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STUDY: Prevailing Wage Laws Boost Homeownership for Construction Workers

February 19, 2020
By: Frank Manzo IV, Jill Gagstad, Robert Bruno, Ph.D.

Prevailing Wage and the American Dream: Impacts on Homeownership, Housing Wealth, and Property Tax Revenues

This study examines links between prevailing wage laws and homeownership, housing wealth, and property tax revenues for … workers and their communities. …

State prevailing wage laws promote the hiring, development, and retention of skilled workers by encouraging investment in apprenticeship programs. Prevailing wage rates often include a cents-perhour-worked contribution into workforce training institutions. As a result, apprenticeship training is 6 to 8 percent higher in states with prevailing wage laws, boosting worksite productivity by an average of at least 11 percent (Bilginsoy, 2003; Duncan & Lantsberg, 2015). Since state prevailing wage laws enhance productivity and labor costs are a small percentage of total costs in construction, the preponderance of the peer-reviewed research has concluded that state prevailing wage laws have no impact on total project costs (Duncan & Ormiston, 2017).

…despite a robust economic literature on apprenticeship training, safety, worker earnings, and costs, little research has been conducted showing the effect of state prevailing wage laws on construction worker homeownership.

This report, conducted jointly by the Illinois Economic Policy Institute (ILEPI) and Project for Middle Class Renewal (PMCR) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, fills that void in the economic research, assessing the impact of state prevailing wage laws on the homeownership rate of skilled construction workers. The impact of state prevailing wage laws on the home values of blue-collar construction workers is also analyzed, determining whether the policy allows construction workers to build household wealth and positively contribute to their communities through property tax revenues.

(PDF Copy of Full Report)

(Visit the ILEPI Website)

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IL: Attorney General Raoul Convenes First Meeting Of Worker Protection Task Force

1/23/20

Chicago, IL (WorkersCompensation.com) – Attorney General Kwame Raoul today convened the first meeting of a task force that will facilitate collaboration between the Attorney General’s office, county prosecutors and state agencies in order to better protect workers’ rights and law-abiding businesses in Illinois.

The Worker Protection Unit Task Force was created under Senate Bill (SB) 161, which was initiated by Attorney General Raoul and signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker. The new law became effective on Jan. 1, 2020. The task force will bring together the state’s leading regulatory agencies that impact workers, law enforcement and worker protection advocates in order to better combat wage payment violations and unfair labor practices. …

… The new law established a Worker Protection Unit Task Force to facilitate information sharing and collaboration between the Attorney General’s office, local prosecutors, the Illinois Department of Labor, the Illinois Department of Human Rights, the Illinois Department of Employment Security and the Workers’ Compensation Commission. …

In addition to establishing the Worker Protection Unit Task Force, Senate Bill 161 codified the Worker Protection Unit within the Attorney General’s office to enforce violations of worker protection laws. The law also gives the Attorney General clear legal authority to investigate and bring enforcement actions against employers that commit wage theft and other workplace rights violations.

(Read More)

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City officials: Getting tax breaks on your project? Pay prevailing wage (MO)

February 07, 2020

ST. LOUIS (KMOX) — St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson has signed an ordinance guaranteeing a prevailing wage for workers on all projects in that receive City of St. Louis incentives.

Krewson says the idea is to avoid developers who get tax breaks and then try to hire workers on the cheap.

“We want to make sure if the city is investing in a project, that the workers are treated fairly and the contractors are treated fairly,” Krewson told KMOX. …

“This is very important to our construction workers on city tax incentivized projects — they’ll be getting a fair wage and benefits on any of these projects,” said Alderwoman Sarah Martin, who sponsored the ordinance.

(Read More)

Fair Contracting Foundation of Minnesota

January 2020 Newsletter

Trades Women Build Nations: Epic Movement in the Making

The next generation of building trades members came to Minneapolis in October. To organize, to learn, but most importantly, to celebrate being in the trades.

The 9th National Trades Women Build Nations Conference solidified itself as the North America’s Building Trades Union’s (NABTU’s) largest annual gathering. More than 2,700 women from across North America attended, surpassing last year’s total. Equally impressive is that the attendees paid their own way.

“The people in leadership who attended were very surprised at the pride women have in being union trades workers. They couldn’t believe the energy of the conference as a whole,” said Vicki O’Leary, chairwoman of the NABTU committee. “More general presidents taking a role is exactly what we need to keep women’s membership growing.”

