Anonymous wrote:The OP wants more people unemployed and more families destitute and dependent on the ruling class for survival. The OP fancies simpler times like 14th century Europe when everyone was impoverished and the Black Death claimed 75 to 200 million lives.
Anonymous wrote:We are having our kitchen and breakfast area redone and started before the order. We haven’t had a kitchen to cook for three weeks. We are paying tens of thousands of dollars. The workers have already been exposed to us and they to us. Yes, the workers are still working, it keeps us all sane and I am grateful.
My neighbors are having their grass cut, gardening done, mulch out down, etc.
Mind your own business OP.
Anonymous wrote:I own a landscape company in Maryland and like builders and remodelers, we are allowed to still be working. You can look at the language of the proclamation from Gov. Hogan-I'm sure its very similar to what DC's will be. We protect our clients, ourselves and our families. If we got sick we couldn't work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today in Maryland I have my neighbor getting a new addition worked on today. About 5 trucks and a dozen or so workman. Not a dust mask in sight.
Money talks.
No dust masks to be had for love or money. It means that people who work anyway in dusty environments are more likely to get sick.
Anonymous wrote:Construction is exempt as ‘essential infrastructure’ under most executive orders across the country. I work for a GC and it really is a hard balance. If we shut our sites down then our subcontractors and their employees won’t get paid. Most of those employees live paycheck-to-paycheck and they’re desperate for work.
This isn’t just self-serving commentary—if we had a national healthcare system and more paid leave, the answer would be different. More evidence of this—in jobs near borders where one state prohibits construction and the other allows it, we are seeing surplus labor coming over the border. Nobody wants to get sick but they want to feed their families even more.
Anonymous wrote:Today in Maryland I have my neighbor getting a new addition worked on today. About 5 trucks and a dozen or so workman. Not a dust mask in sight.
Money talks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today in Maryland I have my neighbor getting a new addition worked on today. About 5 trucks and a dozen or so workman. Not a dust mask in sight.
Money talks.
Well, he probably signed a contract and the contractor wants to get paid soon will do the work rather than delay; even if the owner asked to delay, he would be violation of the contract by not allowing access and contractor could penalize him.
Anonymous wrote:I own a landscape company in Maryland and like builders and remodelers, we are allowed to still be working. You can look at the language of the proclamation from Gov. Hogan-I'm sure its very similar to what DC's will be. We protect our clients, ourselves and our families. If we got sick we couldn't work.
Anonymous wrote:Today in Maryland I have my neighbor getting a new addition worked on today. About 5 trucks and a dozen or so workman. Not a dust mask in sight.
Money talks.