Showing posts with label wages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wages. Show all posts

Monday, October 17, 2022

State Of The Industry, Fall 2022 (Tree Planting in Western Canada)

“Conflicting Economic Data.”  That seems to be the current theme of Canada’s financial reality.  And the same phrase may perfectly describe the situation that western Canada’s planting industry currently finds itself in.  Bear with me for couple paragraphs of economic commentary, before I go more directly into the outlook for the 2023 planting season.  Economic analysis matters, because I believe that a major recession is coming our way like an oncoming freight train.

Around the globe, inflation is running rampant.  It doesn’t really matter how you define inflation, because all indicators are on the rise:  Food, fuel, other energy, consumer goods, services, etc.  Economists could argue for weeks about the current reasons for inflation, but the basic pressures are heavily rooted in energy supply shocks and a couple years of barely-restrained printing of money by various nations’ central banks (mostly to support global economies during Covid).  The current consumer price index inflation numbers are running at slightly over 7% annually in Canada.  As a result, the Bank of Canada has been pushing up the interbank lending rate, which causes banks to increase their prime rates and all other interest rates.

Higher interest rates generally cause people to pay down debt, rather than spending their earnings on fun things.  Therefore, the goal of higher interest rates is to cut down on consumer spending, which reduces demand for goods and services.  In turn, reduced demand normally puts downward pressure on prices for goods and services.  But higher interest rates also hurt a lot of people, because most of Canada’s population has mortgages, credit cards, and/or loans of various types.  We’re getting attacked from both sides, paying more at the pump, more at the grocery store, more for other goods and services, AND dealing with higher interest rates on top of that.  Sure, the higher interest rates will eventually stop prices from rising so quickly, but as I mentioned earlier, I believe that we’re in for a lot of short-term pain over the next 12-24 months.

In terms of wages, the economy is still quite strong, and there are more job opportunities than there are people to fill them.  The current unemployment rate in Canada is pretty low when compared with historical data.  When unemployment is low, employers need to compete harder to attract employees, so wages go up.  Although there are various ways of measuring this, it is likely safe to say that by year-end, wages in Canada will have increased by at least four percent compared to last year.  Unfortunately, a four percent increase in your wages doesn’t seem so great when everything that you buy costs ten percent more than it did a year ago.

The planting industry’s economic health varies from year to year according to many factors, but usually the most significant impact depends on the basic supply/demand of planting contracts, ie. how many trees the industry needs to plant each year.  When overall industry numbers go up (as they did a few years ago, after the 2017 and 2018 wildfire seasons in BC), tree prices go up at a company level.  And sometimes this trickles down to a corresponding increase in planter prices.  When industry volumes go down, companies bid aggressively to chase a diminishing amount of work, and prices go down.  We saw that happen these past twelve months.  The “boom & bust” periods are especially visible in public government work, which accounts for roughly 20% of the trees planted in BC each year.  However, work for private clients makes up the other 80% of industry volume.  Private client pricing (mills, logging operations) is more stable than public tenders, because a lot of that work is based upon multi-year agreements between mills and planting contractors who work together year after year.

Going into 2023, industry volumes are decreasing.  In 2022, we think that BC planted about 286 million trees.  The estimate for 2023 is roughly 262 million trees.  Planting contractors are therefore competing for a piece of a smaller pie.  Supply/demand economics dictate that public bid prices would normally decrease during the Viewing Season (for 2023 projects), which is just starting to ramp up.  But a drop in prices is the last thing that we need right now.

Company owners have numerous expense items to worry about.  Fuel has obviously jumped significantly in the past 12 months.  Buying a truck is more expensive.  Truck rental costs are rising significantly right now for 2023.  Prices for parts are higher, and maintenance/repair costs are way up.  For companies that have a Business Line of Credit or Payroll Credit Facility, interest rates are now double what they were six months ago.  Employer contributions on CPP and EI are also increasing, by 4.38% and 5.56% respectively (which of course is compounded if labour costs are increasing).

