REGISTRATION IS STILL AVAILABLE, BUT SPACE IS LIMITED – 2019 NAFC National Conference, September 22-24, 2019 – Boston, MA

August 2019

Welcome to the 2019 NAFC National Conference!

It is time to register for this year’s 2019 NAFC National Conference to be held on September 22 – 24, 2019, at the Sheraton Boston Hotel in the heart of downtown Boston, Massachusetts. NAFC’s National Conference is attended by several hundred participants from across the nation, including representatives from labor organizations, responsible contractors, fair contracting compliance organizations as well as researchers, academics, attorneys and officials from federal, state and local governments.

PLEASE NOTE THE NEW FORMAT FOR THE 2019 NAFC NATIONAL CONFERENCE – AND REVIEW THE SCHEDULE OF EVENTS BEFORE MAKING YOUR TRAVEL RESERVATIONS

The 2019 NAFC Conference has been extended. We have added additional workshops on Sunday afternoon (Sept. 22nd – the day of arrival) and extended the Conference to include a full day session on Tuesday (Sept. 24th – the final day). Please review the Schedule of Events drop-down menu to ensure that your travel reservations allow you to attend the complete lineup of plenary speakers, panels, workshops and networking opportunities. In addition, please use the Registration & Hotel Reservation drop-down menu to register for the Conference and reserve your hotel. Conference registration and hotel reservations must be made online through NAFC’s 2019 Conference website. Paper Conference registrations and hotel reservations will not be available this year.

The 2019 NAFC National Conference will be the largest and most successful Conference to date. NAFC President Rocco Davis, the Board of Directors and staff have put together a lineup of dynamic speakers and comprehensive workshops to assist you in leveling the playing field in publicly funded construction and promoting responsible and efficient construction at the local, state and federal levels. National experts on construction industry issues will present the latest research and programs which promote the high road construction market, joint apprenticeship plans and pathways for underserved communities and veterans in the construction industry. Leading fair contracting practitioners will describe innovative tools and strategies to ensure enforcement and compliance with the wide variety of laws which regulate public construction, including prevailing wage laws.

Stay tuned for further details and contact NAFC’s Administrator with any questions you may have.

(Conference Details & Registration)

Visit out website at faircontracting.org

2019 NAFC Membership

August 2019

NAFC is a labor-management organization comprised of fair contracting organizations, responsible contractors, and labor unions and was founded to promote and support a level playing field in the public construction sector. NAFC provides a forum for those committed to responsible, competitive contracting and offers its members a wide variety of tools to strengthen, defend and enforce the broad array of laws and requirements which regulate public construction.

Join us today by clicking on the membership form below and submit your check for $850.00 for your annual dues.

NAFC 2019 Membership Application

Please make checks payable to:

National Alliance for Fair Contracting or NAFC
905 – 16th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20006

Please be advised that a fee of membership in the National Alliance for Fair Contracting is not deductible for tax purposes under IRC § 6113.

USDOL Wage and Hour Division to Host Prevailing Wage Seminars

August 2019

Our 2019 seminar will be held in the following location:

  • Indianapolis, IN, August 27th – 29th

The Wage and Hour Division (WHD) Prevailing Wage Seminars (Prevailing Wage Seminars) are three-day compliance trainings designed for regional stakeholders (unions, private contractors, state agencies, federal agencies and workers). In these seminars, conference participants will learn about the following:

  • The Davis-Bacon Act and McNamara O’Hara Service Contract Act
  • Executive Order 13495 “Nondisplacement of Qualified Workers”
  • Executive Order 13658 “Establishing a Minimum Wage for Contractors”
  • The process of obtaining wage determinations and adding classifications
  • Compliance assistance and enforcement processes
  • The process for appealing wage rates, coverage, and compliance determinations

If you have any questions please email WHD-PWS@dol.gov

(Read More)

Tri-State Labor Departments Form Alliance to Protect Workers and Employers (NJ, DE, PA)

07/10/19
WorkersCompensation.com

Atlantic City, NJ (WorkersCompensation.com) – Labor departments from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware signed a reciprocal agreement on Tuesday designed to better protect workers and employers through a newly established pipeline of information sharing and coordination of enforcement efforts.

This agreement grants new powers to each state, including strategic data-sharing, interstate case referrals, and joint investigations that will greatly impact wage claim investigations, worker misclassification, workplace safety efforts, and other labor-related compliance matters.

“All three states have been tasked with protecting our workers, and looking out for those businesses who play by the rules,” said Robert Asaro-Angelo, commissioner, New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development (NJDOL). “This new cooperation agreement will ensure that those crossing state lines to do business are in full compliance with our laws, and employees are taking home every single penny they have earned.”

