The taxpayers will not get any breaks on school construction but will pay the prevailing wage, the governor signaled in a D.C. speech.
By Margo Sullivan, Patch Staff |
Apr 18, 2018 1:30 pm ET
WASHINGTON, DC – Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo told the Building Trades unions she is running for another term, and she supports the prevailing wage. Raimondo delivered a speech in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday. In her remarks, she mentioned the projects her administration has undertaken to put construction workers back on the job. Among the projects, she included her $1 billion plan to replace and rebuild the public schools.
State Rep. Patricia Morgan, a declared Republican candidate for governor, had suggested saving the taxpayers money by not paying the prevailing wage for the school construction jobs. But Raimondo, without mentioning Morgan, stood squarely with the unions and demands for the prevailing wage. The unions had a seat on the panel that developed the billion dollar plan for the schools. No taxpayer groups were represented.
Here is the governor’s speech.
Introduction
Thank you! I love having the opportunity to spend time with people who build things.
Thank you Sean McGarvey. I am so grateful for your friendship and support, and for inviting me back to speak here once again. Brent Booker, thank you for your leadership and for everything you do to support America’s tradesmen and tradeswomen. Terry O’Sullivan, you’re incredible – I’m so thankful for our partnership.
Armand Sabitoni – the pride of Rhode Island! I could not ask for a better friend or supporter. You are a champion for the building trades and you deserve so much credit for all of the exciting development that’s happening back home in our small state.
And to my own local leaders: Michael Sabitoni, Tim Byrnes, and Scott Duhamel, thank you for everything you’ve done to strengthen Rhode Island’s middle class. We’re not done yet. Let’s keep going, and let’s keep building.
Rebuilding the Middle Class Deal
For decades, there was a deal in America: if you worked hard and did what was expected of you, then you could raise a family with dignity and security. You could own a home, save for retirement, help your children pay for school, and even take time to visit beautiful beaches like the ones we have in Rhode Island!
In recent years, though, that “deal” has come under attack. There are powerful forces in America that have been working to ensure that a privileged few do well, without any concern for what happens to American workers.
In my state, the building trades got crushed by the recession. As recently as 2012, nearly one out four Rhode Islanders in the building trades were unemployed. When I was running for Governor, I would talk to tradesmen and tradeswomen. They’d been out of work three months, four months, nine months, a year. They were losing their homes. Losing their marriages. Losing their pride.
We had to do something. Back in 2014, across Rhode Island, there weren’t any jobs for laborers, but there was so much work to do.