Lawmakers: Misclassifying workers costing millions in revenue (PA)

Bucks County Reps. John Galloway, Perry Warren and other area legislators support bills that would address the problem of misusing the independent contractor designation.

By Chris English
Posted Sep 4, 2019 at 3:11 PM

Misuse of the independent contractor designation for workers, primarily in the construction industry, is costing the state and federal governments a combined total of about $300 million in lost revenue, two local state lawmakers said during a news conference Wednesday.

State Reps. John Galloway, D-140, and Perry Warren, D-31, are pushing for passage of two pieces of legislation that would address the problem. One, House Bill 716, would establish a joint agency task force on employee misclassifications. The group would investigate the practice and work toward creating solutions to reduce misclassification throughout Pennsylvania. That bill recently passed the House 198-0, Galloway said.

The other proposed bill, HB 715, would among other provisions tighten the definition of what constitutes an independent contractor to only allow use of the term if a worker’s written contract is project and time specific, with no exceptions.

Also attending the news conference, held at Galloway’s Falls office, to speak in support of the bills were Bryan Allen, chief of staff for state Rep. Tina Davis, D-141, of Bristol Township; Amy Masgay, legislative assistant for state Sen. Steve Santarsiero, D-10, Lower Makefield; and union carpenter Kevin Morrow of Perkasie.

Improperly designating workers as independent contractors gets employers out of paying health and worker’s compensation insurance. If those workers are injured, those needs are often taken care of by the state or federal governments and that places additional burdens on taxpayers, Galloway and Warren said.

Misclassifying workers also leads to the nonpayment or underpayment of state and federal income taxes, they added. The millions in lost revenue could be going toward improving schools and infrastructure and other areas, the two lawmakers said.

“This is done deliberately to cut labor costs, pay less in taxes and avoid paying our working class a fair compensation,” said Galloway, of Falls. “This is a practice that hurts the workers who are entitled to the benefits they’ve rightfully earned, their families that they work hard to provide for, and our economy.

“Employee misclassification is nothing less than theft from our families, friends, neighbors and coworkers, and it creates an uneven playing field for law abiding businesses.”

The state has laws on the books to address the problem, but they aren’t strong or detailed enough and the state Department of Labor doesn’t have enough “boots on the ground” to properly enforce them, Galloway said.

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Prevailing wages are important to workers, contractors and taxpayers (PA)

by: Jack Ramage
Posted:
Aug 16, 2019 / 12:00 AM

The Aug. 11 letter “High Gas Tax Feeds a Broken System” by Nathan A. Benefield, in response to the Aug. 4 article “Why Is Pa.’s Gas Tax So High? We’ve Got a Lot of Roads,” identifies three reasons. He is correct on two of those reasons; Pennsylvania gas taxes fund mass transit operations and pay for much of the state police budget, not just roads. Prevailing wages however, are not a contributing factor.

Prevailing wages do not increase the cost of publicly funded construction projects. In those states that have repealed prevailing wage laws, the promise of lower-cost public construction projects never materialized. Casually concluding that eliminating prevailing wage requirements will automatically reduce construction costs is an out-of-touch misconception of today’s economic environment.

Every segment of the economy is competing desperately for qualified workers. Allowing contractors to lower construction workers’ wages in order to gain an unfair advantage over the competition will cause a race to the bottom and exacerbate the shrinking workforce crisis resulting in costlier projects, substandard workmanship and delayed completions due to a shrinking number of skilled workers in construction. States throughout the country are reporting shortages in skilled construction labor. These shortages are especially acute in states where prevailing wage laws have been repealed.

Prevailing wages create a level playing field by establishing reasonable wages and benefits for workers building our state’s infrastructure projects. Without prevailing wages, unscrupulous contractors will import cheap labor and eliminate good paying jobs for the citizens of Pennsylvania, creating an environment where no one wins: not the workers, not the local contractors and, most of all, the taxpayers of Pennsylvania.

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Central Pennsylvania contractor charged for theft of workers’ wage and benefits (PA)

Sep 30, 2019

Harrisburg – Attorney General Josh Shapiro announced charges against a Centre County contractor after a Grand Jury investigation found that he underpaid workers on Prevailing Wage projects totaling more than $64,000 in wages and benefits for at least five years.

Scott Cameron Good, 56, of State College, is the owner of Goodco Mechanical, Inc., a mechanical contractor based in Centre County who worked on public works projects in Clearfield, Centre and other Pennsylvania counties. Good was charged with Perjury, Tampering with Public Records, and False Swearing. Goodco was charged with Theft by Unlawful Taking, Deceptive and Fraudulent Business Practices and related charges.

The charges are the result of a 21-month Statewide Grand Jury investigation that originated from allegations of theft of wages and benefits from employees on a $16 million public works project in Clearfield County for the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation in 2014. The investigation found that Good and Goodco violated prevailing wage laws by underpaying wages and claiming unlawful benefits credits on the Clearfield County PennDOT project, as well as other prevailing wage projects since at least 2010.

Scott Good previously worked as Vice President for Allied Mechanical and Electrical, Inc. In 2006, the company was found to be in violation of Pennsylvania prevailing wage laws and was sanctioned by the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry for the same practice that he is accused of operating at Goodco.

“Pennsylvania’s prevailing wage laws are designed to protect workers and ensure an even playing field in the bidding process for government contracts,” said Attorney General Josh Shapiro. “The defendants are charged with violating these laws and cheating our hardworking laborers out of thousands of dollars in wages and benefits. Scott Good already knew that his conduct was illegal because his former company was sanctioned for similar violations more than a decade ago, yet he brazenly flouted the law again and continued the scheme at Goodco. I’m proud to work with Clearfield County District Attorney William Shaw Jr. to put a stop to this theft and stand up for workers.”