“Pennsylvania is proud to be part of this collaboration, which is truly a victory for workers and employers,” said Pennsylvania Department of Labor & Industry Secretary Jerry Oleksiak. “This agreement maximizes the use of existing tools by allowing for data-sharing, joint investigations, and referrals to ensure that workers are not taken advantage of and that there is a level playing field for all employers.”

“Delaware looks forward to working together with Pennsylvania and New Jersey to do the important work of protecting workers while fostering a fair environment for businesses to grow and prosper,” said Secretary of Labor Cerron Cade. “Companies who violate Delaware labor laws will no longer be able to hide behind state lines. We look forward to adding new states to this pact to preserve the dignity of work in Delaware and throughout the region.”

The signing took place in Atlantic City during a conference of the NJ State Building and Construction Trades Council, where Governor Murphy had spoken earlier about an expansion of NJDOL’s authority to combat worker misclassification.

Workers misclassified as independent contractors, as opposed to employees, are ineligible for the wage and overtime protections and benefits afforded to employees, and can find themselves underpaid and without basic labor and OSHA protections.

(See Article)

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AG Nessel Joins Effort Urging Regulators To Protect Workers From Harmful Anticompetitive Labor Practices

July 18, 2019 at 10:20 am

LANSING, Mich. – Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel joined 17 other Attorneys General earlier this week in urging collaboration between Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regulators and state attorneys general to protect workers from anticompetitive labor practices that depress wages and limit job mobility and opportunities for advancement.

In a comment letter filed in connection with the FTC’s hearings on competition in the 21st Century, the coalition argues that the FTC should increase its focus on antitrust enforcement in labor markets and use their authority to crack down on non-compete and no-poach contract agreements-in addition to considering how workers are impacted by proposed mergers.

“In an era where wages continually decline and workers’ protections, like prevailing wage, are routinely stripped, we must begin reviving antitrust regulation in labor markets,” said Nessel. “We must do this to protect workers from harmful anticompetitive practices such as targeting low-income workers by forcing them to sign non-compete agreements and ultimately limiting their earning potential.”

Antitrust laws work to protect competition in markets, benefiting both consumers and workers. These laws typically work to prevent harmful practices such as monopolization, price-fixing and market allocation, which can result in higher prices, depressed wages, decreased supply of products, or lower quality products and services. State attorneys general and the FTC have a strong interest in protecting the competitiveness of markets and can work both independently and collaboratively to take enforcement action to stop antitrust law violations.

Recent labor related antitrust actions brought by state attorneys general have confronted restrictive contract agreements and proposed mergers. In fact, Nessel joined a multi-state lawsuit last month against the anticompetitive T-Mobile and Sprint mega-merger, where one of the main concerns is how potentially harmful it would be to thousands of hard-working laborers in the telecom industry across the nation. Nessel and the coalition also cited that the merger could result in substantial loss of retail jobs and lower pay for these workers in the near future.

In their comments, the attorneys general urge the FTC to consider the effect of non-compete, non-solicitation and no-poach agreements due to the limitations they impose on job mobility of workers by directly impacting their opportunity to seek better wages and/or opportunities. These agreements can also prevent competition amongst employers in offering suitable wages, benefits and work environments to obtain the best talent.

(Read More)

DeLauro reintroduces wage protection legislation

Milford Mirror
Saturday, July 13, 2019

Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (CT-03) and U.S. Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) on July 11 reintroduced the Wage Theft Prevention and Wage Recovery Act, legislation that would crack down on employers who unfairly withhold wages from their employees, according to a press release from DeLauro’s office.

The bill would give workers the right to receive full compensation for all of the work they perform, as well as the right to receive regular paystubs and final paychecks in a timely manner. It would also provide workers with improved tools to recover their stolen wages in court and make assistance available to build community partnerships that enhance the enforcement of and improve compliance with wage and hour laws, the release said.

“The single biggest economic challenge of our time is that people are in jobs that do not pay them enough to live on,” DeLauro said. “People are struggling. And across the country, countless workers are putting in long hours and working for an honest day’s pay only to have their employers cheat them out of their hard-earned wages. That is inexcusable.

“The Wage Theft Prevention and Wage Recovery Act is comprehensive legislation that will strengthen current federal law and empower employees to recover their lost wages,” DeLauro continued. “Whether it is compensation for a day’s work, or overtime, employees should be paid what they earn. This legislation puts workers first while helping our economy grow.”