Food costs are much higher than a year ago.  The kitchen team from my camp did a comparison study of invoice prices from GFS for 2022 vs. 2021, using a basket of approximately thirty commonly purchased items, and the average price increase was 35.5%.  That’s stunning.  The only people that benefit from this are planters who work out of camp-based operations with kitchens, because they are shielded from these food cost increases (except when buying their own food in town on days off).  But these higher food costs are certainly hurting the companies that run camps.

There may be significant other challenges that companies have to navigate.  I’m a bit out-of-the-loop on this right now, but there were rumours of enhanced requirements for on-site dressing stations in 2023, and also for more ETV’s spread throughout the workforce.  Having more first aid gear available is unquestionably a benefit for workers.  But who is going to pay for this?  The workers?  If company owners don’t recognize and budget for these potential costs, and bid accordingly, that’s exactly what might happen.

Commercial regs for flight crew fatigue are changing for small operators in mid-December (large operators had to implement these same changes 24 months earlier).  Although the exact rules are quite complex, a general starting point is that the maximum length of a pilot’s "duty day" is being cut from 14 hours to roughly 12 hours per day (the exact length will vary based on certain criteria).  This means that if a pilot arrives at the hanger to start pre-flight planning at 5am, they have to be home with the machine parked and flight plans closed by 5pm, which of course means that they will have to leave the field worksite earlier than most of us are accustomed to.  The maximum hours of daily "flight hours" is also being cut, to 8 hours per day, although this won’t have significant impact since the machine isn't usually running that many hours in a day (except maybe up in High Level).  However, the minimum length for the "rest period" from night to morning is being raised from 10 hours to 12 hours.  It thus becomes essentially impossible for a pilot to fly trees out to stock up a block in the evening, then to return early the next morning to move crews. 

Going back to the length of duty day, the 12 hour day is a best-case scenario.  The exact regs are very complex, and depend on things such as the number of flights per day (that's the number of start/stop cycles of the machine's engine, not take-offs and landings).  The duty day length will also depend on the start time in the morning.  When a pilot starts especially early in the morning, their duty day becomes shorter.  So for example, a pilot doing seven or fewer flights in a single duty day, whose flight cycles are typically between 30 and 50 minutes duration, can only have 11 hours for duty day if they start at 5:59am or earlier.  Let's say that you need a pilot on site at 7am to start slinging trees before the planters arrive, but the ferry time from the airfield to Staging is 1hr.  The pilot will need to start their duty day with the pre-flight inspection and filing of flight plan no later than 5:30am in order to get in the air by 6am, and even that is optimistic because most rotary wing operators will budget a full hour from start time to being airborne.  Because the official start of the duty day is earlier than 6am, the pilot is now only allowed to have a duty day length of 11 hours.  So that could mean that the duty day runs from 5:30am to 4:30pm.  But since the pilot needs an hour of ferry time after planting to get back to the airport, AND time for post-flight and closing the flight plan, they really need to start flying home at 3pm.  Which means that planters might need to fly out of the block starting at 2:15pm.

One solution would be to run two pilots with each machine, to give planters a longer day, but helicopter companies would be reluctant to do this because it would double their labour costs.  Machine costs would also increase significantly if a helicopter needed to return to the airfield mid-day for a crew swap.  And on top of that, the industry doesn't have enough high-hour qualified pilots to make that scenario to work on a broad basis.

There are slight variations and allowances to these changes for certain situations, and a commercial pilot will have a better understanding.  Some details are available here, but again, the CARS regs are very complex.  The bottom line is that these changes will probably impact almost all planting operations that use helicopters extensively, so Project Managers need to contact their preferred helicopter providers and get a full understanding of these potential changes, before putting together any more heli budgets.  Helicopter use may become increasingly associated with constrained production.

