They went home to Saskatchewan.Where are all these hardworking, redneck Albertans you speak of? How come you fellas can't find enough western workaholics to fill these jobs?
...And there's no nepotism in unions?
Hard working albertans,now there's an oxymoron for you.When I was in Alberta the outfit I was with in Whitecourt had 25 people,one was albertan,the rest were from "the east"
Everybody from east of TO is a Newfie to "those people"
I worked with a CAT operator( he bulldozed the snow off the mountain trails) from british columbia a few months ago, and he said those albertans all they do is complain :lol:
Usually about the gubmint though. Or the weather. Or the gubmint. But usually the gubmint. Seems they haven't figured out how to use a ballot, and they just pencil in the same answer they gave the previous time in the booth!
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Funny, I worked out in Alberta, landscaping two summers in my undergrad degree. I was the only easterner (a Nova Scotian, but of course they called me a Newf) and the only guy who never damaged the equipment of the companies I worked for. The guy who hauled livestock for years couldn't manage to keep a lawn tractor from sliding into a power pole...
Obviously you've never been a trucker.
Maybe pay attention to what I said about nepotism,saw the same thing on the pipeline over ten years ago,newfys becomeing spread bosses,bringing their buddys up to become #2's and soon all the locals are out of work because the truth is a lot of them would cut your throat or sell their momma for a job at a buck an hour less and that's the sad truth.
The recruiter from our company is an easterner,that explains all the new hires coming from anywhere but Alberta.
Thats why suncor and syncrude are very tough on hiring relatives starting 2 years ago,they saw the trend and what it was doing to their companys.
In Nunavut they also have a policy on hiring easterners,it's allmost like a union busting trick that I used to see with CLAC,someones allways ready to take a job for less no matter what.
So you'll judge a driver simply for being traffic on your road? I've operated many a loader, scraper and grader and realized that putting my cutting edge to ground usually scours any patted-down windrow.
Yeah ... I have. I'm paid by the hour and he's probably paid by the load. What do I care? I worked with the conditions - not against them.Then you have never spent hours trying to move a lake off the road to make it better for the truckers only to see one bombing down the middle of your windrow putting all the water right back on the haul road on your last pass.You know what I mean? water on one side,dry workable road on the other?
If there's nepotism as you say, then places like Syncrude created the problem by hiring anything with a pulse. You get the best and the worst of the crop I'm afraid. I thought you people knew how to farm! I love it!!!! hahahahahaha
Funny, I worked out in Alberta, landscaping two summers in my undergrad degree. I was the only easterner (a Nova Scotian, but of course they called me a Newf) and the only guy who never damaged the equipment of the companies I worked for. The guy who hauled livestock for years couldn't manage to keep a lawn tractor from sliding into a power pole...
Hey,it's not my problem.
They're just doing what had to be done for centuries - they went with the work. My great granfather's family has been there for close to 300 years. the fished and they sailed - which meant that they were away for large amounts of time - so w3hat's so different about going to Alberta?A large number of the boys from the rock are essentially absentee fathers, they're out west working, the wife and kids are at home.
Better that than not working; that's one thing you can say: the boys are willing to go where the work is, not just whine about wanting to collect EI for staying home because they won't move.
Yeah ... I have. I'm paid by the hour and he's probably paid by the load. What do I care? I worked with the conditions - not against them.