G'day Howie,
I guess that sounds pretty sad, in a way. Obviously there must be a lot of unemployment over there which is never good to see. At least your project will relieve some of those problems for some of those people.
By the way, as an aside, what are the workplace safety practices like over there?
I only ask because Australia has very strong WH&S laws. All of our mining and construction companies are very strongly focused on safety in the workplace. This has been a long term culture thing that is firmly entrenched in everybody in the industry. For one small example of this, the typical salutations of "Good Bye" and "See you later" have been replaced with "Have a Safe Day" even at the end of social conversations.
On a project a few years ago we had a Mexican engineer who was fresh from a stint on a couple of major projects in Indonesia. At our regular project strategy and planning meetings he would come up with ways of completing tasks that we considered to be outrageous. After having his ideas shot down he would say "Oh that's right, I keep forgetting I'm in Australia now.".
We never really knew whether his lax approach to safety came from Mexico or from his experiences in Indonesia or maybe even both. We just didn't know, all we knew was that there was a definite clash of cultures which in itself is also a breach of WH&S laws.
I would be interested to hear your thoughts on Indonesian safety practices.
Cheers
Michael