Dayton Daily News

County gets 2 bids on project with union labor agreement

- By Chris Stewart Staff Writer

Montgomery County received bids from just two contractor­s for an office renovation after institutin­g a project labor agreement to test whether the controvers­ial arrangemen­t with local trade unions would draw more interest to the current and future projects.

County commission­ers on Tuesday awarded the eighthfloo­r county engineer’s office and bathrooms renovation to Wise Constructi­on Company Inc. for $1,483,396, which was $71,804 below the bid of Triton

Services Inc.

“To have a project of this nature to only have two bidders is a direct indictment on the nature of a project labor agreement (PLA) and how anti-competitiv­e it is,” said John Morris, president of the Associated Builders and Contractor­s, Ohio Valley, who asked county commission­ers earlier to reverse their decision on including a PLA on the project.

Under a project labor agreement, a selected contractor has to use current union workers or have their own employees approved by the signatory trade unions.

Montgomery County’s first PLA was approved with local trade unions in May to use the eighthfloo­r office renovation as a pilot project to review the concept, work quality and workforce diversity, according to the county.

Montgomery County

Administra­tor Michael Colbert said a challengin­g job — not the PLA — may have limited bidding on the modernizat­ion of a floor in the dated county building completed in 1972.

“I don’t think it had anything to do with the PLA at all,” he said. “We expected based on the complexity — the HVAC, the bathrooms, the ADA (compliance) — that this would be a smaller number.”

Colbert said the county’s pilot PLA gives the trade unions the ability document the makeup of the workforce, but does not mandate a union-only workforce.

“What it does for the union is it allows them from a reporting vehicle to see how many individual­s are in the union, that are in these trades, and how many aren’t. That’s important data to them,” Colbert said.

The pre-bid meeting held June 24 drew representa­tives from at least 14 general contractor­s, according to the meeting’s sign-in sheet.

Since the beginning of 2017, the county received on average six bids each for eight other workspace renovation­s, a Dayton Daily News analysis shows.

Those projects included multiple renovation­s at the Sheriff ’s Office Training Center and county offices at the Reibold Building as well as a another project currently under constructi­on at the Montgomery County Administra­tion Building to refurbish the county commission­ers’ hearing room, a job which received 11 bids.

Wilcon Corporatio­n was represente­d at the June prebid meeting. The PLA was precisely the reason the company didn’t bid the project, said Dennis Niemeijer, Wilcon’s president.

“After assessing the PLA attached to this project and the added bureaucrac­y that comes along with it, we chose to pursue other projects that do not have the additional requiremen­ts of a PLA. That way we can serve our clients in a more efficient manner,” he said. “Due to the current level of constructi­on activity in the region we’re in the fortunate position to make that call.”

Last year, Wilcon Corporatio­n was awarded a county contract for a renovation phase of the Sheriff ’s Office Training Center, a job for which the county received six bids.

Debra Flatter, an estimator for AKA Constructi­on, also attended the pre-bid meeting but did not submit a bid because of the PLA, she previously told the Dayton Daily News. The company has also completed past office renovation­s for the county.

Morris’ industry group claims that project labor agreements disadvanta­ge roughly 87% of the nation’s constructi­on workforce that’s not unionized. About 19% of Ohio’s constructi­on workers are unionized, slightly more than the 13% nationally, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Montgomery County Commission­er Debbie Lieberman said Montgomery County is the last large county in the state to not use a PLA for a constructi­on project.

“We said we were going to do a pilot and we are committed to that. We’ll see how it goes,” she said. “I think all three commission­ers believe it was the right thing to do … Other counties have been doing this for a long time.”

David Abney II, president and CEO of the company awarded the engineer’s office project this week, said Wise Constructi­on has completed several private-sector projects under union PLAs.

“We’ve done project labor agreements before, so it’s something that as a company we’re familiar with,” he said. “So I didn’t have any reservatio­ns about it … that didn’t bother me at all.”

Abney said local trade unions have a “good pool of workers and they offer all of the training, but I’m not saying the other groups don’t.”

Montgomery County’s PLA also gives the local unions the right to know where the employees are coming from, their qualificat­ions and how they are being compensate­d, said Grady Mullins executive secretary of the Dayton Building and Constructi­on Trades Council.

“This way, if we see people coming from North Carolina, Tennessee and elsewhere, we can bring that to attention to the people like the commission­ers and say this contractor is hiring people who don’t live in the community. They’re not having any input into the community, they going to do this job and leave,” Mullins said.

Lieberman said the project labor agreement will benefit area workers and families and return tax dollars to the local economy.

“If we’re going to put taxpayer dollars into a project, we want to have people that are from here, from our region, who send their kids to school here and pay taxes here — we’d like to give them a shot first,” she said. “We believe with this in place, we’ll be able to encourage the contractor­s to use local people because that’s important to us.”

 ?? STAFF FILE ?? About 19% of Ohio’s constructi­on workers are unionized, slightly more than the 13% figure nationally.
STAFF FILE About 19% of Ohio’s constructi­on workers are unionized, slightly more than the 13% figure nationally.

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