Sonoma County Clean Up

We are actively looking for the following talents and equipment for the Sonoma County Wild Fire



I am absolutely sure you know the people we need to be talking to and that means we shuold be creating a dialogue.





Equipment:



Is a must, if a Climber they need own gear, if a Self Loader they need their own gear, No equipment will be provided.





Travel Reimbursements:



All travel reimbursements will be made within 48hrs of arrival for team leaders and crews.



You all will be put up; the first night and the following day is orientation.



And there is a one time mobilization bonus of $100 per person





Self Loaders (Qty 50)



Will be paid $150- $200 an hour minor adjustments are made based on load capacity and production.



(2) man crew paid $30/ hr with $140 Per Diem per person





The Bucket Trucks (Qty 50)



The trucks with Ground Certified Stamp on the boom are paid at $45/ hr.



Crew men (2) ground and (1) bucket are paid $30/hr.



And (2) Traffic Controllers are paid at $20/hr.



For a total Bucket Truck team of (1) truck and (5) person team.



with $140 Per Diem per person





Tree Climbers at $30/hr (QTY 150)



with $140 Per Diem per person





Saw Men at $25-$30/hr (QTY 150)



with $140 Per Diem per person





Chippers Crews



Trucks are paying $35/hr



(2) crewmen are paid $30/hr.



Per Diem $140 a day



You will have questions; at this point I will answer what I can.





For each person on a full crew there is a per diem of $140.00 for living expenses, this would include motel/ hotel expenses, food and those incidentals that come up in life.



We will be paid by Certified Payroll; so US Citizens or legal residents a must.



Overtime past 40hrs



Get the word out this is 2 year gig minimum.



Stephen Hill

Operations Manager

Louisiana Sand and Gravel, LLC.

787 342 9295



stephen.hill.toll@gmail.com
 
Interesting stuff. It would be cool to hear from some of the folks that do this for a living how they feel about those levels of compensation. Thanks in advance, everybody.

Tim
 
It's the hours that really add up when you go 10-12 a day 7 days a week, then if you're real thrifty by sharing a motel bed with some logger you can bank some of that per diem. And the climate is great compared way up nort at least til the monsoons start in mid-december. I'm not dogging the job and thanks for posting Stephen, it's just not for everybody - but sure beats chasing hurricanes.
 
It's the hours that really add up when you go 10-12 a day 7 days a week, then if you're real thrifty by sharing a motel bed with some logger you can bank some of that per diem. And the climate is great compared way up nort at least til the monsoons start in mid-december. I'm not dogging the job and thanks for posting Stephen, it's just not for everybody - but sure beats chasing hurricanes.

You are absolutely right the opportunity is for everyone, but it needs to make sense for the right folks.

2 year gig, steady money, not waiting for a client to call.

6 day work weeks 7th day is optional.

7 days of per diem.
 
Not very enticing. I pay my groundie $25 an hour. Might as well stay home make and make the same or better


Hey no worries; if things get slow, in some parts of the US Tree Services is Seasonal work, and well if things dry up or slow down.

GIve me a call.

Stephen Hill
Operations Manager
787 342 9295
 
It's the hours that really add up when you go 10-12 a day 7 days a week, then if you're real thrifty by sharing a motel bed with some logger you can bank some of that per diem. And the climate is great compared way up nort at least til the monsoons start in mid-december. I'm not dogging the job and thanks for posting Stephen, it's just not for everybody - but sure beats chasing hurricanes.

@Raven; Not trying to hijack this thread, but maybe you could start another one. I'd love to hear about any of your experiences trying to chase the hurricane work. I bet it would make for interesting reading. Thanks.

Tim
 

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