BA in economics, actually. Even though you want to get snotty defending an entitlement mentality, I appreciate your contribution. But yes, even wages in dangerous jobs are set by the market in non-socialist economies.
What are your experiences with H2S?
Discussion in 'Oilfield Trucking Forum' started by MP3 > CB, Oct 18, 2013.
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I hope they're as cautious about H2S in North Dakota but I doubt it. I'm curious in which fields the most H2S is found. Sounds like S. Texas is better than West Texas. -
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Just be safe, that silica dust gets in your lungs like asbestos. OSHA is supposed to be passing some regulations about it, I heard. -
H2s wells up here in ND are a hit and miss. What I mean is you can have multiple wells side by side one will produce H2s and the one right next to it wont. Most companies take the threat of H2s very seriously and provide all the proper equipment to monitor and protect you from exposer. Accidents will happen. I have been working the ND oil fields for a couple of years now and I have had a few run ins with H2s but with all the training I have received it has been nothing that I couldn't handle.
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I ran into the stuff a few times pulling production water when gauging tanks or the exhaust on my pump while loading. Ran into it at old, stagnant pits too. There were a few locations that we knew always had H2S on them. Spoke to a driver and he said if it was under 100 on the meter they would drive onto the location and see, but over that they sent in crews to clean the location back up (it set down in a deep valley and was just a hot spot for that gas). I wouldn't mess with anything that high. Meter tripped up to 50 a couple times on top of tanks while they vented but the wind blew it away. I was told when I started for the first company that 10ppm was OK to load in and 20ppm was when you needed to get out, but they didn't seem very serious about it. Every company I dealt with after that one told us to get out if the meter detected anything at all and they would deal with it, no messing around. I liked that better.
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I once met a guy from Eastern Europe, I forget where, and man was he bitter at the companies he'd leased on to. He kept talking about how they were out to screw us and how all of our wages should be just so high. He was just bitter.
I don't see the companies doing too much different from any of the rest of us, they try to maximize profit by getting high rates and lower costs. Costs in that sentence includes our wages, labor costs. It's natural, it's the way it should be.
Of course there will be cheap companies where the owner is trying to get out as much as he can now without regard to the long term. He plans on selling or getting out altogether and he doesn't care what kind of condition he leaves the company in- old equipment, high turnover, etc., etc. Stay away from a company like that. But, the freedom to run your business the way you like means you can do that. Then, we have agencies like OSHA to penalize them if they are endangering people. But, buyer beware, OSHA won't catch it all. And, if there is a better company and a better job down the road, try to get in there.
This H2S sounds crazy. My solace is two 80,000 lb trucks passing each other in opposite directions at 60 mph just inches apart is probably even crazier. Too late to back out now. I thought leaving frac sand would get me away from the threat of silicosis. -
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