Maryland just became the sixth state to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour (MD)

Democrats in Maryland just overrode the governor’s veto of the $15 minimum wage bill.

By Alexia Fernández Campbell
Mar 28, 2019, 2:20pm EDT

Maryland just became the sixth state to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour.

On Thursday, lawmakers managed to override Republican Gov. Larry Hogan’s veto of a minimum wage bill. Maryland’s current minimum wage is $10.10, and the new policy willgradually raise the wage floor to $15 by 2025.

Hogan had blocked the bill earlier this week, claiming that such a change would “devastate” the economy. But it was clear early on that he would be unable to stop the national momentum building around a $15 minimum wage.

Democrats control both chambers in Maryland’s General Assembly, and passed the wage hike bill with a veto-proof majority. On Thursday, they overwhelming voted to override Hogan’s veto by 96-43 in the House and 35-12 in the Senate.

Maryland is now the third state to phase in a $15 minimum wage so far this year, and the sixth overall. In February, New Jersey and Illinois did so, too.

While Hogan’s veto was not surprising (he has always opposed a $15 minimum), it’s a striking position in a state where the $15 minimum wage is so popular with voters in Maryland and across the country.

The law will benefit about 573,000 workers in Maryland who currently earn less than $15 -about 22 percent of the state’s workforce, according to the National Employment Law Project.

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NH Voices: Jeff Sullivan — Prevailing wage: Working families prevail (NH)

By JEFF SULLIVAN
Apr 7, 2019

MR. REAP’S RECENT commentary on SB 271 (An Act to Require Prevailing Wages on State-Funded Public Works Projects) misses the mark and distorts the reality. Trying to turn the debate to a union issue is an effort to contort the facts, and the benefits, of the proposed legislation.

Despite wide-spread public misconception, a misconception also apparently shared by the CEO of the Associated Builders of New Hampshire (he should know better), prevailing wage is not “union” wage. Prevailing wage, both federally and in the states with similar laws, is based upon extensive surveys conducted in which contractors disclose wages and benefits paid to its workforce. There is no distinction between union and non-union workers. These surveys will then set direction for wage rates to be paid to construction workers on government-funded projects.

The “facts” tossed around by Mr. Reap have no support when put to the test. Simply put, a prevailing wage law will require contractors to compete for public projects in New Hampshire based on a set of criteria that ensures its workforce is the best-trained, best-equipped and best managed. Projects will be awarded to high-performing contractors; not to those that can assemble the cheapest, least-trained workforce. It is no coincidence that jurisdictions with prevailing wage law protections have the lowest incidence of workplace injury and death. Supporters of SB 271 understand all the ancillary benefits of a well-codified prevailing wage law.

Mr. Reap’s loudest claim is that prevailing wage will drive up the costs of construction and that the sky will fall with “higher property taxes…service cuts [and] busted budgets.” These are the bellwether sounds of those who try to influence public policy by threatening taxpayers with threats of increased government intrusion into our pockets. Again, the facts of prevailing wage laws in other jurisdictions belie these assertions.

In a recent, first-of-its-kind nationwide study on the impact of state prevailing wage laws, the reality of legislation such as SB 271 was proven to provide positive results across economic, social and fiscal areas. In its nationwide survey, “The Economic, Fiscal and Social Impacts of State Prevailing Wage Laws: Choosing Between the High Road and the Low Road in the Construction Industry” (Manzo, et al, 2016), it was shown that states with prevailing wage laws have higher workmanship, productivity and job-safety than states with no prevailing wage protections. Additionally, states without prevailing wage laws have a higher percentages of public health insurance and other forms of public assistance. New Hampshire’s rolls of those on public assistance is a prime exhibit in support of the argument that good paying jobs are the best social program any state can provide its citizens.

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Toms River contractor faces prison for failing to pay workers prevailing wage (NJ)

Michael L. Diamond, Asbury Park Press
Published 3:12 p.m. ET March 27, 2019

A Toms River construction contractor pleaded guilty Wednesday for not paying his employees prevailing wages for their work on a student housing project in Camden, the New Jersey Attorney General said.