There is also a good chance that minimum wage will jump significantly before next summer.  That’s great for workers in many underpaid industries.  It’s also good for tree planters, because companies that hire first-time workers must pay everyone at least the equivalent of minimum wage (including overtime) if their piece-rate earnings are not sufficient.  Will companies that hire large numbers of first-time planters have the foresight to plan for this possibility, and adjust bid prices upward?  A rising tide floats all boats.

Let’s go back to the lower industry volumes.  Can anything be done about this?  A few years ago, we thought that volumes would be historically strong for the next several years.  Part of that was based on the assumption of strong growth of federal tree planting projects, from programs such as the federal “2 Billion Trees” initiative.  But the 2BT program is struggling to scale up quickly, which isn’t a real surprise.  I’m quite familiar with the program, having acted as a project lead proponent for small projects both this year and last year, but my work (on the east coast) has been with very small numbers of seedlings.  For 2BT to work, big players need to design projects that will result in tens of millions of trees being planted, and there are a lot of challenges associated with designing such a project (especially in figuring out where to plant the trees).

In a perfect world, several of the dozen largest planting contractors would each purposefully plan to scale back operations in 2023 by retiring a camp.  I know of at least one major contractor that has already made a conscious decision to do exactly that.  If several companies planned to downsize this way, there would be less concern about the limited number of trees that are available for 2023.  But wait, why should we expect just the biggest companies to save the day?  If every company (regardless of size) downsized by just 8.3%, then the overall 2023 volume would be appropriate for the slightly smaller planting industry.  In such a scenario, supply-based downward pricing pressure would disappear, and bid prices would undoubtedly jump significantly.  Company owners AND their workforces would benefit.  Our industry is nimble enough to do this, but do company owners have the resolve?  Again, it’s the company owners that are hurting themselves if they don’t understand the need for every company to scale back slightly.

Planters expect wages to increase in 2023.  They know that wages are increasing in just about every other sector, and they know that workers are scarce.  What will happen if bid prices decline this fall, and owners have to tell planters after Christmas that planter prices are staying the same?  How many planters will seek employment elsewhere?  Will planting companies be able to hire enough people to get through 2023?  A lot of companies struggled to get their trees planted last year due to hiring challenges, and million of “spring” trees didn’t get planted until July.  Hiring will likely be even harder this year, considering the general labour market situation, so why risk chasing too many trees?  It’s better for companies to aim to scale back.

What else can planters (and companies) expect from 2023?  Well, from what I’ve seen so far, there are a few challenges to look forward to:

-        Head Protection:  WorkSafe has mandated the use of head protection on ALL understory planting in BC from now on.  While a hardhat may not protect you if an entire tree falls onto you, it could make a difference if you get hit by a dead branch.  Of course, hard hats bring their own separate problems, and planters hate wearing them.  Incidentally, we’re also seeing an increase in expectations for due diligence with more detailed DTA assessments.

-        Wildfire Planting:  There has been a LOT of wildfire restoration work in BC in the past four years.  Probably more than twenty companies have worked in the Elephant Hill fire alone since 2018.  Planting continues there, but so does grass encroachment.  As the grass spreads each year, the difficulty increases.

-        Plastic Ribbon:  The Cariboo-Chilcotin region (ranchland) banned the dropping of plastic flagger this past year, to protect cattle from eating plastic.  The full impact of this change was not felt in 2022, as a lot of multi-year contracts were still in progress.  But several multi-year contracts just ended, and the flagger ban throughout this region will be more ubiquitous in 2023.  Couple this with thicker grass in the burns, and we’re going to see a lot of double plants in 2023.  The industry MUST find a cost-effective supply of biodegradable ribbon soon, or loosen up spacing rules.  There are now a limited number of 500' rolls of corn starch ribbon available from Motion for $2.87 per roll, which is approximately three times the cost of polyethylene plastic flagger.  But if everyone bidding on no-flagger contracts were to add another 1.0 cents per tree to their bid price, that would be enough to purchase one roll of biodegradable flagger for roughly every one box of trees planted.  Bidders can pass the cost of this product on to clients!  We just need to make sure that every bidder factors that cost into their bid prices.  Easier said than done, of course.  Also, that price might eventually come down some, if the industry starts buying the corn starch product in large quantities.

