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Funny on one of the commercial contracts it was actually stated that we would be responsible for gritting but then advised in December that if they actually instructed us to grit the path ways etc and failed to request this on a regular basis they could of been held responsible for any incidents so they felt it prudent not to grit at all!
I think if the weather conditions with the current trend it would be worth re-visiting this service.
ice grips
yaktrax
They require us due to health and safety, to grit any paths at the first sign of frost, which normally means us going out at 7pm and not getting back till past 12.
I was going to try and do a bit with him and get some of my own sites. I havent had a proper call regarding construction for 3 weeks so thought I might go back to my roots and try to get some contracts.
Neil Petrie BSc Landscape Mgt said:
You need contracts, service level agreements, acurate (ie subscription based) weather forecasting, equipment, supplies, good staff, clothing and contigencies.
We do it & have pretty tight contracts & SLA's that define what, where, how & when its done. Failure by a contractor can leave them liable. You should have worksheets to record the trigger point of the visit and if possible have your visit signed off (by site contact, Security etc). We also take digi pics on arrival & departure. That way we can address any issues...
We have ours on a retainer fee, with a SLA based on likely events.
We have substaintial stocks of rock already in place (and in fact had supplies left over from earlier this year. The forecasting service we use alerted us in enough time that we did get a large additional order in place before supplies ran out. Get it wrong and you end up short or sitting on a large stock. We ended up selling bags of the stuff 'retail' to people
The biggest winner is dependable staff will to work unsocial hours (.. it costs !) & good equipment.
For residential properties it is hard to convince them it's worthwhile cost (like most things they'll say I can do that, it's easy, an hour later they have exhausted their one bag of rock salt they've had for years, it won't spread, they get fed up etc etc)
Whether you do it or not depends on your desire/need to generate year round work. I would rather have my guys out spreading grit/shovelling snow than go short time working, winter shut downs or lay offs.
Lets hope its a cold snowy winter and the call come in.
Kieran Ray said:
Pro Gard said: