HURRICANE IAN THOUGHTS
Posted on Sep 28 in Member BlogDear FMCA Members,
As you know, Hurricane Ian is not pulling any punches and this storm will affect the majority of our state in many ways. Having been through many major storms living here in Pensacola and across the Panhandle, I firsthanded know what the impacts of this storm will be for the areas in the path. Especially knowing that it will be a CAT 4 or 5 when it makes landfall. Here are some of my thoughts for you to work with. No pressure and some of you will already know what to do but thought it can’t hurt to pass this info on to you just to be safe.
Here are my thoughts:
- Waterways may close down due to sunken boats and debris. In Hurricane Ivan, they closed the waterways to navigation for 30 days. This made it to where we couldn’t do any over water work for 30 days. Then they opened them to commercial work only which was when we could then move forward. Then shortly after, they opened up the waterways to the public once they cleared or marked all sunken obstacles.
- Bridges and roads may get damaged to a point that they will be unusable for a year or two. You will need to think about how you will travel to work and which jobs you will take based on site access. Boat travel may be your new way to get to places instead of the regular roads. In Hurricane Ivan, our main Interstate 10 bridge was damaged and all interstate traffic had to be rerouted. In Hurricane Sally, our main connecting bridge to Gulf Breeze was wiped out and we have been almost 2 plus years without being able to use that bridge. Everyone had to drive 45 minutes one way out of the way to get to their jobs and pay a daily toll to & fro once they were reinstated. I do believe they will suspend tolls for a while until things get back to some sort of order but they will definitely reinstate them before you are ready.
- Be careful of the contracts you take. For new contractors, taking anything you can get your hands on will make sense but for the contractors that have been around a while, you will need to strongly consider only working your existing clientele list because they will ALL call at the same time all wanting to be first and it will turn into a madhouse just trying to get them all lined up better yet taking any new clients and adding them to the list. Reassure all of your current contract load that you are committed to their work first. Also, call everyone of your current contracts and discuss how the storm will affect your agreement already in place. Will you need to take a step back and re-evaluate what needs to be done and then move forward with the new plan? Will they have house damage and want to put their marine project on the back burner? Or, will the house take so long that they will do the marine project first now to bring them to some sense of normalcy? You will just need to know where you stand with each commitment you already have in place befoer making new commitments. I would suggest hiring someone that specifically tracks your contracts and leads and include their salary cost in bidding the new work.
- This leads into your forward thinking commitments. It doesn’t do you any good to over commit and then not be able to get to the work for a while or perform it at all. You will get overwhelmed and your clients will not be patient. Make your list of crews that you have available. Also, categorize crews by their talents/skill. Then make a list of jobs for each crew and apply time frames to them. Add time buffers for weather and materials delays. Then fill in the scheduled spots with projects and don’t stray from it. Don’t tell people what they want to hear. Tell them what you are capable of doing. Be very Honest in your schedule and believe it or not, they will be willing to wait. You really need to manage this area hard. Don’t feel like you need to grab every project. The solid good projects will come and you need to be posotioned to grab them when they are ready and not be wrapped up in a bunch of clean up or debris removal contracts that are now going to weigh you down and keep you from getting to the nice profitable ones you have been waiting for.
- Labor resources are going to be very important. Make relationships with subcontractors, out of town marine contractors and employee leasing agencies. These will all come in handy and help you get the work done. Remember, people from out of town may need your license to work under. Be very careful of working with people you don’t know. Take the time to review their references. Bad workers will cause you more work for yourself which you don’t need when this is all going on at once. When Ivan hit, I went from a 6 person operation to 48 people in a matter of months. You will definitely need to ramp things up.