-        Unwrapped Trees:  Again on the theme of saving plastic, more planters may see boxes being shipped this year without bundle wrappers.  It’s a great concept.  Single-use plastic is no good for anyone.  If western Canada plants 400 million trees per year including the prairies, that’s probably 30 million bundle wrappers per year that end up in landfills and occasionally scattered across blocks.  And aside from the plastic, if it takes 5 seconds to unwrap each bundle, that’s costing planters 2.5 million minutes each year.  I’m all for reducing plastic, and I’m quite familiar with planting trays of unwrapped trees on the east coast.  But when planters have to share boxes and each person has to do a count of their share of the box, unwrapped trees become a challenge.  We've also discovered that some nursery packing crews can’t count, resulting in boxes that don't have the correct number of seedlings in them.  When boxes are overfilled, it hurts the nursery, it hurts the planters, and it indirectly hurts the planting companies.  Nobody benefits except the Clients, who get free trees.  Nurseries that are moving in this direction need to implement working quality control systems BEFORE unwrapped trees become more widespread.  Perhaps it would help to tie the bundles with twine?  Or even better, wrap them in a band of light kraft paper or wax paper with a small piece of masking tape to seal the wrapper.  That would continue to protect the plugs better than a box of loose trees, which the forestry clients would prefer.  And it would allow for better monitoring of counts (both on the planter side and the nursery side), while still eliminating plastic wrappers.

-        Vehicle Safety:  I'll cautiously comment that vehicle safety seems to be improving slightly throughout the industry in the past few years.  Yes, I'm aware of some exceptions, and some accidents.  But we're generally seeing more common sense.  I have to give a shout out to ABBA here.  My crews meet a lot of other companies on the road, and this year, ABBA wins my award for the most professional radio use and cautious driving, at least when we worked in the same area back in April/May.  There seems to more of a safety-driven impetus from some Clients recently, a few of whom are asking for GPS trackers and/or dash cams (audio off) in their contractors' vehicles.  These devices probably make some people drive more cautiously, which is good.  A side note:  For anyone working in the Sparks wildfire area in 2023, be careful.  Some of those roads are going to be pretty sketchy when they're wet.

-        Access:  I’ll focus again on the regions where wildfire planting has been happening for the past few years.  It’s safe to say that in those regions, the low-hanging fruit has been plucked.  Each year, the blocks become more difficult to access.  Helicopter work is becoming more common.  And that brings up a good point.  What happens if someone gets hurt on a block where it’s impossible to extract a seriously injured patient without a helicopter?  Do companies have helicopters on standby for emergency situations such as this?  This is a good time to put in a plug for the services of the TEAAM helicopter recovery service for remote workers.

In terms of fire activity, as of October 17th there were still 202 active wildfires burning in BC.  That's crazy.  I've never seen so much active smoke during a Viewing Season.  Many of these fires will impact our industry in 2024 and beyond.

This year’s Viewing Season is really just getting under way in earnest in the past two weeks, and companies are on the edge of their seat about what will happen.  Will we see lower prices, due to decreased industry volumes?  Will we see higher prices, due to a recognition of how inflation is significantly affecting the cost of running a company?  We’re in the middle of an economic tug-of-war.  Now you see why I started off with the phrase, “Conflicting economic data.”  If company owners are smart, most of them will downsize slightly.  If that happens, bid prices will increase this year DESPITE the lower industry volumes, and companies will be able to react appropriately to general wage and inflation trends.

