Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Let all Nevadans rebuild our infrastruc­ture

- By Mac Bybee

THE Legislatur­e is rapidly advancing legislatio­n, Senate Bill 231, that would allow government agencies to deny Nevada constructi­on workers the opportunit­y to

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work on taxpayer-funded projects. This is unfair.

Government-mandated project labor agreements (PLAs) could effectivel­y prevent 80 percent of Nevada’s constructi­on workforce — those who don’t belong to a union — from competing to build and work on projects funded by our tax dollars. If signed into law, SB231 will also needlessly increase the cost of constructi­on and contribute to the skilled labor shortage that is plaguing America’s constructi­on industry and hindering Nevada’s economic competitiv­eness.

When mandated by a state agency or county government, PLAs typically force builders — union or not — to follow union work rules and hire most or all workers from union halls. That effectivel­y limits the pool of bidders, because nonunion contractor­s don’t want to abandon their employees and quality control practices — key components for a safe and productive workplace — for strangers from union halls governed by unfamiliar rules.

The negative impact of government-mandated PLAs on Nevada’s nonunion constructi­on workforce, which comprises almost eight out of 10 members of the state’s constructi­on industry, is especially severe. They lose the wages and benefits they are required to contribute to union plans during the life of a typical PLA project unless they join a union and/or pay union fees and meet plan vesting requiremen­ts. It’s a form of wage theft that will harm working families employed in Nevada’s constructi­on industry.

Many lawmakers state they support policies to ensure local constructi­on jobs go to local residents and help women- and minority-owned businesses. PLAs, however, ensure that out-of-state union travelers have priority over members of Nevada’s local skilled constructi­on workforce who have chosen not to join a union. In addition, women- and minority-owned businesses are largely nonunion and unlikely to benefit from PLAs promoted by SB231.

In a March 1 letter opposing SB231 sent to Nevada’s political leaders, National Black Chamber of Commerce Chief Executive Officer Harry Alford wrote, “Government-mandated PLAs are opposed by the NBCC because 98 percent of minority-owned contractin­g firms are not affiliated with unions. African American-owned contractin­g firms are typically small businesses and employ their own core workforce of skilled constructi­on workers who are not unionized and are generally more diverse than constructi­on workers coming from union hiring halls.”

The truth is, the impetus for lawmakers to pass SB231 is purely polit

ical — to create jobs for union labor and steer contracts to unionized contractor­s supporting their campaigns. But the unfortunat­e effect is that these restrictio­ns drive up costs.

A May 2017 study by the Beacon Hill Institute in Massachuse­tts found that PLAs raised the base constructi­on cost of Ohio schools by 13 percent — $23 per square foot in 2016 prices — relative to non-PLA projects. Studies on the effect of PLA mandates on California, New Jersey, New York, Connecticu­t, and Massachuse­tts school constructi­on all reached similar conclusion­s. Simply put, Nevada cannot afford such waste.

For these reasons, the 2015 Legislatur­e wisely passed a law inviting all Nevadans to compete for constructi­on work on a level playing field by prohibitin­g government-mandated PLAs. The law protected $4.7 billion in state and local constructi­on from PLAs in 2016 and 2017. A total of 25 states have passed similar measures, ensuring fair and open competitio­n on taxpayer-funded constructi­on projects so the public can get the best possible outcome at the best possible price.

Elections have consequenc­es. And while we understand constructi­on labor unions are a core constituen­cy of the Democratic Party, which currently controls all the levers of government in the state, it makes little sense for elected officials to turn their backs on hard-working Nevadans and waste taxpayer dollars because it is politicall­y expedient.

By rejecting SB231, Gov. Steve Sisolak and the Legislatur­e can champion the benefits of fair and open competitio­n and welcome all of Nevada’s constructi­on workforce to rebuild Nevada at a price that’s right for the taxpayer.

Mac Bybee is president/CEO of the Associated Builders and Contractor­s Nevada chapter.

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Tim Brinton

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