyways, rendering our time spent locating in it useless.
Does this include trying to wade through snow up to my "axles", like we had to do for some survey tickets last winter?
LadyLeatherneck
June 19th, 2008, 10:52 PM
Since when did we start locating for survey tickets? We've been told we don't locate for survey tickets! Has that rule changed and nobody told me?
Also - SNOW MELTS!
frostypeters
June 20th, 2008, 02:54 AM
As far as I know it's on the contractor to first make the dig site safe and accessible for locating. Beyone that, if a facility is unable to be located due to inaccessibility, or safety, it needs to be escalated to the facility owner to make arrangements to get the site cleared. It's one thing to get behind a bush or some thick brush to get to a ped, it's another to spend our time hacking down tons of foliage to get a site located, especially when, in all likelihood, that foliage will be cleared prior to any excavation anyways, rendering our time spent locating in it useless.
BBM,
Well said, did I train you?
gypsygirl
June 20th, 2008, 03:18 AM
Oh... the ROW clearing tickets for HP gas mains!! Gotta love those!! I had one that I was in the brush so deep that I had gotten stuck in the thorn bushes!! Had to have the other locator help me out.. or I would have been there for HOURS! Of course no one is going to appreciate the H.*#*% I went thru to mark it to have it cleared out for them....
TBONE
June 20th, 2008, 03:19 AM
Locating companies will tell their locators not to carry personal items in their trucks. UNDERSTANDABLE! In an accident, anything loose inside a truck becomes a projectile. The companies also tell locators not to carry any form of cutting equipment in their trucks for the same reason. And yet, they tell you that you have to mark in areas that are impossible to get into without it being cleared first. Years ago the utility owners were responsible to clear their facilities for ease of access by locators. Should still be. Is it or should it be a locator's responsibility to maintain and keep up a utility owner's equipment? And, how can you clear around pedistals if you have no equipment to clear with. Those bidding contracts should consider this when agreeing to utility owners demands. Also consider the lack of productivity while you are taking care of someone else's stuff. And who suffers?
Another beef, pot holing! Is that not the "power of the paint"? Is that not the contractor's job? How much time is wasted with a shovel in hand while the contractor sits and watches? WHY ARE THESE THINGS HAPPENING?:mad:
Sadly we have to pothole high profile cables but only one time once you have seen it then thats it as for the clearing good luck one of our guys last week asked for a row to be mowed by DOT and they said yeah sure no problem still hasnt been done yet so lets see how fast he helps them out next time huh :bump:
LadyLeatherneck
June 20th, 2008, 12:33 PM
Many, many moons ago, as a young locator, I came upon a telephone pedestal that you could barely make out. I wasn't in a very good mood that day and was a little upset with that particular contractor, so I used 3 full cans of paint. I've never seen such an orange mess. Afterward, I felt a little bad for doing it, but it was quite funny. Looked like a big orange alien had landed. "Power of the Paint, my brother!" Doesn't work like that anymore.
big boots mcghee
June 20th, 2008, 03:54 PM
BBM,
Well said, did I train you?
Actually, yes, you did. Among other things I learned how to ditch my safety vest before my first locate, how to pass the buck on a difficult locate, and how to clear mass amounts of tickets while enjoying an afternoon at mexican restaurants. Just kidding, sort of, but really a lot of what you taught me is still with me today, almost nine years later. That says a lot, of what I'm not sure, but there's a lot of it so it can't be all bad.:applause:
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