Considering what we had to deal with for the last three years, it seems crazy to say that 2023 may be the most challenging year that the industry has seen in decades.  But this time, the challenge will be economic rather than a global health pandemic.  Let’s hope, in the coming weeks, that company owners will bid appropriately …

 

Jonathan “Scooter” Clark 

www.replant.ca

 

Comment, December 15th - Many companies chased volume, and bid prices are down overall (sometimes significantly) from the levels of two years ago.  I'll put together a full report by the time the WFCA Conference happens at the end of January, and I'll link that here.

 


 

 

Links to Previous "State Of The Industry" Posts:

Fall 2021:  https://jonathan-scooter-clark.blogspot.com/2021/10/state-of-industry-fall-2021-bc-tree.html

Spring 2021:  https://jonathan-scooter-clark.blogspot.com/2021/04/state-of-industry-2021.html

Fall 2019:  https://jonathan-scooter-clark.blogspot.com/2019/09/state-of-industry-2019-bc-tree-planting.html

Fall 2018:  https://jonathan-scooter-clark.blogspot.com/2018/09/state-of-industry-british-columbia-tree.html



 

Thursday, October 25, 2018

Tent Camps versus Motel Shows


A Comparison of Accommodation Types for Tree Planting Employment


Many planters argue about what type of work is better:  planting where you’re living in a tent in a bush camp, or planting where you’re living in a motel.  I’m not going to say which is better, because it depends entirely upon the individual.  I do both types of work every year, with approximately three months doing work in a tent camp in the Interior, and approximately three months (spring/fall) doing planting on Vancouver Island’s north coast.  Admittedly, I stay in a half-condemned camper trailer when I’m in a tent camp, but let’s overlook that luxury for now.  There are pros and cons to both situations, so let me try to illustrate the differences.

There are three main areas on which to compare the two situations:  planting earnings, cost of living, and miscellaneous non-financial considerations.  Planting earnings are highly variable, and depend on the person.  This is where the majority of dissent and even outrage from readers will be generated, from people who don’t agree with my opinions.  However, when it comes to Cost of Living and Miscellaneous Non-Financial Considerations, the facts are pretty straightforward, and hard to argue.  Let’s get the most contentious part out of the way first then.


Planting Earnings

This is going to be the most contentious section of this post.  Most planters tend to defend the regions that they’re working on, because they don’t like to believe/admit that they’re not getting a good deal for themselves.  Many planters also criticize people planting for other companies and/or in other parts of western Canada, without a full understanding of how a particular company operates or what current conditions are on a particular contract.  Some companies improve, others become less professional over time, or start making mistakes that will ultimately have a negative effect upon their reputation as a good company to work for.

A lot of planters look at the western Canadian planting industry in a very simplistic sense, of north vs. south.  I’ve seen hundreds of people commenting over the years about “how it is” in the industry, and many of these people have only ever worked for one or two companies.    I’m not sure how these people can consider themselves to be experts.  Look at me:  I spend a few months each summer supervising for a large northern company, working in northern BC and Alberta, and I also spend a few months each year doing coastal planting, typically spring and fall work on the north Island.  I’ve also worked for about fifteen different companies during my career.  Despite all this, I don’t even consider myself to be an expert!  I don’t think anyone can be.  Having said that, I’m going to give you my reasoned opinions on everything.

I’ve tracked my earnings as a planter for more than a decade, at a number of companies, and dozens of contracts, in varied regions and under a huge diversity of planting styles and contract specs.  To be fair, when I’m planting for the company that I also work as a camp supervisor for, I don’t typically get a lot of planting days in a season; typically only about ten to sixteen days.  Sometimes this is an extra small contract in August that a half dozen of us do together.  Sometimes it is a few days of planting here and there in my own camp, on days off and when special missions need to be done.  For those projects, I need to make adjustments to ignore the part days (because my supervising responsibilities take priority), and I usually only consider full days, to get less biased data.  Also, if I’m planting during the season, I rarely plant full days on a regular block; that just doesn’t make sense.  If I do plant during my regular season, it’s usually because I’m dealing with scraps, holes, problems, or special missions.  So most of my planting data at that company comes from August projects, because I’ve been able to plant full-time on five the last six of those projects).

