Baltimore Sun

Tradepoint has been good to organized labor

- Peter Demchuk, Baltimore The writer is business manager of the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers Local 24.

When Tradepoint Atlantic welcomed an 855,000-square-foot Amazon distributi­on facility to Sparrows Point, they could have given the constructi­on work to cheap labor. They could have brought in out-of-town companies who, by paying their workers low wages, would have passed on boatloads of savings. But they didn’t. Instead, Tradepoint Atlantic worked with local unions (“From environmen­tal hazard to water feature: Tradepoint Atlantic touts cleanup of polluted canal at former steel mill,” Sept. 26).

In 2016, they signed a Project Labor Agreement to make sure union contractor­s got a shot at applying for all Tradepoint Atlantic manager constructi­on projects and that workers would be paid a prevailing wage. Since then, they’ve worked with many local unions, including the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers Local 24, where I work. As the business manager with Local 24, in every interactio­n I’ve had with the Tradepoint Atlantic team, I was impressed by their commitment to keep work local.

I strongly support Tradepoint Atlantic’s plans for Sparrows Point because it will give more work to local workers. I know firsthand that they will uphold their promise to create quality jobs and economic growth for the community – putting county residents back to work and with it, lifting up all of Eastern Baltimore County. I call on all of Baltimore County to support Tradepoint Atlantic in this next endeavor.

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