OP
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2004
- Messages
- 24,401
- 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
Take away is it’s always easier to take the path of least resistance and go with the flow and even if you end up going over the waterfall…
Quite possible too involved as I picked out and wrote up the specs as my part of the build team in 1994 always opting for durability for the long haul and made the case it’s actually saving us money…
I won’t argue I’m not the best fit in a large enterprise and 85,000 employees is large.
Case in point if I may…
Corp decided to do a landfill waste audit enterprise wide several months back sending out teams in hazmat suits to empty, sort and document the contents of our landfill stream…
It was quite a production with different colored tarps taking up a section of cordoned off parking lot…
The audit revealed we were fully compliant and the team found nothing that shouldn’t be placed for collection… which I said before they began… they showed up twice.
The exercise was billed to my center in the amount of $25,000 for the audit.
Doing research I found one center was fined a high dollar amount for improper disposal of bloody gauze and surgical drapes so corporate legal said every site must be audited…
We redbag anything with a drop of blood for biohazard disposal and no one would place a redbag in landfill trash…
It could be as simple as engineers tend to calculating and factual and it’s my signature on each manifest…
When dollars are scarce it’s only reasonable they be allocated by substance and not fluff…
Quite possible too involved as I picked out and wrote up the specs as my part of the build team in 1994 always opting for durability for the long haul and made the case it’s actually saving us money…
I won’t argue I’m not the best fit in a large enterprise and 85,000 employees is large.
Case in point if I may…
Corp decided to do a landfill waste audit enterprise wide several months back sending out teams in hazmat suits to empty, sort and document the contents of our landfill stream…
It was quite a production with different colored tarps taking up a section of cordoned off parking lot…
The audit revealed we were fully compliant and the team found nothing that shouldn’t be placed for collection… which I said before they began… they showed up twice.
The exercise was billed to my center in the amount of $25,000 for the audit.
Doing research I found one center was fined a high dollar amount for improper disposal of bloody gauze and surgical drapes so corporate legal said every site must be audited…
We redbag anything with a drop of blood for biohazard disposal and no one would place a redbag in landfill trash…
It could be as simple as engineers tend to calculating and factual and it’s my signature on each manifest…
When dollars are scarce it’s only reasonable they be allocated by substance and not fluff…
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