The state recommended Albert Chwedczuk be sentenced to three years in prison. He also must pay up to $200,407 in restitution to his workers.

“This employer cheated his workers and hoarded public funds for his own enrichment,” Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal said in a statement. “This case is a message to all employers that we will not tolerate contractors underpaying their workers and lying about it.”

Contractors working on government projects are required to pay employees prevailing wage, which includes both wages and fringe benefits based on collective bargaining agreements for a particular trade in the county where the work takes place.

Chwedczuk, 45, had been barred since 2014 from working on public contracts because of previous violations of the Prevailing Wage Act when he operated Ren Construction LLC and Real Construction LLC, authorities said.

They said he created a new business called Bella Group LLC to obtain a subcontract worth $400,000 to perform masonry work for the Cooper Camden Student Housing Project on South Broadway.

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Labor Commissioner & Consumer Affairs Alert Garden State Accountants on Misclassification this Tax Season (NJ)

Labor Commissioner & Consumer Affairs Alert Garden State Accountants on Misclassification this Tax Season

Misclassifying workers as 1099 independent contractors denies benefits and costs the state

March 20, 2019, 4:41 pm

TRENTON – This tax season, the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development, in conjunction with the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs, sent a letter to Garden State accountants reminding them of the legal standard for proper classification of employees and reinforcing the state’s commitment to ending worker misclassification.

By misclassifying workers as independent contractors – workers who receive 1099s, not W-2s – employers avoid paying unemployment and disability taxes, costing state and federal taxpayers untold millions of dollars. In New Jersey alone, auditors have identified more than $80 million in underreported employer contributions since 2010.

“One of the Labor Department’s primary responsibilities is protecting workers from unscrupulous business practices, and supporting responsible businesses by ensuring everyone plays by the same set of rules,” said Labor Commissioner Robert Asaro-Angelo. “We are engaging New Jersey’s accounting professionals to send the message to employers that they are not able to shirk their responsibilities simply because they have unlawfully elected to use a particular form.”

Workers misclassified as independent contractors 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. Additionally, independent contractors are not covered under the National Labor Relations Act, which makes it more difficult for them to organize and collectively bargain with an employer.

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Lujan Grisham signs bill invalidating counties’ right-to-work laws (NM)

By Andy Lyman
March 29, 2019

Supporters of right-to-work legislation in New Mexico were dealt a big blow Wednesday when Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed into law a bill to prohibit counties from passing their own right-to-work laws.

Compulsory union fees in the public sector was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2018, but private sector unions can still require workers to pay union fees. It’s against the law for all unions to require workers to pay dues, but they can collect fees to pay for the wage and benefit bargaining.

With the governor’s signature, House Bill 85-sponsored by Democratic Reps. Daymon Ely of Albuquerque and Andrea Romero of Santa Fe-invalidates resolutions passed, over a span of about 14 months in 10 New Mexico counties and one village, that barred union membership as a condition of employment.

Lujan Grisham spokesman Tripp Stelnicki bluntly said state law takes precedence over local government.

“New Mexico is not a so-called ‘right-to-work’ state,” Stelnicki said. “That’s the reality in every county.”

The bill was a direct answer to a push by right-leaning organizations, led by Americans for Prosperity, to localize efforts that failed to pass the Legislature in 2015. That year, with a majority in the House, Republicans passed a bill that would have made it illegal for employers or labor unions to require workers to join a union as part of the job. That bill never made it past the Democratically controlled Senate.

A couple of years after that bill failed, Americans for Prosperity, a politically right-leaning group, began working with county commissions across the state to slowly pass their own right-to-work measures. Sandoval County was the first in the state to pass the law, but was quickly answered by a federal lawsuit from a labor union. The local labor union in that case argued the county did not have the authority to pass such a law and used an advisory letter from New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas to back up its claim.

