Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bollard contractor files lawsuit against union, official

Laborers official Desalvio accused of defamation

- By Michael Scott Davidson Las Vegas Review-journal

Muller Constructi­on has filed a defamation lawsuit against Laborers Local 872 union and one of its elected officials.

Robert Kern, an attorney representi­ng the company, last week filed suit in Clark County District Court against the union and recording secretary Lou Desalvio. The Nevada Foundation for Fair Contractin­g, a nonprofit whose president is Laborers business manager and secretary-treasurer Tommy White, is also named as a defendant.

The suit follows claims by Desalvio that Muller Constructi­on underpaid constructi­on employees on a public works contract late last year. Desalvio submitted a complaint to the county and the Nevada Labor Commission­er’s office, sparking separate ongoing investigat­ions.

“These allegation­s are immensely harmful to this company, and they’re absolutely false. There has to be consequenc­es,” Kern said. “You’re talking about the livelihood and survival of this company and its employees.”

The lawsuit claims that Laborers Local 872 orchestrat­ed a “campaign of defamation” to harm Muller Constructi­on’s reputation because the company received a $4 million contract to install some 800 steel posts, known as bollards, along Strip sidewalks to prevent vehicles from driving onto them.

The lawsuit also claims union representa­tives picketed in front of Muller Constructi­on’s office and Strip worksites with 30-foot-long banners reading “Immigrant Labor Abuse — Labor Dispute — Muller Constructi­on.” The banner was in front of the company’s office as recently as Thursday afternoon.

“The effect of these statements has been to create the perception and belief among the public that Muller is an unscrupulo­us company that violates the law, abuses its workers, and hires ‘scabs’ to replace its (allegedly) striking workers,” the lawsuit states. “As Muller is a constructi­on contractor whose business is largely dependent upon receiving public works and government contracts, such perception­s among the public are vastly damaging, as they could convince County officials to cease contractin­g with Muller entirely.”

Muller Constructi­on’s lawsuit repeated the company’s claims Desalvio impersonat­ed a county official to gain access to the job site and falsified an interview with two workers who told them they and a third worker were being paid less than what is required by Nevada’s prevailing wage law. County commission­ers this month were poised to extend their contract with Muller Constructi­on by $2.5 million but postponed their decision until an investigat­ion into Desalvio’s claims are completed.

Desalvio could not be reached for comment Thursday, but he has denied Muller Constructi­on’s allegation­s against him. He has said he identified himself as a compliance officer for the Nevada Foundation for Fair Contractin­g, which monitors public works constructi­on projects for labor law violations.

White was unavailabl­e for comment.

Muller Constructi­on is seeking damages exceeding $10,000, plus attorney fees, and wants Desalvio, the union and the nonprofit to retract any false public statements made against the company.

Contact Michael Scott Davidson at sdavidson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3861. Follow @davidsonlv­rj on Twitter.

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