Local Minnesota unions and their leadership made a strong contribution to the success of the conference according to Jessica Looman, executive director of the Minnesota Building Trades. “The conference was very well supported by the locals. One thing really exciting to see was local union leadership really embrace the conference not just by asking their members to attend but by encouraging them to be leaders,” she said.

(PDF Copy of January 2020 Newsletter)

(Visit FCFMN’s Resources Page)

Wage theft: An underreported crime

Catholic News Service |Mark Pattison
February 21, 2020

A rising tide lifts all boats, according to the popular economic adage.

But what if the reverse also is true? What happens when wages are depressed, and illegally so?

The Catholic Labor Network, based in Washington, is testing that theory right now through its Mid-Atlantic Construction Wage Theft Project. It has sent a man to construction sites in Maryland and the District of Columbia to talk to workers to learn who hired them and how much they’re getting paid.

Ernesto Galeas, who has gone to the job sites, said a growing number of builders are going through labor brokers to obtain workers. The brokers get their fee – and, according to Galeas, the workers get about $10 an hour with no overtime, no Social Security, no worker’s compensation and no health insurance. …

In a February phone interview with Catholic News Service, Galeas said: “In every job that I visit, most of them have labor brokers in drywall, carpentry, siding, plumbing, electricians. I would say that of 10 jobs, eight of them are under labor brokers.”
While labor brokers were more common in new-home construction, it has spread to commercial development, he added. …

The attorney general’s office in the District of Columbia levied fines this winter totaling roughly $3.25 million against three firms found to have violated the city’s wage-theft law. Some of that money will go to workers as back pay. Two of the three companies specialize in drywall hanging and electrical work.

D.C.’s Workplace Fraud Act, which applies to the construction industry, requires companies to classify most workers as employees. Those who violate the law can face significant fines. Maryland has a similar bill, hence the Catholic Labor Network’s focus there with its wage-theft initiative. …

California passed the Private Attorneys General Act, which allows workers to stand in the shoes of their state’s labor department and seek civil penalties for wage theft; they also generate millions in new revenue for state enforcement agencies, expanding their capacity to root out wage theft. Such legislation also has been proposed in New York, Oregon, Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont and Washington. …

A 2017 study by the Economic Policy Institute found wage theft “causes many families to fall below the poverty line, and it increases workers’ reliance on public assistance, costing taxpayers money. Lost wages can hurt state and local economies, and it hurts other workers in affected industries by putting downward pressure on wages.”

In examining the 10 most populous states, which hold a bit more than half the U.S. population, wage theft comes to more than $8 billion a year. “If the findings for these states are representative for the rest of the country, they suggest that the total wages stolen from workers due to minimum wage violations exceeds $15 billion each year,” the report said.

Just how much is that? David Cooper, a senior analyst at the Economic Policy Institute and co-author of the report, told CNS that “when you look at the amount of wage theft that takes place, it’s significantly more than the value of property theft.” The report quotes FBI statistics from 2015 that show the combined value of money and property stolen in robberies, burglaries, larceny and motor vehicle theft in the United States was $12.7 billion.

“The magnitude,” Cooper said, “is a lot larger than people think.”

(Read More)

Illinois law promoting diversity in construction set to take effect (IL)

Posted by Adam Redling
December 30, 2019

Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker signed Illinois Works Jobs Program legislation Dec. 10 to strengthen a pillar of the state’s Rebuild Illinois initiative and increase diversity in apprenticeships for construction and the building trades. Senate Bill 177 takes effect Jan. 1, 2020.

Rebuild Illinois is a $45 billion capital program designed to improve the state’s infrastructure and provide resources to those in the building profession.

The Illinois Works Jobs Program will help ensure that Illinois residents from all communities not only benefit from capital projects, but also have access to careers in the construction industry and building trades.

The law encompasses a $25 million investment and works through community-based organizations. These organizations will help recruit new apprentices to work on construction projects and sets strong apprentice participation goals of 10 percent on public works projects. Through this pre-apprenticeship program, bid credit program and review panel, the new law is designed to help ensure the Illinois Works Jobs Program can build and maintain a diverse workforce on Rebuild Illinois projects.

“Rebuild Illinois is the largest, most robust capital plan in state history. We’re working with our partners to make sure every community in the state benefits from these good jobs-especially those who have been left out for far too long,” Pritzker says. “We’re putting Illinois’ government back on the side of working families, designing a state that is economically prosperous not just for the few, but for every Illinoisan, no matter the color of their skin or their ZIP code.”