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Say yes to more prevailing wage: Requiring higher pay for laborers in all public works is good for New York’s middle class (NY)

By KEVIN DUNCAN
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
MAR 20, 2019

Over a century ago, New York State established its first prevailing wage law. It was based on the common-sense principle that workers who build something for the public good be paid a fair wage for their work. It’s a deal that’s paid off for New York and for countless families who’ve been lifted into the middle class through hard work and sweat equity.

Prevailing wage laws require construction workers who do major jobs for state or local government to be paid at rates that are set through negotiations between businesses and laborers.

The problem today is that more and more big projects are being funded as public-private partnerships, blurring the line of what’s considered “public work.” Construction projects are being built throughout the state, subsidized with public funds, that are able to evade requirements to pay a decent wage to their workers.

Take the Trump Ferry Point Golf Course in the Bronx. New York City taxpayers spent over $120 million to build a golf course on the site. Trump was then selected to operate the course, and as part of that deal, built a $10 million clubhouse.

Because this part of the project was not clearly defined as “public work,” the billionaire developer was able to do so without wage requirements, keeping the extra profit for himself.

That’s why we need legislation to clearly define public work – and a bill currently under consideration in the state Legislature does just that. Supportive language was just included in one-house budget resolutions, and the governor has signaled his support as well.

A clear definition of public work will create a bright line test so there’s no more ambiguity. Under the proposed law, a project will be considered public work if: the construction is paid for in whole or in part with public funds, or the construction is performed in contemplation of a public entity leasing a portion of the space in the resulting development.

This would relieve the state of the great administrative burden of trying to determine whether or not various projects are public work. Furthermore, it would grant the Department of Labor additional enforcement abilities to better ensure that public funds are used appropriately.

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Opinion: New York’s Renewable Projects Need Prevailing Wages (NY)

By Maritza Silva-Farrell
April 9, 2019

The climate crisis is underway, and it’s clear that we need to take dramatic action to reduce our state’s greenhouse-gas emissions and reliance on fossil fuels. We need an economy-wide transition to renewable sources of energy, from powering our buildings with renewables like solar and wind to running our public transportation on electric vehicles. There’s no time for debate-according to the UN’s IPCC report, we need to face the climate crisis now, or condemn our planet and the people on it to a dire future, particularly frontline communities who are already experiencing the direct impacts of climate change.

The transition to clean energy will require a massive investment in renewable jobs. We’ll need workers to build and install solar panels and wind turbines, retrofit buildings for energy efficiency and create green public transit systems. As we direct our state’s resources into renewable infrastructure, it’s critical that we invest in the workers who build it.

The Climate and Community Protection Act sets an enforceable mandate to transition New York’s economy off of fossil fuels, and includes provisions for prevailing-wage standards for the workers employed by state-supported projects related to the transition. Researchers show that the Climate and Community Protection Act would create and sustain 150,000 jobs over the first decade of implementation, and these jobs must pay good, family-sustaining wages.

Green-energy projects are a critical part of our state’s economic future. There are already over 156,000 New Yorkers employed in the clean-energy sector. As we invest in solutions to the climate crisis, more and more New Yorkers will find jobs installing solar panels or weatherizing buildings. Including prevailing wage standards in our state’s climate legislation makes the bill not just about the environment, but about economic justice. Workers protecting our communities from the worst impacts of climate change should make a fair day’s pay for their work.

While there are other proposals on the table to address some parts of the climate crisis, none of them take into account the need for good labor standards for the workers who are building the transition.

By attaching prevailing wages to renewable energy projects, we’re investing in the long-term health of our communities and green economic growth. The creation of good union jobs will yield greater economic mobility for workers and their families. With the Climate and Community Protection Act we have an opportunity to do just that and bring more investment into our state. This bill, if passed, is expected to generate $138 billion in cumulative income for New York’s economy. Let’s make sure that the benefits of this investment go to workers and the communities that have been impacted the most by the climate crisis.