- Get with your permit agencies that you deal with and get very clear on what the rebuild requirements will be for each agency. Will permits be required or can you build back as was without having to get permits. Will they require “after the fact” permits? I am sure that the Governor will issue an Emergency Executive Order for the affected counties that will allow work to be built back without a state required permit. I will assist in reaching out to the Army Corp and FDEP and see what the plan is immediately after the storm. Photo document each project in it’s entirety and save the photos. Also, ask the client’s for any existing copies of permits or photos that will help you justify what you put back in place. It is good to have a file with as much data in it as possible for each project. The agencies will come knocking later and want to know why something was done if it didn’t meet new codes and you will need to explain this. Also, charge the client for this photo and documentation work.
- Evaluate what materials you will need to finish your current contract load as well as what you will need for new contracts. Consider buying in bulk. Consider trying new material approaches that are not widely used in your area in order to have access to materials faster which will help you to keep things moving forward. You will need to think about buying marine treated wood, composite and fiberglass pilings, vinyl & steel sheetpiling seawall materials, pressure treated framing and decking, composite & fiberglass grated deckings, screws, bolts, hurricane clips, erosion control fabric, turbidity curtains, rope, anchors, fish cleaning tables, aluminum dock ladders, pex and pvc plumbing materials, shingles and metal roofing, electrical conduit. Remember, supplies have already been tough to get so you will want to discuss these items with your suppliers right now.
- Consider that rental equipment will be hard to get. If you already have tractors and excavators on rent, you may want to keep them on rent cause when you let them go you may not be able to get them back. Consider getting large fuel supply tanks in order to keep your equipment, boats, pumps and generators running. I had to drive 2 states over in Ivan in order to get fuel in order to keep things moving. Same with oil.
- Go to the local county and city governmental agencies and let them know you are available to do emergency work if needed. This will be profitable work for you.
- Be prepared to operate in a system where there is no power for weeks. Generators will be your best friend and you will need a few of them. You will need them to run your homes as well as each job site and they will break down so having extra generators is not a bad idea. Same goes for tools. You will need to consider what you need to amp things up to multiple crews.
- Make sure ou have enough cash to operate if the power goes out. It may be that all credit card terminals are not working due to power outages and cash will be king to keep you moving!
- Any claims you may need to file, call and get a claim number even if you are not ready to submit your claim. Just establish your number right away. Then as soon as possible, file the claim. Get yours in the queue right away.
- Last, when approaching projects, before just jumping in the water to work, please make sure the environment is safe. One of the biggest things we learned was that there could be live power wires on land and in the water. You don’t want to just jump in the water without making sure there is no active live power in that project vicinity. They have meters to test the waters. Make sure when working with a client even if it is a year after the storm, that they have all breakers to the dock turned off. Even if there is no dock there. We have learned this as well. Don’t touch any metal in the water until you know it is 100 percent safe. We are almost 20 years past Ivan and still finding live wires in back yards. Crazy!
I will send more thoughts as I have them even if they are one liners but wanted to get this to the membership to start thinking about how to deal with a storm of this magnitude. I hate to say it but this is looking like it will be one of the worst storms to hit Florida so it’s time to go ahead and get your plans in order. Please be safe and remember to let us know if any of you need anything at all and we will rally together to help as possible. I hope all of you make it through this unscathed!!!
Sincerely,
John Loftis
President of The Florida Marine Contractor’s Association
POTENTIAL HURRICANE IAN
Posted on Sep 24 in Member BlogTo All FMCA Membership,
While we thought we made it through this season without any Hurricanes, it appears we have a potential storm breathing down our necks. The cone of uncertainty appears to be heading somewhere right above Sarasota to the Tampa Area all the way to the Panhandle. I expect tomorrow will start defining the true path of the storm. It is expected to become a Cat 4 at some point with landfall around a Cat 3. Depending on where in the state it hits, it could be a Tuesday all the way to Thursday of this coming week for landfall. Not a lot of time to put our plans in place.
Please make the necessary preparations to include fuel, water, food, generators, tools, materials and anything else you can think of you might need to keep work moving forward.
