Damage to City property, invoice received

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jlee

Lifer
Sep 12, 2001
48,518
223
106
Imagine if the roles were reversed and city property damaged your car, you'd get laughed in your face if you tried to charge them double your hourly rate for lost work time.

The city's insurance would likely cover repair + rental.
 

LiuKangBakinPie

Diamond Member
Jan 31, 2011
3,903
0
0
Actually civilian matters require 3 invoices here by us so the people won't over charge each other. Since the council are paying their workers a monthly salary I don't see why you get invoiced for labor.
 

zanemoseley

Senior member
Feb 27, 2011
530
23
81
Geez $80,000/yr for a maintenance supervisor and that's hourly with some OT probably. Sign me up lol.
 

sjwaste

Diamond Member
Aug 2, 2000
8,757
12
81
It's either OT or a fully burdened rate (inclusive of benefits, time off, admin/overhead). It's always more than the pay rate. Think about your job and the non-monetary portion of your compensation.
 

Bignate603

Lifer
Sep 5, 2000
13,897
1
0
I know private companies mark up costs but I figured since this is public, they wouldn't try to profit, or at least profit by that much.

You misunderstand, they are not profiting. They are charging you the full cost of keeping a person in that job which includes their benefits, insurance, equipment, the building they work in, etc.
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
72,938
34,093
136
Street sign? Was it a stop sign? With stop signs, yield signs, and other "vital" signs the city has to dispatch a repair crew regardless of time of day or day of week to get the sign back up quickly.
 

3chordcharlie

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2004
9,859
1
81
It's either OT or a fully burdened rate (inclusive of benefits, time off, admin/overhead). It's always more than the pay rate. Think about your job and the non-monetary portion of your compensation.

No one ever does this. There's also a bunch of overhead - they could have itemized the scheduling secretary's time to write up the work order, etc.

That's why there are guys making $25/hr, being billed at $50-100/hr, who think they're getting the shaft. In most cases they aren't.
 

rh71

No Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
52,844
1,049
126
If I actually got what my company charges clients for the work I do... I'd have already bought my own small business by now. My last mini-project was the price of a car and it only took me a week or so of dev time.
 

alent1234

Diamond Member
Dec 15, 2002
3,915
0
0
other than the benefits and taxes you have to pay for the materials to fix whatever you broke
 

rivan

Diamond Member
Jul 8, 2003
9,677
3
81
what people 'get paid' and what they 'bill for' on invoices is not the same
that is about right

This, exactly.

If nothing else at all, your "max pay" doesn't cover the total cost of the employee or the overhead for having that employee.

Those employees get health insurance, have an office, maybe a public vehicle, SSI, etc.
 

Phoenix86

Lifer
May 21, 2003
14,644
10
81
You misunderstand, they are not profiting. They are charging you the full cost of keeping a person in that job which includes their benefits, insurance, equipment, the building they work in, etc.
Actually those rates would include profit, as other mentioned it's about what a contractor would charge given the pay rate.

A contractors billing rate covers employee pay, benefits, admin costs, etc. AND profit.
 

marvdmartian

Diamond Member
Apr 12, 2002
5,444
27
91
Can't say for anywhere else, but where I work, we mark up 26% above the hourly wage, to allow for the cost of benefits. We then charge the average of everyone's wages + benefits per hour. So you're probably lucky they're itemizing each employee individually instead.
 

1sikbITCH

Diamond Member
Jan 3, 2001
4,194
574
126
But what about billing for time lost/wasted?

You can't bill a private person for that time so why would you be able to bill the city?

If a person (or the city) hits your car (property damage only), you can get reimbursed for the cost of fixing the vehicle. That could be widened to include rental, towing, and storage fees but it's not going to cover you for punching out early to go pick up the car, cellphone bill for time on the phone spent dealing with it, or any other extraneous costs that arise.
 

Gibson486

Lifer
Aug 9, 2000
18,378
2
0
What you the city pays the employees is not what you pay the city. You need to cover the employee AND the equipment, the support, the overhead and the time. As for profit, why not? If they are charging you double the rate, then they are profiting, but not by much at all.
 

3chordcharlie

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2004
9,859
1
81
What you the city pays the employees is not what you pay the city. You need to cover the employee AND the equipment, the support, the overhead and the time. As for profit, why not? If they are charging you double the rate, then they are profiting, but not by much at all.

The rates he quoted seem a little on the low side for a mobile crew, at the wages he figured.

The city might have made a something, but I doubt they made a full $20.
 

MotionMan

Lifer
Jan 11, 2006
17,124
12
81
I caused some damage to City property.

I received an invoice, itemizing the individuals who worked to perform the repair, and their hourly rate.

My concern is that when I check out the City's current pay scale online, it's about half what they're charging me.

Examples:

1 Maintenance Supervisor for 0.5 hours @ $73.78/hr (max pay for this position is $39.38/hr)

1 Office Support Specialist for 1.0 hr @ $52.56/hour (max pay for this position is $25.20/hr)


I've got the pay scale sheets printed out for each individual and I'm planning to go tomorrow and argue that I shouldn't be paying almost double their hourly rate. I can't imagine any real justification for this...unless I'm expected to believe that the City can choose to profit on a repair, which sucks. But then I ask, why aren't the profit margins consistent for every individual?

Help...

Research the concept of "overhead".

MotionMan
 

Bignate603

Lifer
Sep 5, 2000
13,897
1
0
Actually those rates would include profit, as other mentioned it's about what a contractor would charge given the pay rate.

A contractors billing rate covers employee pay, benefits, admin costs, etc. AND profit.

It sounded like the city was billing him for they time of city employees, not a contractor.
 

pmv

Lifer
May 30, 2008
15,142
10,040
136
You should have just sneaked back under cover of darkness and put the sign back up yourself. Bit of quick dry cement - how hard can it be?

Then deny you ever knocked it down in the first place ("what do you mean its now facing the wrong way?").
 

lupi

Lifer
Apr 8, 2001
32,539
260
126
There's an interstate on ramp where I work with a long steady curve and a short sharp curve at the end. Can't tell you how many times I've seen the metal guard rail right at the beginning or the sharp portion get real dinged up then swapped out within a week. It never seems enough to redo the support post so assuming the can ticket the majority of people that hit it, should be a decent money maker for them.
 

JoeMcJoe

Senior member
May 10, 2011
327
0
0


1 Maintenance Supervisor for 0.5 hours @ $73.78/hr (max pay for this position is $39.38/hr)

1 Office Support Specialist for 1.0 hr @ $52.56/hour (max pay for this position is $25.20/hr)

Help...

Those hourly pays are different than the hourly rates.
Don't forget to include health care costs, pension, vacation, sick time and a buffer to fight people fighting the rates.