DirtSmuggler
Geotechnical
- Sep 29, 2021
- 29
Back story: I work at a multi discipline company in the NY metro area. Often that we discovered the civil and/or structural department excludes the geotech department in project and try to do the geotech work themselves. About 9 out of 10 times, they screw up and we have to come in and save them. But when we do come in for the save, it can never be billable time. This causes our department to have the highest overhead charges because we have to "be a team player" and help them out. The other department try to do the geotech work themselves, sometimes to save cost, and sometimes to keep their own department busy (and hours) instead of "outsourcing" it to the geotech department. Other department head are quite arrogant and think their department matter more than ours. Whenever we do get added to collaborate projects, the budget allocated to us is tiny compared to everyone else. So its very difficult to stay under budget. Whereas other departments spend most of their time "drafting emails" which are "very important". So are department often goes out and try to find are own work and our own clients individually to keep billables and profits up. But we are always forced to prioritize the collaborative projects over our own individual project. So I don't feel like the geotech department is valued here. I don't know if this is the same at other multi-discipline company. I'm only staying at this company because my direct boss is awesome and has taught me so much. I love learning from him and want to learn as much as I can before he retires in 5 years. So I'm here for the growth (salary is lower compared to other offers). But I don't know how long I would want to stay here. Additionally, geotech salary are much lower than those in the structural and civil department at this company.
So I was wondering, where will geotech engineers be most valued in 5 years? Whether within the US or internationally. Within the US, I hear from coworkers that Colorado (tunnels) will be good for geotech and internationally I'm hearing Singapore (tunnels) and New Zealand (rail). Salary and respect are much higher there vs the US. I wondering what insight the community has on the future for geotech and where they would be most valued.
So I was wondering, where will geotech engineers be most valued in 5 years? Whether within the US or internationally. Within the US, I hear from coworkers that Colorado (tunnels) will be good for geotech and internationally I'm hearing Singapore (tunnels) and New Zealand (rail). Salary and respect are much higher there vs the US. I wondering what insight the community has on the future for geotech and where they would be most valued.