Fed Gov Reg's cost Jobs...

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
This exact situation was talked about in another thread. The fact that Fed Gov regulations are responsable for the loss of jobs in our country...employers would pay the wages for the most part, if the government would cover them in over burdening regulations...this article is a perfect example...the guy just quit, costing up to 100-150 good paying jobs...and he didn't take them overseas or to Mexico...he just quit...

BUT...in this situation, barry is probably just as happy..i mean he said he was going to bankrupt the industry....

‘Right Out of Atlas Shrugged’: Hear an Exasperated Alabama Businessman Tell the Feds – ‘I’m Just Quitting’

Posted on July 26, 2011 at 8:50am
Dave Urbanski
Businessman Ronnie Bryant Tells Feds – ‘I’m Just Quitting’ | TheBlaze.com

Ronnie Bryant was vastly outnumbered.

Leaning against a wall during a recent Birmingham, Alabama, public hearing, Bryant listened to an overflow crowd pepper federal officials with concerns about businesses polluting the drinking water and causing cases of cancer.

After two hours, Bryant—a coal mine owner from Jasper—had heard enough and, in a moment being described as “right out of Atlas Shrugged,” took his turn at the microphone:


“Nearly every day without fail…men stream to these [mining] operations looking for work in Walker County. They can’t pay their mortgage. They can’t pay their car note. They can’t feed their families. They don’t have health insurance. And as I stand here today, I just…you know…what’s the use? I got a permit to open up an underground coal mine that would employ probably 125 people. They’d be paid wages from $50,000 to $150,000 a year. We would consume probably $50 million to $60 million in consumables a year, putting more men to work. And my only idea today is to go home. What’s the use? I see these guys—I see them with tears in their eyes—looking for work. And if there’s so much opposition to these guys making a living, I feel like there’s no need in me putting out the effort to provide work for them. So…basically what I’ve decided is not to open the mine. I’m just quitting. Thank you.”

The Blaze contacted Bryant, and he remains as resolute as he was at last week’s public hearing. To him, it’s just not worth the time, money, and regulatory hassle to open up a new mine—even one located in a remote area with less environmental impact.


“If they want to create jobs, provide health insurance, and increase revenue,” Bryant said in reference to the federal government, “they need to back down on the regulatory burden. It’s like pulling an iron ball with a chain. I’m not saying to make it go away—just the stuff that’s not pertinent or useful.”

Terry Douglas, who owns two mines in Jasper with Bryant, said it costs them about $250,000 per mine in permit fees alone and that paperwork and regulatory inspections are a constant presence (as well as an additional revenue strain). When asked about typical concerns surrounding coal mining—including companies skirting health and safety regulations—Douglas said it “doesn’t make sense” to let safety lapse and risk losing miners to illness or injury when it would only cost more to train new personnel.

“We take care of our equipment and take care of our people,” Douglas said. “The regulations make coal miners out to be criminals; but we’re not outlaws. Coal mining is an art. I have a civil engineering degree; Ronnie has a mining engineering degree. It’s not wildcat whiskey we’re making; this is drinking whiskey we got.”

Bryant pointed to less stringent environmental regulations in countries such as China, saying that the U.S. is falling behind even though it has abundant resources. “But you can’t get to them,” he said, adding that while there are concerns over dwindling wildlife populations, “people are becoming the endangered species.”

Gwendolyn Keyes Fleming, regional administrator for EPA’s Southeast Region, attended the Birmingham public hearing but could not be reached for comment.
 

tbubster

Seasoned Expediter
I had a boss like this once.Only it was the union he was going up against.I was working for a cabinet company in shelby twp MI.It had around 150 workers,non union shop I was working in the shipping dept making 14 dollars an hour 6 months after I started.No one that worked there made less then 12 an hour.this was back in the early 90's.Not one job there was back breaking work either.
These guys from the teamsters started coming around at breaks and lunch.well some of my fellow workers started to listen to them and tried to get others to listen.well When the owner found out He called a meeting He let it be known that if he heard anymore talk about people wanting to go union he would shut the doors and lock the gates.He took care of the people that worked for him.payed pretty good,healthcare,
bonuses.On your birthday you got a card and a 50 dollar bill.IF some ones was having a hard time he would help.
well the talk kept up for another week after that .Then one monday morning we started showing up for work and sure enough the doors were locked and so were the gates.The following sunday got a call to be at work the next morning.there was another meeting and the only thing he said to us was next time it will be for good.
Most of us new that the union was not the way to go and we let him know how we felt.My point is weather its the feds or the unions they both need to back up and let the people who create jobs do just that.:D
 

cheri1122

Veteran Expediter
Driver
I can sympathize with the frustration over excessive regulation - if I deliver at night, too far to DH to a truckstop, sleep at Walmart, and head for the ts in the morning, I can't fill the fuel tanks [while I have nothing but time] because it will start the 14 hr clock. I have to wait until I get a load, at which time I usually no longer have the time to wait in line for fuel. So I understand the stupidity of it all, and yet....
The mining industry has a very sorry record on safety - they earned the reputation for taking shortcuts that risk [other people's] lives.
I'd like to see the 'trivial & unnecessary' regulations tossed too - but which ones, exactly, are we talking about? All we ever hear is the vague 'too many' complaint, why has no one compiled a list of the ones they'd like to get rid of?
If the EPA is on it, forget it. Maybe you trust the nice benevolent hardworking honest corporations to refrain from dumping toxic waste into the water supply, but I don't. And I bet a majority of Americans don't either.
 
Top