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Lots of work in Barnett play

With prices hovering near record highs, the natural gas in the Barnett Shale field is providing jobs for many people.

With country music in the air and barbecue being served, more than 1,000 people gathered recently on the grounds of D.S.I. Inspection Service to celebrate what keeps them busy -- the Barnett Shale natural gas field.

The partygoers represented the many professions -- engineers, tool salesmen, welders and truck drivers -- involved in extracting gas. And they demonstrated how the explosion of drilling activity is drawing labor to Fort Worth from all across the map.

Surveying the scene, Marion Sheffield, D.S.I.'s president, reflected on how the boom drew him from Louisiana, where his business was previously based.

"A year ago, this was just an empty field," he said. "Now I employ 45 workers here, and I'm closing down my California operation. The Barnett Shale is the place to be."

Ken Evans, a grizzled veteran of drilling in Alaska, Louisiana, California and Texas, sat at one of the picnic tables. "I was passing through here last year and heard about the Barnett Shale," he said. "I got some work and just stayed."

Drilling consultant Tim Henricks came from Denver with his former contractor, Antero Resources. When Antero's Barnett Shale properties were bought by XTO Energy of Fort Worth this year, the new owner kept Henricks and his Barnett Shale expertise on, at least for a while.

"In this business, the jobs are day-to-day," Henricks said. "There's no such thing as security."

A number of the workers say that the Barnett Shale, with its promise of prosperity, prompted them to change careers.

David McEntire, a salesman for R&H Supply of Bridgeport, worked as a mobile-home builder until the natural gas boom beckoned two year ago.

"This was a step up for me," McEntire said.

Another R&H worker, Benny Brito, said he quit his job as a welder to go to work for the equipment-supply company "because the money is better."

The Barnett Shale revived the career of K.C. Castleberry, a field services worker who signed on with Flint Energy of Bridgeport after being laid off by Chevron when that company merged with Texaco this decade.

"There are all kinds of booms in the oil-and-gas business," Castleberry said. "There are bad ones that play out quickly, and there are good ones that will last. This is a good one."

Tom Gilbert worked as a golf pro and golf course manager for two decades after helping Texas A&M University's golf team win the Southwest Conference championship in 1968. A year ago, he signed on with D.S.I. and now calls on producers, selling D.S.I.'s drill pipe and tubing-inspection business required by operators' insurance carriers.

"We haven't seen the best of this yet," Gilbert said of the Barnett Shale drilling boom.

As of mid-June, 73 of the 601 active drilling rigs in Texas were in Johnson, Tarrant, Hood, Parker, Denton and Wise counties, the area that makes up most of the Barnett Shale play.

The drilling has expanded this spring into Bosque, Ellis, Palo Pinto and Jack counties, where another five rigs were working in June.

Through the first four months of 2005, natural gas production in the Barnett Shale increased to 134.2 billion cubic feet from 117.6 billion cubic feet a year ago.

With more increases expected in drilling during the second half of this year, the Barnett Shale is likely to surpass 400 billion cubic feet of production in 2005, exceeding the 368 billion cubic feet produced last year and maintaining the field's status as Texas' largest.

Although production companies such as Devon Energy, XTO Energy, Burlington Resources, Quicksilver Resources and others attract attention from investors and the news media, it is the smaller contractors who actually do the painstaking work of planning and steering the drilling, building the rigs and operating them. They also put up fences and signs and drive the trucks that deliver the tubular pipe.

"The service business is the backbone of the oil-and-gas industry," Sheffield said. "A drilling project needs a wide variety of people to make it work."

Sheffield showed visitors around his 15-acre yard, where more than 3,000 joints of pipe were stacked. Companies send their pipe to inspectors like Sheffield to check for cracks or other problems before the pipe is put into the ground.

"We have a good supply of pipe and machinery," said Sheffield in the drawl of his native Mississippi. "What we're short of now is good, trained people who are willing to work hard."

Sheffield has worked hard since he got into the oil-and-gas business after completing an Army tour in Vietnam in 1969. He learned the inspection business while working across the country, following the drilling activity. By 1978, he went into business for himself, founding D.S.I.

"I had a few very good years," Sheffield says of the late 1970s and early '80s, when the U.S. drilling rig count reached a record 4,530. But as most of those attending the party recalled to their sorrow, those glorious days came to a crashing end by the middle of the 1980s.

Raymond Kincaid of Abilene works for Mike Byrd Casing of Bridgeport. Casing is the pipe, plus the mud packing that supports it, that reinforces the well hole.

"Business was slow for a long time," said Kincaid, ruefully recalling the lean days of the late 1980s and 1990s, when the rig count eventually dropped below 500.

Today, field workers not only can rely on fairly steady employment, but they can do it close to home.

"I've worked in Wyoming, California, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Louisiana," said Gary Moseley, a supervisor with No-Drift Tech Systems of Fort Worth. No-Drift provides guidance and monitoring during drilling.

"But now I can stay at my home in Weatherford and work in one of the busiest fields in the U.S.," Moseley said.

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Posted on Mon, Jun. 27, 2005
By Dan Piller
Star-Telegram Staff Writer
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