Maritza Silva-Farrell is the executive director of ALIGN, the Alliance for a Greater New York

(See Article)

Connections: Discussing the debate over the “prevailing wage”(NY)

By EVAN DAWSON & MEGAN MACK
4/1/19

Are construction workers paid fairly in New York State? The legislature has been debating the so-called “prevailing wage.” Non-union workers and business leaders have warned that expanding the prevailing wage will cripple businesses that want to expand, while stalling the clean energy industry. Union leaders have joined many Democrats in calling for more wage protections, arguing that the business community always claims the sky is falling when they have to pay people a little bit more.

Our guests debate it:

  • Brian Sampson, president of the New York State chapter of Associated Builders and Contractors
  • Dan Maloney, president of the Rochester & Genesee Valley Area Labor Federation
  • Dave Young, president of the Rochester Building and Construction Trades Council

(Listen to Discussion)

2019 Budget Fails to Close the “Public Works” Loophole (NY)

Opponents of commonsense reform mislead with false cost figures

For Immediate Release
April 1, 2019

Last night, state leaders reached a budget agreement for fiscal year 2019 which unfortunately fails to include the proper definition of public works. Properly defining public works is a commonsense reform to apply anti-corruption protections and family-supporting prevailing wages to all construction projects which receive public assistance.

To protect taxpayers from wasteful spending and corruption, New York requires competitive and transparent public bidding by contractors on all public works construction projects. Unfortunately, a loophole in state law allows millions of taxpayer dollars to be spent without the anti-corruption and transparency demanded of traditional public work projects. Increasingly, economic development projects across the state fall through this loophole, allowing public money to bypass these safeguards as it goes to private interests. Closing the loophole by properly defining public work to include all projects supported with public money will provide much needed accountability and transparency in government spending.

The measure’s opponents successfully muddied the water by spreading misinformation to suggest it would result in “huge” increases in construction project costs. The truth is that defining public works would reward workers and taxpayers, not the wealthy and irresponsible contractors exploiting our flawed system. As per economists Frank Manzo, Alex Lantsberg, and Kevin Duncan, “the overwhelming majority of peer-reviewed research conducted over the last 15 years forms the consensus view that construction costs are not affected by prevailing wages.” Sixteen other states across the country apply a more comprehensive definition of public work, which apply middle-class prevailing wages. Unsurprisingly, the doomsday scenario of huge cost increases and less development, which opponents claim would befall New York, has not materialized in these other states.

While today’s state budget was a missed opportunity, the New York Foundation for Fair Contracting looks forward to when all taxpayer-funded construction goes to the lowest responsible bidders, not the most politically well-connected contractors. The NYFFC is a non-profit established to level the playing field in public works construction for the benefit of taxpayers, responsible contractors, and workers.

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Union workers and day laborers join forces in push for prevailing wage (NY)

By DENIS SLATTERY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
MAR 27, 2019

Albany – An unlikely coalition of activists, union workers and day laborers joined forces Wednesday to call on New York lawmakers to grant raises to construction workers on publicly subsidized projects.

Hundreds of construction workers, decked out in orange and yellow, filled the state Capitol Building, shouting “End corporate welfare, pass public works!”

The workers want so-called prevailing wage rules, requiring all publicly funded construction projects pay at least the average wage paid on all projects completed in that area, to be expanded to all projects that use even a portion of public funds.

Gov. Cuomo and both chambers of the state Legislature have backed the measure, but whether it will be included in the final budget, due by April 1, remains unclear.

“The Legislature has a simple decision to make: do blue-collar workers deserve an honest day’s pay for an honest day’s work, or do developers deserve to grow their bottom-lines using our tax dollars?” Michael Hellstrom, the assistant business manager of the Mason Tenders District Council of Greater New York said. “This is about ensuring our tax dollars are no longer used to line the pockets of out-of-state contractors who exploit workers and drive wages down. The clock is ticking and construction workers need to know what the Legislature’s decision will be.”

Manuel Castro, the executive director of New Immigrant Community Empowerment, said the measure would provide protections to both union and non-union workers.

“I think it’s important to show unity on these issues because for a long time we’ve known that contractors, by using a variety of different schemes, like subcontractors or brokers, they look for cheap labor and don’t pay workers a living wage.

Sixteen states have already passed similar legislation.

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