What Keeps a New Zealand Crew Off Site? A Practical Readiness Checklist
A practical NZ checklist for the details that block a crew before a job starts: availability, paperwork, access, gear, and last-minute changes.
Key takeaway: a crew is not ready because the job is in the calendar. A crew is ready when the people, paperwork, details, and gear all line up before wheels start turning.
What readiness actually means
It is easy to confuse "scheduled" with "ready." They are not the same thing.
A crew can be booked for 7am and still lose the first hour because the wrong person was assigned, the site details were thin, the induction was missing, or the material pickup never really got confirmed.
The usual blockers
Most morning delays come from one of these:
- the right person is unavailable
- a licence, induction, or safety document is missing
- the address, access note, or contact details are unclear
- tools or materials are assumed rather than confirmed
- the scope changed and the update never reached the field
They look small on paper. They do not feel small when the ute is already on the road.
A simple readiness check
Before the day starts, check:
- People - who is assigned, available, and actually right for the work?
- Paperwork - are licences, safe work procedure, inductions, and certificates current?
- Site details - does the crew have the address, access notes, and contact?
- Materials and tools - is the gear there or confirmed?
- Job context - what changed since yesterday's plan?
If one of those is fuzzy, the job is not ready yet.
Where Foxspec helps
Foxspec treats readiness as something to check before dispatch, not after the first phone call from site. The aim is simple: show what is blocked early enough to do something about it.