(Read More)

Power Design to Pay $2.75 Million to Resolve Wage Theft Lawsuit (DC)

D.C. Office of the Attorney General alleges national electrical contracting company misclassified more than 500 workers as independent contractors. This settlement is OAG’s largest recovery to date in a wage enforcement action.

January 23, 2020

Attorney General Karl A. Racine recently announced that Power Design, Inc., a national electrical contractor headquartered in St. Petersburg, Fla., will be required to pay $2.75 million to workers and the District as part of a settlement in a wage theft and worker misclassification case. The settlement with the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) resolves a 2018 lawsuit against Power Design and two subcontractors that staffed its worksites for allegedly misclassifying more than 500 electrical workers as independent contractors instead of employees to cut labor costs. OAG also alleged that Power Design cheated workers out of wages and benefits and failed to pay District unemployment insurance taxes.

Under the terms of the settlement, Power Design will be required to: …

  • Pay $50,000 to support apprenticeships, job training, or workforce development opportunities to District residents.
  • Implement new policies and procedures to ensure compliance with the District’s minimum wage, overtime, paid sick leave, and worker misclassification laws.

(Read More)

Press Release: AG Racine Announces Two District Employers Must Pay Nearly $500K In Unpaid Wages To Workers And Penalties (DC)

News Release – DC Office of the Attorney General
Jan. 2, 2020

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Attorney General Karl A. Racine today announced that the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) resolved two wage theft enforcement actions against two District employers that require them to pay nearly $500,000 in relief to harmed workers and penalties to the District. In a settlement with the Office of the Attorney General (OAG), Rock Spring Contracting, LLC, a construction company, is required to pay over $280,000 for allegedly misclassifying workers as independent contractors and depriving them of legally-mandated paid sick leave and overtime pay. …

Under the District’s Workplace Fraud Act, which applies to the construction industry, companies are required to classify most workers as employees and those who fail to do so can face significant penalties. …

OAG’s Increased Efforts to Fight Wage Theft

In 2017, OAG worked with the Council of the District of Columbia to grant the agency independent authority to investigate and bring wage theft cases, and to increase penalties on employers who violate the District’s wage and hour laws. Since then, OAG has launched more than 30 investigations into wage theft and payroll fraud and has taken action against a home health care provider, a national electrical contracting firm, KFC franchises, a cell phone store, a cafe chain, and other businesses that harmed District workers. AG Racine also recently testified before Congress and highlighted findings from an OAG report about how worker misclassification-a type of payroll fraud-hurts workers, undercuts law-abiding businesses, and cheats taxpayers. Read our latest factsheet on OAG’s work to protect District workers.

(Read More)

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UC Davis housing contractor gets 10 years in prison for fraud (CA)

Nov. 17, 2019

DAVIS, Calif. – A 56-year-old Colorado man who fraudulently became a UC Davis housing contractor has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for insurance fraud, wage theft, perjury and grand theft, officials said. …

Thompson then secretly ran the business using the fraudulent license, officials said.

His business was able to obtain a contract with UC Davis to build student housing. During construction, he stole more than $633,000 of his employees’ wages, defrauded the California State Compensation Insurance Fund and committed perjury to conceal his fraud. In all, he caused a total loss of more than $2 million, according to the district attorney’s office.

(Read More)

Construction firms owe $1.1 million in back pay (IL)

State decision on prevailing wage follows complaint by carpenters council.

By David Roeder
Feb 24, 2020

The Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters said Monday the developer and subcontractors that built a senior living center in Northbrook have been ordered to pay $1.1 million to employees for violating state law on prevailing wages and benefits.

The Illinois Department of Labor, responding to charges the council filed, ordered the back pay for employees who constructed the Lodge of Northbrook, a 164-unit facility at 2150 Founders Drive, Northbrook. The project benefited from bonds issued by the Illinois Finance Authority, making it subject to the state’s Prevailing Wage Act. …

Executive Secretary-Treasurer Gary Perinar of the carpenters council said the back pay award is the largest in its history. He said many workers will receive thousands of dollars paid out over a year.

“We have a new department dedicated to combating wage theft and are putting unscrupulous contractors on notice that cheating workers and taxpayers will not be tolerated,” he said. The council is a part owner of Sun-Times Media. …

“Wage theft and the loss of tax revenue affects everyone,” Perinar said. “It takes advantage of workers, many of whom are unaware of their right to receive fair wages and benefits for themselves and their families. It puts signatory union contractors at a disadvantage for competitively bid projects. And it cheats communities out of tax dollars to increase future growth, new projects and public services. Thanks to our research team for discovering this injustice and to the Department of Labor for enforcing the law.”

(Read More)