Here’s the part that will probably cause a lot of people to start arguing:  I make more money planting per day at my northern rookie mill company than I do planting on a good contact on the coast.

Now, before everyone starts screaming in disbelief, let me remind you that this statement is based upon years of spreadsheet data that I’ve collected.  My typical daily earnings on the coast are around $330 per day.  My typical daily planting earnings at the northern company are around $370 per full day.  And the interesting thing is that these numbers have been very consistent from season to season over the past decade.  I’m past the point of improving my production due to additional experience.  If that’s happening, it’s being offset by the fact that I’ve planted for so long I don’t care about numbers anymore.  Now to be fair, we usually plant for an hour longer per day up north, so my average planting time works out to about 8.5 hours per day on the coast, and up north works out to about 9.5 hours per day.  When you break my daily averages out on a hourly basis, they are almost exactly the same, no matter where I work ($38.80 to $38.90).  Even more interesting, I consistently find that I earn almost exactly the same amount per hour whether I’m planting 20 cent trees on the coast, 30 cent trees on the coast, 45 cent trees on the coast, or 11 cent trees in northern Alberta.

Please note that this is all based on data from 2010-2018 inclusive, a period of relatively stagnant earnings.  These numbers may seem outdated to readers a few years from now, if prices and earnings actually start to rise significantly with the expected demand for planting labour in 2019-2021.

Based upon my personal experience, and based upon discussions with dozens of planters, foremen, and supervisors at twenty other companies over the past few years, this is my gut feeling about prices throughout western Canada:

Northern BC & Alberta:  Earnings are decent for a planter with a few years of experience, albeit living conditions are tough.  This area takes the most criticism (sometimes deserved, sometimes not) but probably gets more than it deserves.  A lot of 5-10 year vets who move to other areas say that they made terrible money when they planted up north.  Well of course they did.  If they started between 2007 and 2012, the money WAS terrible, as the economic recession hit this region much harder than the others.  And they were much less skilled planters than they are now.

Northern Coastal work:  Earnings are decent, albeit you need quite a few years of experience to get a job.  Planting is very difficult, but you don’t have to stay in a camp.  If you can get remote work with one of the top companies (Rainforest, Stephen, some of the other small operators), earnings can be stellar.

South/Central Island Coastal:  Prices have been under a LOT of pressure over the past decade.  My daily earnings always drop when I get down to Campbell River, Courtney, Comox, or further south.  This may be due to a large number of planters who live at home in those areas.  Labour supply goes up, prices decrease.  This is probably the worst area to work.

Southern Interior BC:  Prices at most of the smaller companies are quite good.  There’s still great money to be made here.  Living in motels is great, especially once you’ve been planting for several years and the tenting lifestyle no longer appeals to you.  The only real drawback (which is not a drawback to some people) is that the seasons down there are much shorter than northern BC or Alberta.

Of course, all of the above considerations are very general observations.  Certainly, experiences can vary tremendously from company to company, and from contract to contract.

It always amuses me to hear 20-year coastal vets saying that they don’t like working up north because they don’t want to have to bend over 3000 times in a day.  I can respect that.  But then I hear dozens of 2nd and 3rd year vets, who have only ever worked at one or two companies, parroting the same line.  Personally, I don’t mind bending over 3000 (or 4000) times in a day.  What I hate is climbing up steep hills and over giant carpets of slash.  I’m not saying that someone who doesn’t like bending over 3000 times is wrong.  I’m just saying that everyone can have their own opinion that matches what their body prefers.  There is no right or wrong.  If some of those northern planters spent a day on some of the tough coastal blocks that I’ve worked on, they might quickly run back to their Alberta farm fields.  I’ve worked on many coastal blocks where I’ve thought how much easier it would be to plant five Alberta trees at 11 cents each than it would be to plant one coastal tree at 35 cents.

