Around the Cluster, with Akare Nulie
Today I'm visiting Maintenance Post 437C, in the middle of a SuVee corporation automated farming operation.
The small, prefabbed unit provides a place to live for one to three SuVee employees who maintain and repair the equipment in their 10000 square km area.
Maintenance Tech Raho Pala explained that they are usually rotate in for eight to fourteen months at a time, though some accept or even request permanent assignments.
"It can be tough for the families." He says, adding, "But they understand. We're feeding the State."
The living area is surprisingly spacious, though as Raho notes, "One thing we've got plenty of out here - land."
Most of the furniture is clearly corporate-issue, but some of the pieces are brightly painted. ("We've only got the colors they give us to touch up the machinery," Raho explains.) A table and few chairs, a battered low-end holo-projector against one wall, a console where equipment status can be monitored, and a small, but functional kitchen space in the corner. Raho assures me that after a few months, most of the techs learn how to do wonders with the bland supplies the corporation sends. Apparently cooking is a hidden prerequisite for success in this particular job.
The walls are covered in a mix of posters provided by SuVee and decoration that is clearly more personal in nature. Sports teams, holo-stars, prints from classic and contemporary artists, cheerfully defaced motivational posters, and even hand painted art abounds and overlaps. According to Raho, it's traditional for out-going techs to leave behind at least one item. He's only due to stay for another month, and he shyly points out his own contribution: A small abstract piece made from what he calls 'N.O.ed parts' that sits on a shelf in the kitchen.
Through a door in the back is a separate compartment where the techs bunk, and past that is the door out to the maintenance yard, where farm equipment too damaged to repair in the field, but not damaged enough to send to Central is brought.
That's where I meet the other members of the maintenance crew, Isia and Eland. They both get back to work after a brief greeting. Raho explains that the harvester they're working on is needed back out in the fields. He also tells me that Isia and Eland are recently married, and are planning on requesting a permanent assignment to post 437C.
"They're even talking about getting authorization to have a kid." He says, "We've been working on fabbing up a little addition so they can have their own room. All approved, of course."
The yard is bordered on the side opposite the hab unit by a small parts warehouse and attached machine shop along with the shed where most of the monitoring equipment is. There's an old, but well maintained looking short-hop heavy-lifter for bringing in the damaged equipment.
To wrap up my tour, Raho takes me up to the observation tower above the hab unit. The fields spread out without breaks in every direction, the irrigation channels glittering in the sun. It seems incredible that these few people can make it run smoothly, but Raho says they do, and he seems confident they will continue to. And as he says, "We damn well make the most of it while we're out here."