(See Article)

The Raise the Wage Act of 2019

Milford Mirror
Saturday, July 13, 2019

This week, the House will vote on the Raise the Wage Act, legislation that will gradually increase the federal minimum wage for the first time in ten years. Since the minimum wage was first established, this has been the longest period of time without Congressional action to increase it. This legislation is a responsible approach to restoring the value of the wage. It will give nearly 40 million Americans a pay raise, lift millions out of poverty, and stimulate economic growth.

ABOUT THE RAISE THE WAGE ACT

The last minimum wage increase was enacted into law in 2007 and began to take effect in 2009. Since then, low-wage workers have been left behind. While many states have taken action to raise the minimum wage above the federal level, 56 million workers in 21 states are stuck at the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, according to EPI. The minimum wage workers in those states have effectively suffered a 17 percent pay cut because of inflation over the last decade.

The Raise the Wage Act would gradually increase the federal minimum wage from $7.25 per hour to $15 per hour by 2025, which would raise wages and dramatically improve the quality of living for millions of American workers. The legislation also ensures that all workers earn at least the federal minimum wage by phasing out over time the subminimum wage for tipped workers, youth workers, and Americans with disabilities.

RAISING THE MINIMUM WAGE IS GOOD FOR WORKERS

The Raise the Wage Act:

  • Gives 27 million workers a raise, according to CBO;
  • Directly benefits the low- and middle-income workers who were disadvantaged by the GOP Tax Law that only benefited the rich;
  • Ensures that tipped workers will benefit from one fair wage, in addition to tips;
  • Eliminates the subminimum wage for young workers, which allows employers to pay employees under 20 an hourly wage of $4.25 for the first 90 calendar days of their employment; and
  • Changes the law to ensure workers with disabilities benefit from the minimum wage, rather than allowing employers and organizations to apply for special certificates to pay individuals with disabilities less than the minimum wage and less than the prevailing wage.

RAISING THE MINIMUM WAGE IS GOOD FOR FAMILIES

  • According to CBO, the Raise the Wage Act will lift 1.3 million of American out of poverty, including 600,000 children.
  • Also according to CBO, this bill will provide over 23 million women – many of whom are the primary breadwinners in their households – with a raise.

RAISING THE MINIMUM WAGE IS GOOD FOR BUSINESSES & THE ECONOMY

  • Raising the minimum wage will put money back in the pockets of workers, generating a collective $118 billion in additional income that workers will then invest back into their communities. [EPI, 2/5/19]
  • Gradually increasing the minimum wage over six years will give businesses time to plan and make any needed adjustments.
  • With a higher minimum wage deterring absenteeism, employers may benefit from reductions in worker turnover.

(See Article)

Noah Smith, Bloomberg Opinion: Solving the riddle of spiraling infrastructure costs

NOAH SMITH Bloomberg Opinion
Jul 26, 2019

High construction costs pose a major threat to the U.S. economy. Not only are highways and transit systems irreplaceable for most Americans, they enable the free movement of people and goods within and between cities – the glue that holds together networks of domestic production.

Without smooth roads, solid bridges and well-functioning trains, supply chains break down, people can’t get to work and the whole economy gets gummed up. In the short term, the government can spend more, throwing money at the problem to keep infrastructure intact. But in the long run, high costs will make this option ever-less tenable. Eventually, local and state governments, and even the federal government, will balk at the price tag and simply let infrastructure fall into further decay.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics finds that productivity in the construction of infrastructure like highways, streets and bridges has fallen in recent years. Others find the situation even more dire. Economist Leah Brooks and law professor Zachary Liscow find that, between 1960 and 1980, the inflation-adjusted cost of building one mile of highway tripled in the United States. Rail systems are also expensive to build, especially when compared with other advanced countries.

Unfortunately, the cause of these high construction costs is a mystery. Many people, when confronted with the question, quickly reply that strong unions or the Davis-Bacon Act – which stipulates the wages federal contractors must be paid – are to blame. But the people who give this answer are incorrect. First of all, construction salaries simply aren’t particularly high.

France and other countries that build infrastructure much more cheaply than the United States are even more heavily unionized or covered by collective-bargaining agreements. Brooks and Liscow examine a number of different data sources and conclude labor prices in highway construction simply aren’t responsible for increased costs. Compensation has remained roughly constant in real terms, even as overall costs have exploded. They also find the cost of materials hasn’t gone up significantly.

Another usual suspect: land-acquisition costs. Unlike China, which kicks hapless peasants off their land whenever it wants to build a new megaproject, the United States’ constitutional system forces government to acquire land from private owners (though it can use eminent domain to limit the cost of acquisition and compel a sale). But Brooks and Liscow find that land costs are a relatively minor piece of highway construction costs, and that this share has not increased over time. Changes in eminent domain law also don’t seem to raise costs much. Nor, they find, do increases in planning costs explain much of the trend.