Anyway, the point of this section is that planting earnings can vary widely depending on where you’re working.  Prices are generally much higher in the Southern Interior and on the coast than they are in northern BC or in Alberta.  Despite this, higher prices do not necessarily translate to higher earnings.  In the end, it is my daily earnings that matter the most to me.  I do believe that earnings can generally be higher in the Southern Interior than in northern BC or Alberta.  But I also believe that most people need at least four to five years of experience before they’re truly ready for the more technical ground that many small Southern Interior companies specialize in.


Cost of Living

I’ve addressed this issue before, in other discussions on Replant, but it’s an important consideration.  In a camp, you typically pay camp costs of $25 per day (usually $27 to $34 per day if you work in Alberta).  You usually only pay those on planting days, when meals are provided.  On days off, you are responsible for feeding yourself, in town, at your own expense.

When working on a motel contract, you typically pay $25 per day in ‘camp costs’ to cover a portion of the cost of your motel room (the employer subsidizes the rest).  This cost is incurred every night, regardless of whether or not it is a work day.  In addition, you have to pay for your own food.  My experience, based upon a decade of tracking personal food costs for groceries while working on the coast, has been that I need to budget about $20/day to feed myself (that’s under a cost-conscious regime where I don’t eat fast food or eat meals at restaurants).  That expense, naturally, also needs to be paid regardless of whether or not it is a work day.

Let’s compare these costs under the assumption of a 3&1 shift schedule.  In a bush camp in BC, you’d pay $25/day for three days (camp costs) and $20/day on the fourth day (food in town), which works out to a total of about $95 for the shift.  This breaks down to $23.75 per calendar day for living expenses.  If you wisely account for this against your planting earnings, this cost of $95/shift, set against three days of planting, means that the first $31.67 of each day’s planting earnings go towards your cost of living.

In a motel, you’ll be paying $45 per day for the first three days ($25 motel plus $20 food), and then exactly the same thing on the day off.  The total is therefore $180 for the shift.  This breaks down to $45.00 per calendar day for living expenses (as opposed to $23.75 in a camp).  If you wisely account for this against your planting earnings, this cost of $180/shift, set against your three days of planting, means that the first $60.00 of each day’s planting earnings go towards your cost of living (as opposed to $31.67 in a camp).

Obviously, surrendering your first $60.00 of each day’s earnings to your cost of living is a pretty steep price to pay for being a tree planter.  By living in a camp, you can save yourself approximately $28.33 per day.  This is one reason why daily earnings MUST be higher for motel jobs; because your cost of living is also higher.

In this analysis, I’ve neglected the impact of income taxes.  Your planting earnings are taxed, but your food and camp cost expenditures are deducted from after-tax income, which skews the numbers even more in favor of tent camps and against motel accommodations.  Luckily, in some cases, planters are able to used T2200’s or Remote Work Allowance (RWA) to negate the taxation implications.

In this analysis, I’ve neglected the impact of slightly higher camp costs in Alberta (which are due to food costs being higher in Alberta).  Of course, some of the companies working in Alberta are more likely to have 4&1 work shifts, which counterbalances the higher camp costs.  Also, my daily food costs may be higher or lower than your own circumstances.  I admittedly do eat a lot, but again, I stay away from restaurants and other high-cost food items in order to stretch my food budget.  Rice and pasta help in that respect.

Bottom line, anyone reading this that wants more accurate numbers could re-do my calculations based upon the precise camp costs at your own company, based upon your own eating/cooking habits, and based upon your personal tax situation.