Also, prepare your project job sites to include removing unnecessary materials, loose debris and equipment. Move all boats to onland trailers and all barges to safe havens. Find tucked in coves or rivers that are positioned opposite of the severe winds so that there is land mass protecting your equipment from wave and surge action. Put your equipment in places where if something happens to it it won’t damage other personal properties. Allow for for rising waters in your tying off of equipment. Any permanent project framing needs to be secured as best as possible. Consider holding off on installing decking/seawall top caps that could allow wave action to impact it and destroy the structure. Protect any erosion points with sand bagging or rip rap. Haul off ALL of your stored new materials so you don’t lose them.
Consider your plan moving forward if you are impacted by the storm. Review your contracts immediately and determine all materials you will need in order to keep your current contract load moving forward. Then consider the new and repair work you will need materials for and consider buying in bulk to make sure you have enough to complete your work load. Evaluate your emergency work versus current contract load and communicate to all of your clients your plan going forward. They will be sympathetic and understanding to the situation. Just keep them informed!
While being competitors, consider helping out your fellow contractors near you that may have been impacted worse than you. We are all on the same team and in the same industry.
If your area is directly hit by this storm and you or your business is impacted, please let us know what you need and all members from around the state will rally together to do what we need to help you so that you can repair quickly and get back to moving your business forward. We are ALL in this together!!!
To monitor the storm better, here are some suggested sites on the internet and Facebook that will help you keep an eye on what’s going on with this storm. If you have any sites that are solid and not listed here, please send them to me to send out to the membership.
Hurricane Tracking Sites Below:
https://www.spaghettimodels.com/
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com
On Facebook:
Mike’s Weather Page
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid0NAsQSbvWHYYV4y3fihXZzBNK7AovfiDWvLf8mXXJTt6cPmYS71JMLfqTFXvYTrJrl&id=100044200397606
NOAA National Hurricane Center
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid0wn3xjpS3pxUYNEjNhKCAhe7RoVAgsUtrLm2r7xqt1AFTL15u8HCXjbaiRkmk9dgrl&id=100064875420537
Last, here is the Governor’s Executive Order pertaining to this storm:
https://www.flgov.com/2022/09/24/memorandumexecutive-order-22-219-amending-executive-order-22-218-emergency-management-tropical-depression-nine/
Please be safe! Wish you all well in this next week.
Sincerely,
John Loftis
President of FMCA
HB735 – gaining traction
Posted on Sep 20 in Member BlogI am involved in 1-2 conference calls a week with various Government entities or Florida Representatives about the unintended consequences of HB735. Today was no different, other than I truly feel Paul Renner’s aide, Shannon Shephard, “got it” and will be aligning with us to help rectify the unintended consequences.
Will send out more updates as they develop.
See you at the EXPO October 7th & 8th. Hopefully we will have some good news by then.
Kelly White
FMCA Annual Meeting & Expo 2022-running out of rooms
Posted on Sep 02 in Member BlogGood Afternoon,
We are down to 8 rooms left in our pre-negotiated block of rooms at the $174 rate that includes other perks. Please be sure to register today!!!
If you are a contractor, you do not want to miss Friday’s workshops!!
10:00 am – 10:50 am Electrical Grounding Workshop Bill France Room
Robert Elie, Elie Electric
11:00 am – 11:50 am Marine Engineering/Barges, Cranes & Davits Bill France Room
Roger Guerard, Sea Island Marine Engineering
12:00 pm – 12:30 pm Lunch Bill France Room
12:30pm – 2:30 pm Round Table Discussion amongst Contractors Bill France Room
Topics: Controlling Material Cost
Scheduling Jobs – large projects
Investing in your business, tools, resources, employees
Hiring Practices
New Products, Processes or Tools
2:40 pm – 3:30 pm Construction Contracts & Cost Escalation Bill France Room
Lindsey Brock, McLeod Brock Attorney at Law
5:00 pm – 8:00 pm Welcome Reception in Exhibit Hall Richard Petty
Register today so you don’t lose out on the discounted rates!!!
