U.S. Agencies Cleared to Require Union Workers on Job Sites
Monday, April 12, 2010
By Holly Rosenkrantz
April 13 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. agencies may require contractors on public construction projects to negotiate with labor unions under a rule issued today by the Obama administration.
The rule that takes effect next month lets the government make so-called project labor agreements a requirement for contractors on U.S.-financed construction jobs that exceed $25 million.
Under the order, unions have the ability to bargain for wages, hours and work-rules in exchange for agreeing not to call a strike. Supporters of project-labor agreements say it promotes efficiency on government purchases. Opponents say the arrangements discriminate against the more than 85 percent of construction workers who aren't union members.
"Anti-competitive project labor agreements are special interest kickback schemes," Jim Elmer, national chairman of the Associated Builders and Contractors that represents more than 25,000 firms, said in an e-mailed statement.
President Barack Obama issued several executive orders that supported labor unions in February 2009, a month after taking office, including a rule to promote project labor agreements in the construction industry. Today's action is a final step in implementing that executive order.
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