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#11
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#12
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Am Thu, 26 Feb 2009 08:26:16 UTC, schrieb Roland Perry
auf uk.railway : agencies are for. Of course blame will lie with the workers who are down to work in two places at once (if that is the case) and who have got the jobs from different agencies. Why keep blaming the workers? What kind of agency signs someone up, sells their services to a client, and then fails to get confirmation from the workers that they'll turn up? What if the workers have been signed up by two different interim agencies for the same job? The workers confirmed that they will be at the assigned place in time, but nobody really noted that the 5 from agency Hire-the-Fire are the same as the 5 from agency Fire-the-Hire? Cheers, L.W. -- ----------------------------------------------------- |
#13
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On Feb 26, 8:26*am, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 15:54:59 on Wed, 25 Feb 2009, remarked: I'd be very surprised if the project management company had all the individual details of the staff that would be needed, that's what the agencies are for. Of course blame will lie with the workers who are down to work in two places at once (if that is the case) and who have got the jobs from different agencies. Why keep blaming the workers? What kind of agency signs someone up, sells their services to a client, and then fails to get confirmation from the workers that they'll turn up? The one where the workers are signed up to more than one agency. A worker may have signed for a morning shift on one job with one agency and an evening shift on another job with another agency, having a shift or two in between (depending on the day) But I don't see how any project management company can take ALL the blame. My original point is that the problem with the workers was one occasion of a much bigger project, if there is something fundamentally wrong with staffing supply, then why didn't happen much more often? Because the big re-wiring projects take place during specific maintenance windows. In this case both Rugby and Liverpool St over the same Xmas holiday. And big re-wiring jobs have happened at the same time before, why should the project managers think it would be any different this time? Both sets of project managers should have realised that they'd been promised "too many" engineers because there simply aren't enough to go round, and even if that penny hadn't dropped when they placed their orders with the agencies, it should have done so on the first day the workers failed to tun up. But that fails to take into account that there might be enough workers, but that more than expected have taken a break over Christmas, maybe not over the whole period, but for a day or two. There were also lots of little OHL jobs from which workers were pulled when the problems became apparent. |
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In message
, at 18:28:53 on Thu, 26 Feb 2009, Lüko Willms remarked: What if the workers have been signed up by two different interim agencies for the same job? The workers confirmed that they will be at the assigned place in time, but nobody really noted that the 5 from agency Hire-the-Fire are the same as the 5 from agency Fire-the-Hire? The workers can't legitimately confirm they'll attend on the same days, to two different agencies. -- Roland Perry |
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 18:28:53 on Thu, 26 Feb 2009, Lüko Willms remarked: What if the workers have been signed up by two different interim agencies for the same job? The workers confirmed that they will be at the assigned place in time, but nobody really noted that the 5 from agency Hire-the-Fire are the same as the 5 from agency Fire-the-Hire? The workers can't legitimately confirm they'll attend on the same days, to two different agencies. But if the second job is offering more money, and the workers are in short enough supply that they can't not be used, can anyone do much about it? (IIRC this was about specialist skilled workers, and so just hauling in someone off the street wouldn't work?) -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
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In message , at
18:28:55 on Thu, 26 Feb 2009, Arthur Figgis remarked: The workers can't legitimately confirm they'll attend on the same days, to two different agencies. But if the second job is offering more money, and the workers are in short enough supply that they can't not be used, can anyone do much about it? The agency can't force them to work, but the agency ought to know how many are actually going to turn up. -- Roland Perry |
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On Feb 26, 5:52*pm, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 09:41:53 on Thu, 26 Feb 2009, remarked: Why keep blaming the workers? What kind of agency signs someone up, sells their services to a client, and then fails to get confirmation from the workers that they'll turn up? The one where the workers are signed up to more than one agency. A worker may have signed for a morning shift on one job with one agency and an evening shift on another job with another agency, having a shift or two in between (depending on the day) That's fine, as long as the two sites aren't as far apart as East London and Rugby (and Modulo the Working Time Directive). It's up to the agency to make sure those aspects are OK. Replace agency with agencies and maybe you can grasp the problem. And big re-wiring jobs have happened at the same time before, why should the project managers think it would be any different this time? I don't know - that's why we are blaming the project managers for failing to spot what was going to be different this time. Blaming the project managers for something that has never occured before seems a bit harsh. Why should they question an agency that has provided the workers on all previous occasions? Remember, the original question was: Has Bechtel ever been involved in a disasterous project? I would say not, as the OHL problems that Christmas were only a small (although important) part of something much bigger. Both sets of project managers should have realised that they'd been promised "too many" engineers because there simply aren't enough to go round, and even if that penny hadn't dropped when they placed their orders with the agencies, it should have done so on the first day the workers failed to tun up. But that fails to take into account that there might be enough workers, but that more than expected have taken a break over Christmas, A strange thing to do when your main job is wiring things during maintenance windows like Xmas. Actually, their main job won't be working at Christmas, otherwise they'd be very poor. There will be work all year round on repairs and replacement jobs. And something the agencies should have seen coming weeks ahead when the workers concerned confirmed (or not) their availability. |
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#20
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On Feb 26, 7:57*pm, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 11:20:09 on Thu, 26 Feb 2009, remarked: The one where the workers are signed up to more than one agency. A worker may have signed for a morning shift on one job with one agency and an evening shift on another job with another agency, having a shift or two in between (depending on the day) That's fine, as long as the two sites aren't as far apart as East London and Rugby (and Modulo the Working Time Directive). It's up to the agency to make sure those aspects are OK. Replace agency with agencies and maybe you can grasp the problem. Replace "agency" with "each agency". Blaming the project managers for something that has never occured before seems a bit harsh. Why should they question an agency that has provided the workers on all previous occasions? So what was different this time? Remember, the original question was: Has Bechtel ever been involved in a disasterous project? I would say not, as the OHL problems that Christmas were only a small (although important) part of something much bigger. The Rugby re-wiring was a disastrous project. It was on the TV news day after day. Yes, but Bechtel weren't hired to do just the Rugby re-wiring, they were hired to get costs under control and the WCML upgrade completed to some sort of reasonable budget. What would the alternative be, once the problems became apparent? Postpone it to a later date and so impact on the other parts of the project, or try and get things done at the slot set aside for the work, even if it looks like things will run over. I would be interested to see if they recommended the start of the new timetable in January and how much Bechtel were involved in the day to day decisions and how much 'local' control Network Rail had over matters. Actually, their main job won't be working at Christmas, otherwise they'd be very poor. There will be work all year round on repairs and replacement jobs. But I'd still expect the main work to be major projects during periods when the line was closed (be that Xmas, weekends, or just overnight). If they are all agency staff, then how can they be forced to work weekend or during holiday? |
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