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Bandit Energy is now in Weyburn

Lionel Pouliot starts again with a half-dozen people
Bandit Energy
Lionel Pouliot, left, heads up Bandit Energy Service鈥檚 new Weyburn shop, assisted by Guy Church, right.

Weyburn 鈥 Bandit Energy Services was looking for someone to head up their new operation in Weyburn, and Lionel Pouliot was coming off a five-year non-compete agreement. The result was a good match, according to Pouliot, who now heads up Bandit鈥檚 southeast Saskatchewan location.

Pouliot has a long history in oilfield construction and maintenance, having worked with Carson Energy Services and its successor companies from 1983 until last year.

鈥溌槎勾紸Veast Saskatchewan is showing a market opportunity, for sure, and an opportunity to get local people in the area,鈥 Pouliot said on May 2.

鈥淚 started at the end of the shovel, working maintenance truck, crew truck. I started working on some bigger projects. When we expanded into Halbrite around 1997, I was managing that facility with six guys.

鈥淎t peak, when it was busy, it was 120 people,鈥 he said.

That shop is now closed and listed for sale.

In a way, Pouliot is starting over again. 鈥淭his situation is no different than Halbrite 鈥 start with six guys and try to build it up.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e targeting the Bakken in the Stoughton area, and the Flat Lake play. We go as far east as Highway 9,鈥 he said, noting the want to work relatively local.

Pouliot was one of the senior managers of Carson Energy Services and was a part-owner. He, along with those others who were bought out, had a five-year non-compete agreement. That agreement expired Oct. 1, 2016.

Pouliot had worked with the successor companies 鈥 Flint Energy Services, URS and AECOM which had each, in turn, owned and operated what was once Carson Energy Services.

鈥淲hen Flint took over, there were three of us just below Ron (Carson); myself, Steve Smith and Quinn Olson at Wainwright. Steve had Lampman, and I had Estevan, Carlyle, Alida, Virden, Halbrite, Kipling and Oxbow.鈥

Dale Ziegler looked after the mainline division, at White City.

In the fourth year after the purchase, and with the industry in a downturn, they downsized. 鈥淚 went to Regina and looked after White City, Swift Current and Virden. Steve took the rest of southeast Saskatchewan,鈥 Pouliot said. 鈥淚 did that for nine months and they let me go March 2016.

鈥淚 spent time at Kenosee Lake relaxing and finished off some landscaping.鈥

Bandit ran an advertisement in the paper looking for someone to run their Weyburn operation. 鈥淚t was the perfect fit. It worked well for us both,鈥 Pouliot said.

He does not have ownership in Bandit, nor had he considered going out on his own, but some people suggested he should.

In Weyburn they鈥檙e concentrating on maintenance and construction of facilities, single and multi-well batteries, as well as some small pipeline work. They鈥檒l be working on steel and fibreglass, and in early May workers were segmenting the Weyburn shop to isolate carbon steel work from stainless steel work.

鈥淲e鈥檙e a Canadian Welding Bureau shop. We can weld structural steel according to code,鈥 he said, adding their quality control program is approved by the Saskatchewan boiler branch, now known as the Technical Safety Authority of Saskatchewan.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to do some welding and fabrication,鈥 he said. Welders are typically subcontractors, and Pouliot has many contacts along those lines.

鈥淲e have lots of support from Lloydminster if we need it,鈥 Pouliot said.

Bandit is long established in the Lloydminster area as a pipeline construction contractor. Their services also include general oilfield construction and maintenance and civil construction.

Asked about the rates service companies can charge oil companies, and how those have been brought low by the downturn now in its third year, Pouliot said, 鈥淚t鈥檒l be tough to slide those up again.鈥

He noted the price of oil is a major factor. 鈥淢aybe if it hits US$75 again?鈥 he noted. 鈥淭he other thing is, if there鈥檚 going to be a shortage of people, we鈥檙e going to have to offer more money to people to keep them. If the oil companies won鈥榯 let us up the rates, we won鈥檛 have the people to supply them. There鈥檚 a shortage of people, qualified people with experience.鈥

鈥淢ore importantly, it鈥檚 about people. Do they know what they鈥檙e doing? Are they experienced?鈥 Pouliot said, noting the importance of paying more for good people.

So far the Weyburn shop has three excavators, one D8 dozer, a motor grader, rubber-tire backhoe and skid steer loader. They have four crew trucks and a tri-drive winch tractor.

鈥淚f we need something, they鈥檒l send it from Lloydminster.鈥

He鈥檚 got growth on his mind. 鈥淚t would be nice to have 30 to 40 people work here. We鈥檇 like to have to expand our shop, but we need some growth for that to happen.

Guy Church, who has 39 years experience in the oilfield, has signed on, filling the roles as assistant manager, safety coordinator and business development.聽

Pouliot said, 鈥淲e鈥檙e focused on local. We want to hire local people as much as we can. We want to support local as much as we can. I insisted the license places (on vehicles) were green.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important to be part of the community,鈥 he concluded.

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