OP
ultrarunner
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2004
- Messages
- 23,709
- Tractor
- Cat D3, Deere 110 TLB, Kubota BX23 and L3800 and RTV900 with restored 1948 Deere M, 1949 Farmall Cub, 1953 Ford Jubliee and 1957 Ford 740 Row Crop, Craftsman Mower, Deere 350C Dozer 50 assorted vehicles from 1905 to 2006
Its kind of a catch all...I'm amazed and don't even know what a Hospital Chief Engineer does.
Did you take courses similar to a civil engineer or an architectural engineer and also go to med school?
For me it was 4 year Industrial Engineering.
No plans for anything in the medical field...
In 1991 a hospital near me had problems with their generator and needed someone immediately... the contracted company had no one until the following morning which meant cancelling the surgery docket.
The charge nurse said I know someone local and the CEO said at this point make the call...
Just happened to be home for lunch... I have my own property management company.
I said see you in 20 minutes... the starting battery was the problem and within an hour new battery installed, fluids and operation checked.
The CEO asked for my card and asked if I wanted a contract for weekly generator check and exercise...
I said no.
About 2 weeks later got a call asking again and was told I could do the work anytime from 5 pm Friday evening to 5 am Monday morning and I agreed because it was minutes from home and flexible...
Soon was mending broken equipment, servicing steam boilers and sterilizers, vacuum pumps, installed nurse call system, etc...
18 months after I started my weekend gig the decision was made to build a all new 32,000 square feet 6 operating room wing with MRI and CT to follow...
My little weekend side job morphed into full time owners representative for the project...
In 1995 we moved in and I thought ok... mission accomplished.
At that time I was asked to officially be salaried Director of engineering as I was part of the design and construction and knew every inch of the new build and all the players.
Through mergers and acquisitions there were lots of twists and turns leading up to joining a 65,000 employee hospital organization... Lots of Corp folks coming in with ideas that really didn't have a clue and I have outlasted all of them.
As part of the merger my salaried position was eliminated and title changed to Chief... I fought it but my Admin said give it a try... saying you can always quit later.
I make more as an hourly Chief than I did as Salaried Director because being hourly all time on the job is paid... first time ever double time, holiday pay, weekend and night differential, etc...
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