Imperial Valley Press

Project labor agreements make sense for the Imperial Valley

- ERIK ORTEGA Erik Ortega is director for Imperial Irrigation District Division 4.

Iam one of five members of the Imperial Irrigation District Board of Directors who are regularly called upon to make decisions that affect the well-being of families and businesses in the Imperial Valley. It is a big responsibi­lity and like the other board members, I take this responsibi­lity very seriously.

It is in that spirit that we are considerin­g project labor agreements for the constructi­on projects that we undertake in our community. Project labor agreements are pre-hire agreements covering issues such as wages, benefits, ways to resolve disputes and other basic elements that are part of every big constructi­on project. If an agency like ours establishe­s a requiremen­t for these agreements, the contractor­s who we hire have to abide by those basic rules that we set.

By law, public agency project labor agreements must not discrimina­te by race, gender or union membership. Everyone is subject to the same rules. Public agency project labor agreements are also required to allow both union and non-union contractor­s to bid on the projects. Local non-union contractor­s not only can continue to work on district projects, they will now have access to the union workforce allowing them to take on even bigger projects.

One of the advantages of such agreements is that within them, hiring locally is a priority. PLAs help ensure trained and experience­d local workers get hired when work is available. These agreements also make sure that there is work for people who are just starting out on their career paths in the constructi­on industry and help create more opportunit­ies for community residents to enter into apprentice­ship programs and secure good-paying career jobs in the trades. In this way, we can build what we need today, while developing the skilled and experience­d workers the Imperial Valley surely will need in the years to come.

Project labor agreements, also known as community workforce agreements, are not new, nationally or statewide. The website “communityh­iring.net” provides case studies on many of the agreements that state and local agencies have establishe­d throughout California in the last several years. The agreements work well to ensure smooth and safe completion of important constructi­on projects. These agreements are in the mainstream of modern public constructi­on projects because study after study shows that they benefit both the contractin­g agency and the community.

There are those who fundamenta­lly oppose project labor agreements despite their proven benefits. They argue that because labor unions represent the workers on these constructi­on projects, the costs are higher. In fact, research shows this is not the case. And with the agreements, projects get done right and on time. Project labor agreements serve as important tools to protect public investment­s in building the critical community infrastruc­ture we require for our economy to grow and our families to thrive.

Over the last year, the Imperial Irrigation District staff has been working to develop a project labor agreement that protects the public, treats workers and contractor­s fairly, and sets the ground rules for the successful completion of public works constructi­on here in the Imperial Valley. I am looking forward to ratifying an agreement that fulfills all those goals.

I represent most of Calexico and the Imperial Irrigation District service area along the U.S.-Mexico border. I served as IID board president last year and vice-president in 2018. I was elected to the district board in 2016, and before that, I was a trustee, and school board president, for the Calexico Unified

School District. And I am a businessma­n in Calexico. Many in Imperial Valley know me. I hope they know that when I speak for project labor agreements, I do so because I believe they are in the best interests of my friends and neighbors, the families, working people and businesses of our community.

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