So if high U.S. costs aren’t due to expensive labor, land, materials or planning, what explains the enormous expense of building roads and trains? With the easy answers ruled out, the economic detectives investigating the cost mystery are looking at subtler factors.

(Read More)

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California Senate to Consider Sweeping Changes to Rules for Independent Subcontractors (CA)

by Scott Braddock | July 10, 2019

After it passed the California Assembly earlier this year, that state’s Senate is set to begin hearings this week on a sweeping reform to the way employers classify their workers as either employees or contractors. Assembly Bill 5 would codify a landmark state supreme court ruling that raised the bar for when companies can legally classify folks as independent contractors.

Among other things, the court’s ruling says the scope of work being done must be outside the core of a company’s business for the workers to be classified as independent contractors. This is perhaps one of the most aggressive efforts in the country to crack down on what critics call employee misclassification or “payroll fraud.”

As Construction Citizen readers who have followed the issue are well aware, misclassification happens when employers pretend their workers are subcontractors when, by law, they meet the definition of employees and should be compensated as such including benefits. There are of course many legitimate uses of contract labor. The problem arises when unethical employers use the subcontractor designation to skirt the law and avoid payroll taxes, health benefits, retirement plans, and more. This allows those companies to underbid law-abiding firms by significant amounts. It is especially rampant in construction but other industries are not immune.

Explaining the California Supreme Court’s ruling in what has become known as the “Dynamex Decision,” attorney Timothy Kim wrote on Labor & Employment Blog: “In particular, the Court embraced a standard presuming that all workers are employees instead of contractors, and placed the burden on any entity classifying an individual as an independent contractor of establishing that such classification is proper under the newly adopted ‘ABC test.'”

In other words, this greatly narrows the conditions under which a worker can be classified as a contractor. And it is worth the attention of employers and workers in other parts of the country because large states like Texas and California often lead the way on policies that will eventually be adopted elsewhere.

The legislation under consideration mirrors the court’s ruling. Under the bill, the answer must be “yes” to each of the following for a worker to be legally classified as an independent contractor:

– The worker is free from the control and direction of the hirer in relation to the performance of the work, both under the contract and in fact;

– The worker performs work that is outside the usual course of the hirer’s business; and

– The worker is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, or business of the same nature as the work performed for the hirer

If the bill is passed by the Senate and signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, hundreds of thousands of Californians stand to gain access to benefits they don’t currently enjoy. The proposal puts Gov. Newsom in a tough spot politically, though, because he would like to appear to be on the side of both the labor unions supporting the bill and the tech giants like Uber and others which do not.

(Read More)

San Jose Votes to Bolster Workforce Standards on City-Subsidized Construction (CA)

By Grace Hase
August 6, 2019

Two years after workers helping to build San Jose’s Silvery Towers were released from literal slavery amid a criminal probe into their boss, local labor leaders secured stronger protections for builders on city-subsidized projects.

The City Council voted 9-2 Tuesday to expand rules that prevent worker exploitation on publicly subsidized projects. Among the new rules are requirements to hire more apprentices as well as local and underrepresented workers.

Council members Johnny Khamis and Dev Davis cast the dissenting votes.

San Jose will now require that workers who live locally put in 30 percent of the total work hours on a project covered by the ordinance. Construction companies must also use “good faith efforts” to hire “underrepresented workers as entry-level apprentices to perform 25 percent of the total apprentice hours.” The city defines an underrepresented worker as someone who receives government assistance, is at risk of losing a home or has survived labor trafficking, to name some examples.

Tuesday’s newly approved rules build on efforts that began before the month-long summer recess, when councilors passed a law that requires private construction companies to pay workers a prevailing wage on projects that benefit from city subsidies.

“This investment is in our workforce,” Arenas said. “We can’t have it both ways. I don’t want to stop development. I want to make sure we have housing, but I can’t have it on the backs of our laborers and our working poor.” She added: “We need to assure there are standards on pay and work for folks who need it. I feel that this is the way to get there while still honoring our goals around housing.”

Labor leaders, who had fought for the new protections for more than a year, were pleased with Tuesday’s decisions. Jean Cohen, a spokeswoman for UA Local 393, said that she was glad that all workers will now have equal protections.

“The building trades, the labor movement and the development community all have a shared goal, which is to build beautiful buildings for the city of San Jose,” Cohen told San Jose Inside. “There are many valuable components in the ecosystem of what it takes to develop a project, and these policies build a strong foundation for all interested parties, which is to have a vibrant and robust downtown.”

(Read More)