Reliable jobsite sanitation. Weekly service. Same-day delivery. Built for contractors in Salmon.
OSHA Standard 1926.51 sets the minimum: one toilet for every 20 workers on a construction site, serviced regularly, accessible during all shift hours. That's the floor. Most general contractors in Salmon aim well above it, because the math of crew downtime works against you fast when a unit goes out of service unannounced.
Peters Portable Toilets runs the jobsite side of our business on a scheduled-service model, not a call-when-it's-bad model. The unit gets serviced on its day, every week, regardless of whether someone phoned in a complaint. That's the only model that holds up across a 14-month build in Salmon, ID.
We coordinate with your team to choose placement that works for the entire project. Avoids unnecessary relocations later.
Crew count, phase of construction, and service frequency determine units needed. We rebalance at phase changes.
Twice weekly standard. Includes pumping, restocking, and checks. Service tags left for verification.
Units removed within 48 hours of notice. Clean end to every project in Salmon, ID.
Standard OSHA-compliant units built for heavy jobsite use. Muddy boots welcome.
Foot-pump or pressurized stations paired with toilets for full OSHA compliance.
Multi-unit sites, scaled to crew size with centralized billing and logs.
Service for night and weekend crews on infrastructure and time-sensitive projects.
Rapid mobilization for new phases or sudden crew increases in Salmon, ID.
Accessible units for workers and site visitors, fully serviced on schedule.
Three main variables: Unit count (OSHA ratios), service frequency, and project duration.
No hidden mobilization fees inside service area. No mid-project rate spikes. Transparent monthly billing.
A missed service costs far more in crew downtime. Our service-completion rate is a point of pride. Choose reliability for long-term projects in Salmon, ID.
"Peters services six of our active jobsites. Consistent service tags, stocked units, and fast scaling for new phases."
— Ray Calderon, Project Superintendent
"They reroute service trucks as our crews move without constant calls. Consistent performance across the board."
— Theresa Vandermeer, Project Manager
OSHA ratio is one toilet per 20 workers minimum. Practical ratio often 1 per 10 in high-use conditions. Service frequency scales with crew size and weather.
Plan relocations into the contract as the site evolves.
Standard turnaround 24–48 hours. Same-day often possible for calls before 11 a.m.
Yes. Service tags and logs provided at no extra charge for audits.
Yes. Flexible adjustments as crews change across project phases.
Missed service (not due to access issues) means the next one is free.
Yes. Customized scheduling for infrastructure and urgent projects.
Send your site address, crew count, and start date. Receive a clear written quote the same business day.
Click Here to Call (888) 341-5226Talk to a real estimator who knows construction sanitation.