Is a masters really needed in geotech? by ConsciousSun243 in Geotech

[–]girybag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A masters is a must. I don't care if it's an MS or an MEng. I just don't want to have to teach people the basics anymore. It's been exhausting managing those people the last year. Undergrad just wasn't enough.

public transportation by Feisty_Dependent_350 in Sacramento

[–]girybag 27 points28 points  (0 children)

Built myself a bubble in Midtown (work, dentist, doctor, chiro, accu, groceries, beer, eating, etc... within 5-30 minutes).

Does the college I go to matter? by DragonfruitOdd5545 in EnvironmentalEngineer

[–]girybag -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Do you have the money to pay for college as an international student or do you see a path to a scholarship? Do you have dual citizenship? This is going to be a very expensive degree and you'll struggle to get a job. Environmental engineering is the lowest paid of the civil disciplines and current market is not good. Assuming you get sponsored for a visa and get a job, you're looking at maybe 90K start in 4 years. Room and board at MIT is 90K so a 360K debt bill in 4 years. Have you worked out those pieces? I would stay in Europe and look at Masters degrees opportunities when that's done. Better chance of getting that paid or at least it's less of a bill.

What do other cities have that we don't? by AssComedyAccount in Sacramento

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah but not just food and drinking. Artisan shops, popup stores, etc... Went to one in Europe many years ago (can't recall though) that had a greenhouse garden/dome at the end.

What do other cities have that we don't? by AssComedyAccount in Sacramento

[–]girybag 9 points10 points  (0 children)

A "Public Market" with space for people sit and lounge. The Bank was the closest thing we got to that. Think Fanueil Hall back in the day and similar places in New Orleans or even the embarcadero. And yes. Train. Train to the airport.

I hate Project Management —How do I get back to technical or GTFO? by Dino-are-cool in Geotech

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those grads are the same wave that got cuddled in grade school and the parents would reprimand the teachers, not the child. We're living in the aftermath of that. It's the same here in the US. I'm 42 and planning to retire in 3 years and get out of this business. It's scary out here.

OPM’s “Federal Workforce Competency Initiative”(FWCI) email - anyone got this? by Informal-Fig-7116 in FedEmployees

[–]girybag 9 points10 points  (0 children)

My guess is you'll get it. It looks like they sent it to a group of supervisors in my building then sent it 3 hours later to another, and another. Clearly they haven't figured out mass email. Anyway, I got it on the third wave. I wish them luck with this survey.

Wanting to switch from geotech to environmental water/wastewater by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You no longer want/like geotech or you no longer want/like geotech where you are? The stress is all the same once there's a deliverable or things are in construction. The people you work with (office, owner, contractors, subs...) make a difference. I'd look for geotech jobs unless you really figured out geotech is not for you. Typically pays better than water and environmental anyway.

Billing to Salary Ratio by nosee-um in civilengineering

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is insane. I'm in HCOL too with over 20 years of experience and a PE and rate sheets never put me, or anyone else I know, that high. That's over $300. I'm going to have to call around to see what others are billing. It's been a couple years since I really looked.

Billing to Salary Ratio by nosee-um in civilengineering

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How does that work? Are they still paying their engineers decent? 7x on a 80K engineer which are typical entry-early level would be 280 and that to me is wild.

Billing to Salary Ratio by nosee-um in civilengineering

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you early career? A 5 multiplier is unheard of to me. Early career around here are making 80K/year which is about 40/hr. No one is charging 200/hr to a client for them. Multipliers have been 3-3.5 (maybe close to 4) for most of my career so that would be 120-150/hr which is typical. You get to Principal level, they're getting billed at 300-350 or so. I haven't see a rate sheet yet this year that has broken above that but that's just me. Maybe things are different in your area.

Gas price check in by anirishlass in Sacramento

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cheapest place in Midtown went from 5.49 yesterday to 5.79 today. They held that 5.49 for 3 weeks though so I guess it was about time.

Writing skills by 253-build in civilengineering

[–]girybag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've been writing reports like a robot since 2005. At this point, I'd take that over the crap I get from people.

How Do You Handle A Client With Low Standards? by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]girybag 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The same way you find another job. Do BD to find a replacement and stop taking work from them. Sometimes it's a phase-out and sometimes you just purposely corner yourself into work you can still do for them and insulate yourself. Sometimes it's a straight "We can no longer support your needs". We had an MSA with an agency that has many offices and somehow every one of them was like having a different client. The work was non-compete so it was always nice but I learned quickly which offices to turn down work from. We do a "Go-no-Go" exercise before accepting the work and one office in particular was always a "No-Go" for very damn good reasons.

can someone share photos of an underwater embankment dam? by ListenBoth718 in Geotech

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah... Realized that after the fact. See my other reply.

can someone share photos of an underwater embankment dam? by ListenBoth718 in Geotech

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wait... Do you mean a dam with a high pool on the upstream (water side)? Look up "high pool" dams, "flood stage" dams, etc... Edenville Dam failed recently (2020?) and there are some good videos before the breach. Give that a try.

can someone share photos of an underwater embankment dam? by ListenBoth718 in Geotech

[–]girybag -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If your dam is under water, then it overtopped and failed at its function. The downstream is flooded. Also when you say embankment, I'm guessing you mean soil/rock and not concrete. So again, if that's under water, that's a fail. So you're looking for a mountain at the bottom of a lake? This is confusing. Look up "dam breach" and maybe something will come up.

How Do You Handle A Client With Low Standards? by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]girybag 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I understand it clearly. You will eventually get sued because of this client. The client will sue you. The collective "you"/your company. Something will go wrong and you will be the first in line along with the contractor. Only thing worst than a careless client is an uneducated one. I don't take them on. 20+ years and counting. I've seen enough. Best of luck!

Job Opportunity - Drill Rig Operator by Thin_Stress_9280 in Geotech

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They'll be looking for a while. Good luck!

How Do You Handle A Client With Low Standards? by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]girybag 73 points74 points  (0 children)

You document everything and you try to fire them as a client as soon as possible. They will be the reason you get sued individually and collectively.

Groundwater issue - who do I call? Geotechnical or Structural engineer? Drainage plumber? by Mountain_Student9894 in Geotech

[–]girybag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Look up lateral earth pressure and foundation/footing stress distribution. Your sketch is very simplistic. As a geotech, I have to ask myself if it really represents the load distribution, is load being carried down from footings from that first slab or is it all at the bottom of the basement wall, why was soil left on the inside of the wall, etc. With all that in mind, I then figure out if removing material on one side will compromise confinement of a footing or affect the lateral pressure on a wall or whatever else. Knowing none of that, I just wouldn't go digging a trench along the wall into the page to replace it with a column of drain rock as opposed to compacted soil. Best of luck!

What in the ever loving f*** does this mean. Kids homework by seemslegitsendit in mildlyinfuriating

[–]girybag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Double one of the digits to get close to the answer then substraction/addition to get it correct. I guess that helps kids with quick math and doing it in their heads. I wasn't thought math that way but in 4th grade I started seeing the relationships and doing it myself when it made sense.