“Clearfield County laborers deserve to be paid fairly for their hard work,” said District Attorney William Shaw, Jr. “The defendants allegedly took advantage of their workers and violated prevailing wage laws by operating a misclassification scheme inside the company. My office will work alongside the Attorney General’s Office to hold Scott Good and Goodco accountable for their crimes and deliver results for the workers he underpaid.”

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Officials, activists fight wage theft on the border (TX)

Mexican consulate and U.S. Labor Department seek to end workplace exploitation

by: Julian Resendiz

Posted:
Aug 23, 2019 / 03:01 PM CDT

EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) – The Mexican consulate and the U.S. Labor Department office in El Paso on Friday signed a cooperation agreement to fight wage theft and other labor violations committed against immigrants.

The consulate said it will begin a weeklong labor-rights education campaign on Monday and encourage Mexican citizens who experience workplace exploitation to file a complaint with the local Wage and Hour Division of the Labor Department.

“Everyone who works in the United States, regardless of immigration status, has rights in the workplace that are guaranteed by law,” said Mauricio Ibarra Ponce de Leon, Mexican consul general in El Paso. “We will support our community and ensure that their labor rights are being respected. This agreement allows us to send people who come to us to the appropriate (U.S.) authority.”

Jacobo Valenzuela, a representative of the Wage and Hour Division in El Paso, said his office receives some 600 labor-related complaints a year. Most complaints come from workers in the restaurant, construction and agricultural industries, he said.

Ibarra said wage-theft – which occurs when an employer short-changes an employee for hours worked, refuses to pay overtime already performed or withholds payment altogether – isn’t the only issue faced by immigrant workers on the border. The weeklong Spanish-language education campaign known as “Labor Rights Week” will also include information on filing workplace injury claims, sexual harassment and human-trafficking complaints, as well as workplace safety issues.

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Montpelier ponders employer, wage ordinances (VT)

By Stephen Mills
9/17/19

MONTPELIER – The City Council is considering crafting responsible employer and livable wage ordinances to make residing in the Capital City more affordable.

Discussion of the proposed ordinances came at a meeting of City Council last week. Councilor Conor Casey proposed enacting a Responsible Employer Ordinance that would require the city of Montpelier to follow “good employer” requirements when spending taxpayer money on contracted services that would include “responsible wages,” worker’s compensation and the proper classification of workers as employees instead of independent contractors, among other employment protections.

The council also reviewed a report on a Livable Wage Ordinance by Michael Sherman, of the Social and Economic Justice Advisory Committee, after the council identified implementing a living wage requirement in Montpelier in its 2018-2019 strategic plan.

Casey noted that the city is going through a recent building boom with the near-completion of Taylor Street Transit Center and shared-use recreation path, and a $16.5 million upgrade for the Waste Water Treatment Facility. The city is also proposing to build a $10.5 million parking garage.

Casey said that construction workers were a “largely invisible” workforce that deserved recognition, employee protections and livable wages.

“I think this is a group that has been sort of been abandoned by the federal government,” Casey said, and referenced the federal Davis-Bacon Act that seeks to ensure minimum wages to be paid to various classes of laborers and mechanics employed under the contract, but added, “It isn’t what is once was.”

“We can actually see people who are risking their lives, working on construction sites, with a wage that would be less than what we want as minimum wage, maybe $12 an hour,” Casey said, adding that the state had opposed appropriate wage structures for construction workers.

“This is an issue I’ve always felt strongly about,” Casey said, noting he has spent his professional career representing “frontline workers.” Casey currently works as an organizer for the Vermont-National Education Association, representing more than 12,000 teachers in the state.

“Even though they might not Montpelier residents, (construction workers) deserve to be treated with the same standards that we treat our own workers,” Casey said, noting that the Montpelier has three collective bargaining units for city workers.

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Spokane Promotes A More Diverse Construction Workforce (WA)

The City is launching a program to encourage women, minorities, and veterans to join the construction industry.

by: Press Release Desk, News Partner
Aug 15, 2019 / 4:58 PM ET

From the City of Spokane: The City of Spokane is launching a small grant program designed to provide training to allow more women, minorities, and veterans be prepared for construction industry jobs. Grants of up to $2,500 are available for organizations that want to establish or expand pre-apprenticeship programs in construction trades for one or more of these groups.

The City has been working for some time to increase the number of available construction workers in our community. The Spokane region has seen an 18 percent increase in construction jobs over the last year! Ensuring that the community has a well-trained construction workforce is critical as our community continues to grow. And helping women, minorities and veterans qualify for good-paying construction jobs is another goal.

In 2016, the City revised its Public Works Apprentice Program statue, requiring all contractors on public works construction projects to use apprentices for at least 15 percent of the labor hours on the job. The requirement applies to construction projects with an estimated value of $600,000 or more.

The program has helped to grow the number of trained construction workers in our community. This grant program is next step in this effort. Fines paid by contractors who were unable to meet the apprenticeship requirement are funding these grants.

(See Article)

Construction Business Group redoubles efforts to root out misclassification (WI)

If drywall and flooring could talk, it’d probably have a dark story to tell about Wisconsin’s ongoing construction boom. Behind projects big and small, say people close to the industry, there thrives an underground economy made up of contractors who cheat their workers out of wages and benefits to deliver projects on time and under budget.

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