“We thought that they were a solution when it started,” said Williams County Commissioner Dan Kalil. “But then it got to be such a land rush that it just got way out of hand.”I've talked about this before. When folks are waiting for "their" well to come in, they can't advocate for man-camps strong enough to get the necessary workers in state; once "their" wells have come, it's time to slow things down, I guess.
Williams County, with Williston as the county seat, has approved 9,600 temporary housing beds. But now it has implemented a moratorium on new temporary housing facilities.
But many say the crew camps — particularly the larger camps that are professionally run – are a necessary solution to the housing shortage, which in turn is contributing to a workforce shortage.
Jeff Zarling, president of Williston business development firm DAWA Solutions Group, said he thinks the man camp moratorium is having negative consequences.
Companies are buying single-family houses and crowding several workers in them, or putting up RVs in a disorganized fashion, Zarling said.
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Man-Camps: To Grow Or Not Grow
This link to the Grand Forks Herald sent to me by a reader.
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