>>397174Yes. the money is that good. its not exactly the hourly rate its the amount of days / hours you can work. you had better be ready willing and able to work a fuckton of hours. you will be payed alot of money. but you will be expected to work, work work,. its ok though. nothing else to do in ND. just dont blow all you money. save as much as you can as fast as you can. you wont want to be here any longer than o have to.
see
>>396726 its all true. see also
>>396717most reputable companies will provide or assist with housing somehow. most all companies in ND all desperate for skilled, even semi-skilled workers. it is not that difficult to line up a job b4 you come here. just start making some contacts. make sure you negotiate for good benefits, pay and housing. once you get here you will hate yourself if you take a shitty deal and are stuck with it. they will invest alot of money in you for safety training and stuff. some employers will put it in the contract they can take the expense of your training out of your pay if you quit/resign before 6 months or something. Main thing - negotiate housing or housing allowance, per diem or something to make up for it.
Schlumberger, Halliburton, XTO, Baker-Hughes, Wolf Oilfield serevics, Mitchells Oilfield services,..theres a ton of companies they're all looking for people.
one of the big hazards is traffic/driving year round, but especially in winter