Gate Keepers Make $300 Per Day And Rentals Are Full

In the oilfield, you could make $75,000 just watching the gate. A retired teacher now makes anywhere from $100 to $300 per day logging trucks coming in and out of an oil & gas lease in South Texas. 100's of job openings are creating opportunity for residents across the region. Three Rivers' population of 2,400 wasn't quite ready for the boom. Rentals are scarce and you can almost forget about buying a home. There aren't any on the market. 

But workers do, in shifts, and there aren't enough houses, hotel rooms or apartments to hold them all. Rooms at small, independently owned motels that a year ago went for $50 are now renting for $100 to $150 a night, about the same as the Omni Bayfront in Corpus Christi.

The Atria, a 42-unit hotel that opened in April, was full in its first week, manager C.J. Patel said. A similar hotel is under construction next door.

Landlords who once leased three-bedroom houses to locals for $500 a month are letting their leases run out, doubling or tripling rent, and leasing to oil field workers from San Antonio. Gas stations and restaurants have windows plastered with ads offering bedrooms for rent.

A friend of Sowell's placed a sign at the restaurant's cash register advertising RV rentals. Thirty minutes later, he called and begged Sowell to take it down.

"His phone hadn't stopped ringing," Sowell said. "He was tired of taking calls."

Read the entire news release at caller.com

Bee County Job Fair Draws Record Crowd

We're experiencing an oil boom in South Texas, but there are still lots of people job hunting. The great thing about the oilfield is it creates lots of jobs and opportunities. There were an estimated 1,000 jobs on display yesterday at the Beeville, TX, job fair and visitors trumped expectations when as many as 2,000 people visited potential employers. Visit the Eagle Ford Jobs Page to search open positions in the South Texas oilfield. 

Skilled or unskilled, from across Texas and out of state, at least twice as many people as the 1,000 jobs 24 employers sought to fill converged on the Bee County Exposition Center on Tuesday.

Two hours in, the company was running low on informational cards for attendees to fill out, putting attendance well above the 1,000 mark. Robbins estimated attendance approached about 2,000 people, all seeking good pay ranges and relatively close-to-home work, which included jobs out in the fields, on the roads and in offices.

 

1,000 Oilfield Job Openings At Beeville Career Fair Oct. 4

Job hunters in South Texas should head out to Beeville's Bee County Exposition Center for a job fair today. 25 employers will be on hand to fill Eagle Ford Shale related jobs. Those companies have more than 900 oilfield job openings across the area.

Job seekers take note, a major career fair is set to take place Tuesday in Beeville. Two dozen oil and gas companies are looking to fill close to 1,000 positions.

 

Despite a bad economy and high levels of unemployment, there are plenty of jobs available in South Texas. The job opportunities available at this fair range from entry level to management to CDL drivers.

All of these employment opportunities are the result of the Eagle Ford Shale. Drilling and Fracking for oil and natural gas in South Texas has proven to be extremely profitable over the past couple of years. Experts say the Eagle Ford Shale is one of, if not the biggest discoveries of oil and natural gas ever to be made in North American history. That has oil and gas industry companies looking to hire.

Read the entire news release at kiiitv.com

Koch Staff and Eagle Ford Production To Double in 2011

Koch Industries' South Texas staff will grow from 64 to 125 in the near future and Eagle Ford Shale production is all but guaranteed to double in 2011. First half 2011, oil and gas production matched 2010 rates with 101 Bcf and 3.5 million barrels produced. Don't expected that growth to let up this year. With almost 200 rigs active, you can bet production will easily exceed double that of 2010.

Estimates from the Texas Railroad Commission, which oversees drilling activity, show that the more than 3.5 million barrels of oil slurped from the ground between January and June this year is the same amount produced in all of 2010.

Natural gas follows the same trend: 101 billion cubic feet produced in the first half of 2011 almost overtakes the 107 billion reported in all of 2010.

In 2010, there were $2.9 billion in total revenues logged as of early this year, about $512 million paid in salaries and benefits to workers with about $60.9 million flowing into state coffers and $47.6 million into local governments across the 24-county Eagle Ford region, according to the UT-San Antonio report.

Pre-Eagle Ford, Koch Pipeline had a staff of 64 people across South Texas. Those numbers in the near future will double to about 125, company vice president Larry Van Horn said.

 

American Shales Add Jobs and Oil Production

American shale plays, such as the Eagle Ford and Bakken, might produce as much as 2-3 million barrels of oil per day by 2020. A recent report by the National Petroleum Council (NPC) and American Petroleum Institute (API) suggest shales might also add 1 million jobs over the next 10 years. That's an employment boom this country needs. The oil & gas industry already supports some 9 million American jobs. As people get hired it will be hard to refute, but we all have to work to help the rest of the nation understand that American energy creates American jobs

America needs energy. America needs jobs. A way to get them both is right under our feet.

A recent report by the National Petroleum Council says the United States has a more abundant supply of oil and natural gas than previously believed. The report concludes that by 2035 America could be producing 2 million to 3 million barrels of oil per day from shale formations, including the Bakken shale in North Dakota and Montana and the Eagle Ford shale in Texas.

The Sept. 15 report forecasts that under the most optimistic assumptions, America and Canada combined could produce up to 22.5 million barrels of oil per day, if the U.S. lifts regulatory barriers. This would allow America to reduce its reliance on oil from other parts of the world.

Read the full news release at thehill.com