Hi Tim, my reason for saying this is due to the responses from a thread I started last summer about the need/desire/possibility of a tree climber'a union.
I found a few posters to be shut down to the idea seemingly because of the word primarily. I don't have time now to find the thread, but it's probably a decent read if you're handy with the search function
Thanks for the response, JontreeHI. I understand you now. An earlier post in this thread gets at that issue. It's important to try to engage with all of the folks that get turned off just by using the word. They have to have some negative impressions of unions. Even better would be people who've actually had a negative experience in dealing with a union somehow, in order to be able to possibly avoid pitfalls that are preventable.
On the other hand, there are a lot of businesses that absolutely hate the thought of having to sit down at a bargaining table with an entity that has just as much power as they do. They prefer the arrangement in which a huge company brings each little guy all by himself into the room, and says "Here's the deal, take it or leave it. There's another hundred guys outside that'll take it." That is how big wally acts.
So, I don't know what the right answer is. The "Angies List" type of arrangement might leave each guy negotiating his own wage each and every time, which might be a real pain. It would be nice if you could go to an online bulletin board type of arrangement to see what the current offering is for each location. This would help to prevent guys from bankrupting themselves trying to travel somewhere to find work, only to have them offer a wage that ends up costing you money for having made the trip, instead of coming out ahead at the end.
If you do not wish to set up a union type of organization, maybe you could just make it possible for guys to negotiate labor rates via e-mail with the companies that want their services. But what protection does a guy have if he travels a long way, gets there, and they try to change the terms on him now that they know he's in the hole for his expenses? It is the reason that contracts exist.
Maybe I just answered my own question. You guys are called "Contract Climbers" after all.
Tim