Sample Analysis Assessing Earnings and Cost of Living

Now that you have an understanding of how earnings and cost of living can vary, let’s do a sample analysis.  Let’s say that you’re a moderately decent third-year planter, working for a northern BC company, and you usually average about $275/day in a 66 day season, with shifts of 4&1.  Let’s say that you think you could average $350 per day if you worked for a high-end Southern Interior company for their spring season, but you’d be living in a motel and working 3&1’s.  You expect that you’d get about 44 planting days at that company (because they start April 26th and have work until June 21st, which is common for those companies).

Northern Company:
66 Planting Days @ $275 = $18,150
Less Camp Costs of 66 Planting Days @ $25 = -$1,650
Less Food on Days off (24 @ $20) = -$480  (allowing for some extra days off on camp moves)
  Total NET earnings for Season:  $16,020

Southern Company:
44 Planting Days @ $350 = $15,400
Less Motel Costs of 58 Calendar Days @ $25 = -$1,450
Less Food Costs for 58 Calendar Days @ $20 = -$1,160
  Total NET earnings for Season:  $12,790

In these two examples, it’s obvious that although your average daily earnings are higher at the Southern company, your total season earnings are higher at the Northern company.  This is common.  However, this doesn’t factor in the non-financial benefit of having five extra weeks off in late June and July.  For university students, the total earnings are usually the most important consideration.  For non-students, who often work in the early spring too, the appeal of planting in July is not a big selling point.

Now that you have a good understanding of how to consider all of the financial ramifications of various options, let’s look at the non-financial considerations.  For some planters, these are the points that are the most important.  It’s not always all about the money, even though your earnings are important.


Miscellaneous Non-Financial Considerations

For some people, money is not the most important deciding factor.  If you’ve ever studied Organizational Behaviour (or a few dozen other academic subjects), you’ve probably read about Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.  There are safety, behavioural, self-esteem, and self-actualization needs that can be considered in your decision:

Tent Camp Advantages
-        More active social life
-        Having meals cooked for you
-        Some people really enjoy camping
-        Can sometimes be situated quite close to the blocks (contract dependent)
-        Usually fairly good gender balance
-        And as mentioned above, lower cost of living and longer work days

Tent Camp Disadvantages
-        Living in a tent sucks during bad weather
-        Camp moves are painful (although so are moves to a new motel)
-        Less privacy, unless your tent is far away from everyone else
-        Hard to sleep on the night off, if everyone is partying
-        Less likely to shower on a daily basis

Motel Advantages
-        Showering nightly, with no lineup
-        Get to choose your own diet
-        More privacy, and easier to sleep on the night off
-        A dry bed during poor weather conditions
-        And as mentioned above, shorter work days

Motel Disadvantages
-        Really sucks if you don’t like to cook, or aren’t good at cooking
-        Drives to the blocks tend to be longer, on average
-        Social activities are unlikely to involve the whole crew
-        Gender balance frequently skewed towards heavily male dominated
-        And as mentioned above, you pay for your food and motel, 7 days per week


Conclusions

The strength of our industry is the diversity.  There is no “best” type of accommodation or planting solution, otherwise, every single company would adopt that.  The industry needs the high priced motel shows and highly technical planting that attract highly experienced planters.  The industry needs the large tent camps full of planters with less than three or four years of experience, who can quickly learn to plant well on easy ground.  The industry needs small shoulder seasons of work in February/March/April and again in the fall on the coast, to retain highly experienced planters in the industry.  The industry needs the vast majority of the work to be easier ground that falls into the May/June/July window, so it can be performed by college and university students seeking temporary summer employment, but who generally have no interest or desire in a long-term career as a planter.  In short, the industry needs to have as much variety as possible, because tree planters’ needs and motivations are so varied.

So there you have it.  There is no universal “best situation” that fits all users.  Tree planters are diverse, tree planting contracts are diverse, tree planting companies are diverse, and peoples’ desires are diverse.  You should make a decision about what is best for you based on your own desires, not based upon what other people tell you is best.