Well, Halliburton did not bid, but Zinke's friends company Whitefish got the job.
Here's a glimpse of the job so far.....
https://www.rawstory.com/2017/10/en...-and-threatens-to-leave/#.WfEWqf4qjmk.twitter
This is going to be POTUS level ineptitude.
The reason the standard is the power companies doing a shared attack on the problem is... manpower.
As I understand it, with Texas ad Florida, or any other hurricane, within a few days, they plonk 10 or 15 THOUSAND workers on the ground, with heavy equipment.
White fish is bragging they've got 300 people in PR.
The tail of the prior storm's rains were still falling in Houston as some 400 of those large tree trimmer rigs were caravaning into the county. PR's roads are still largely uncleared... did Whitefish plan for that?
Can they accomplish their contracted task in those conditions?
People
will continue to get sick because of the delays, and some of them will die. The infrastructure situation should have been, literally...
attacked by concerted military construction forces.
People out... earthmovers in. We'll try to have you back home by Christmas.
It should not be handled gently, and be allowed to drag out for 14 months.
And Whitefish doesn't have the logistical experience to play a leading role in that.
I wonder... did we learn exactly nothing from Katrina?
Or did we learn, depending on the nature of the victims, exactly what can be gotten away with?
