"Thirty six, thirty seven, thirty eight, thirty nine, forty. Ok, I'm good for another tv program." It's a deal I made with myself a few years ago traveling, hotel living is not conducive to staying in shape. Thirty minutes of tv equals 40 push-ups, It started as twenty.
The tv is just a diversion, an opportunity to zone out for a little bit before going to bed. I never have been one to hang out at the bars at night it seems in these small towns the wind turbine guys weren't always the most welcome guests in town. I suppose I cant blame them, this industry has its share of young rowdy guys looking to sew their oats and with the kind of money they made they sometimes acted like these towns owed them a good time. It can be a bad combination to be very young and have a lot of money and be too far from home.
Next week it will be the same routine in another town. And the week after that.
I have to say leaving the Texas panhandle in August to head for Alberta isn't a bad thing. I opted to drive this time. The last time I left my truck on a wind job the crew all but ruined it. Granted the sites are notorious for eating trucks alive. Still, I liked this one and didn't want to drive a rental, it's just easier having everything the way I like it. Besides it giving me the road time to relax some it also allowed me to hit a job in Montana after I left an equipment auction New Mexico on my way north.
****
"Welcome to Canada, what is the nature of your trip?" The boarder agent looked at my passport and then looked up at me. His expression blank, pleasant enough, but expressionless. Not a bad thing, having had to deal with an agent with a chip on his shoulder before I'll take expressionless every time.
"Business." I've learned to just answer questions, they will ask what they need to.
Forty five minutes later I was out the door and on my way north. I'm never offended by customs and immigration in fact I find it refreshing. Canada just wants to know what the benefit to Canada is by letting you in to work there. Simple.
This trip was like the last, the company I consulted for had started this job three weeks ago with another manager and it was in trouble all ready. It seems I was becoming the fix it guy. I was missing the days when I started a project from the start. I suppose being a bit of a perfectionist on the front end of these can be a little hard on the site managers, but it worked for me in that it held their feet to the fire in getting what I needed ahead of my crews so we weren't held up. I like to go fast, it works for my crews bonus's as well as mine. And really the site managers too in the long term if they are smart enough to recognize it. But increasingly they are lazy. These traveling gigs pay well because it's not easy getting people who are willing to be away from home as much as we are. The down side is it forces our customers to settle for help that is less than motivated sometimes. It's not a dynamic I'm willing to except. I've been responsible for more than one middle manager loosing his job. The upper management however loves us, we make them look good to the owners of these facilities and it helps them get the next job.
***
"Jeff it's good to see you, I'm glad you are here. I'm going to need to have a few minutes before tomorrow's production meeting. I don't want to blind side you in front of the owners reps.
"Can you give me about an hour? I'm on my way to the concrete plant and I'm going to need to check with them before I can commit to what you are going to want from me." I told her as I hugged her as a greeting.
Jennifer smiled as I answered her. We had worked together enough for her to know I would fix our problems and get the job back on track. She was the site project manager and was known as a bit of a ball buster if not a bitch. While we mostly got along well on these sites and had a mutual respect that the other was good at their job. The hug was an effort to get started off on the right foot with her and she knew it. I wasn't much of a pushover and it wasn't likely we were going to agree on the fix on this one. I knew enough about how this project started to know the delays were caused by her company not getting us approval of our submittal package. It was something we had now and she would have a short memory of why we were where we were.
The plant seemed to be ready. More than ready really, they were staffed up for 1000 yards a day and the delays meant they weren't producing enough concrete to cover their overhead.
In talking to the manager I assured him within a few days we would be at full swing.
I had an interview with a safety consultant in the morning and needed to talk to Jeniffer to make sure I was clear on what their expectations were. If I let them they would have me running their program at my expense.
The job I was supposed to hit tomorrow was going to have to wait a couple of days. I could see that already so I made my calls and and pushed those meetings off a few days.
***
"So as you can see Jeff, the room is looking at you for a boost in production." I can't say Jennifer didn't give me the heads up that this meeting would go this way, but as usual REV would use me as their scape goat if I let them. Not really Jen's fault if she was going to survive as a manager for them she would have to deflect much of the sites problems to someone else to remain looking good to their customer.
"Well as I see it roads are going to be the issue in short order..."
Jen cut me off mid sentence with a big smile. "You have 20 turbine sites available now and we will have roads to 10 more a week for the next three weeks..."
"My manpower is going to double the day after tomorrow." I winked at Jen with the eye the rest of the table couldn't see. "By next week I'll give you 15 foundations a week. Do the math, in 3 weeks we're going to have a problem. I'm going to need you to shift more resources to roads immediately if you want to catch our original schedule."
The rest of the meeting went the same way with a back and forth sparing between Jen and I. I tried not to come on too strong without letting her run over me. We spent some time after the meeting with the group going over the site plan so I could give her an idea the direction I wanted to site to develop. Ron the Bunker Energy Co. Representative was looking over our shoulder and took notes as he did.
Jen is a nice looking brown eyed brunette with a large rack that she loved to catch men looking at. Peripherally I could see her nipples were making an outline in her blouse, her posture seemed to straighten and she was beginning to move closer and make more eye contact and generally was bolder in her demeanor. It wouldn't be the first time she had used some sexual tension as a way of trying to intimidate me. Like the other times there was no acknowledgement of it from me. I stood my ground even brushing her breast with my forearm reaching up to mark the plan that hung on the wall outlining the roads I needed built first. I did get a sideways glance from her but it seemed to go un noticed by Ron.
On my way to my truck in the site office parking lot after the meeting Ron was walking fast to catch up with me. "Hey Jeff, pretty aggressive schedule you gave Jennifer in there. Don't get me wrong I'd love to see it, but I have to warn you she'll ram that schedule up your ass if you can't make it happen." Ron is a guy not much older than myself with a bit of a Santa Clause appearance complete with the wire frame glasses, he seemed quiet in his approach to things so far, but he also struck me as wise man that was no ones fool. "Are you really going to be able to turn over 15 foundations a week?"
"That was a bit of a shot across the bow in there. I'll give her 15 foundations next week and 18 the week after and I'll keep that pace until she gets me what I need with the roads or I'll send the crew to another job and wait on them to build roads. This isn't my first rodeo with Jennifer and she knows I intend to do what I said I would."
"Well this will be fun to watch, you keep riding her." Ron chuckled at what he said realizing what it sounded like. I chuckled a little myself thinking he just might get the nickname "Bad Santa." We exchanged some small talk before I got into my truck to go back to the hotel.
I needed to return a few emails and had received a curious text from the owner of the company I was working for that indicated my plans for the upcoming week might change.
***
"Hey Richie I got your text what's going on? You indicated something about a change of plan?
"Jeff I know this isn't something you have done in a while but I need you to go out to a remote site for a look see to determine feasibility of a transmission line change. The environmentalists are involved and the previous route isn't going to work."
"Richie I haven't been out on a remote in years." I shot back.
"I know, but they want you. They know they will get the truth if you go. They need experience on this one. Charles called me himself." Charles was the director of wind development in Montreal, if he was involved this was turning into a big deal. "He trusts you Jeff, he knows if you say it can't be done then he has a problem. But if there is any way it can you'll know how."
"Give me the rundown, what does this entail?"
"Ok, but listen to the end before you say no, hear me out.
"Ok, ok." I laughed.
"They are going to send someone with you. They can do the grunt work, they just need you to over see it. They are thinking It will take a week if it all goes well with weather."