A labor agreement to lower union costs on new construction
won unanimous approval Thursday from the Philadelphia Housing Authority's board
of commissioners.
Herb Wetzel, a PHA commissioner and executive director for
housing and community development issues for City Council, said he "never
thought he'd see the day that we'd get an affordable housing agreement in
Philadelphia."
Under the pact, the building trades would lower costs by 20
percent on large-scale construction projects for the housing authority.
Local labor leaders and PHA directors hailed the agreement.
Before the 6-0 vote, PHA president and chief executive
officer Kelvin Jeremiah said the agreement would "substantially
reduce" the authority's construction bills. The cost of building a
single-family home should drop from $300,000 to $250,000, he said.
But a lobbyist for a Washington-based construction-industry
trade association said the agreement will give "unions a monopoly" on
building projects and "a huge advantage over qualified nonunion
competitors."
Ben Brubeck, director of labor and federal procurement
issues for Associated Buildings and Contractors Inc., warned that such
"schemes" distort the free market and could increase costs in the
long run.
He said contractors would be forced to hire union
specialists for each type of construction job rather than allowing a worker to
handle many different tasks.
The PHA agreement covers construction projects worth more
than $5 million.
"Nonunion contractors will not be able to compete for
those projects," Brubeck said.
The Obama administration and U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development have encouraged this type of "project labor
agreements."
Responding to the PHA pact, John J. Dougherty, business
manager of Local 98 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
called it a "great initiative" that will help PHA to rebuild
neighborhoods.
Source: Philly.com
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