Any questions call Kelly White 904-553-5189
See you all soon!
Membership Fee Increase
Posted on Jun 09 in Member BlogGood Afternoon Fellow Florida Marine Contractor Member’s,
I have been following many of you on Facebook or Instagram and seeing a lot of nice work taking place across the state. I just want to tell every one of you what a great job you’re doing to change the public’s thinking into realizing that the Marine Industry is a sought after needed profession. We are a dire part of what a Client needs to either enjoy or repair their property. We are also involved in building structures at every major waterfront facility to include marinas, commercial boat ramps, parks, public docks to 1000’s of personal residences across the state. From the Vendors and Suppliers, the Consultants along with the Marine Contractor, again I say, GREAT JOB!
Behind the scenes, your FMCA Board Of Directors and Executive Director Kelly White have been working really hard on some issues around the state that have popped up.
We have had some unintended consequences of House Bill 735 that created a hurricane of issues for the Marine Contractor. Here soon, we will be releasing a write up in more detail on this issue and what we are doing to address it.
We have had seagrass study requirements and issues around the state both at the Federal and State level that need some ironing out. We have internally as a Board had some success in dealing with the FDEP on some of these issues but certainly have more ground to cover.
We are pursuing an exemption for the Florida Marine Contractor to be able to use a surface to water air supply rig (Hookah Rig) without having to be classified as a full fledged diver. This is needed for many reasons.
Intend to pursue legislation & funding that makes it legal for a Marine Contractor to be allowed to use all public boat ramps in order to conduct their business. Advocate for making the locations next to public boat ramps usable for commercial use. I guess we could call it a designated commercial area for contractors.
We have had some issues with contractors trying to get a State Certified Marine Contractor’s license versus finding someone that the state Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB) will approve to sign off on them. This has proven to be one of our biggest issues around the state. We have many qualified individuals from through out the state that are unable to get approved to be a State Licensed & Certified Marine Contractor. They have taken the test but it appears the next steps are near to impossible. I will be doing a detailed write up of this going forward.
In the past, before the economy of 2008 & 2009, we had a lot of momentum with the state legislative branches as well as the Federal and State agencies. We have noticed that we are starting to develop a great rapport with these agencies again along with some direct and very appreciated support from our Governor, Ron Desantis.
Knowing what FMCA has accomplished in the past with creating the State Certified Marine Contractor’s License along with assisting in the creation of the USL&H work comp code, I first handedly witnessed that all this was done with the help of a qualified lobbyist. When the economic crisis in 2008 and 2009 hit the Marine Contractor across the state, we had to stop lobbying as well as lower dues from $1,000.00 a year down to around $450.00 per year in order to keep membership alive. I was President during that era. My one goal along with the help of the Board of Directors was to save the FMCA. We accomplished that goal and have been building back ever since. Here we are, almost 13 years later with thriving Marine Contractor’s all over the state and our membership is the best it has been in years. It has been a passion of mine for many years to create a working relationship with a new lobbyist to start helping us tackle some of our issues. I didn’t want to just work with anyone. We knew that we needed to work with a group that understood our issues and knew how to navigate the system in order to produce viable results we can sink our teeth into. We are there now! Our board voted last month to move forward with Jenkins Hill Consulting to tackle the above issues I listed above as well as work with us on future issues. My sole goal for FMCA is to bring results to the Marine Industry that give direct benefit to you as a member. I, along with the Board, are excited for this move. Please understand that this doesn’t come for free unfortunately so I made the recommendation in our last meeting to increase our membership dues from the $450.00 per year to $650.00 per year starting effective for renewals due in July. It is the minimum needed in order to not impact your wallets too hard but still make this lobbying decision viable. I was President when we voted to drop the membership fees so I feel it is only right for me to be the one to request to increase them. Please understand that I weigh a lot into this decision and would never push for it unless I truly thought it would directly affect your companies in