In a historic pact, the city's building-trades unions have
agreed to cut their wages and benefits by 20 percent when working on
residential construction projects for the Philadelphia Housing Authority.
Kelvin Jeremiah, PHA chief executive officer and president,
said the pact would, on average, reduce PHA's cost of building a house by
$50,000, allowing the public housing authority to increase the number of
affordable homes it can build.
"This is unheard-of," Jeremiah said Wednesday.
"These guys have come to the table and are willing to take a 20 percent
pay cut in the interest of affordable housing."
The five-year pact will come up for a vote Thursday at the
monthly meeting of PHA's board of commissioners.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which
provides most of PHA's funding, also must endorse the agreement.
Jeremiah said there already was broad support from Mayor
Nutter, city officials, and HUD leaders.
The agreement covers contracts of more than $5 million. It
does not cover members of the building trades who are employees of PHA and who
maintain existing properties.
"This is a very, very good negotiated agreement,"
said Pat Eiding, secretary-treasurer of the Building and Construction Trades
Council of Philadelphia.
Eiding, who also is president of the Philadelphia Council of
the AFL-CIO, said the agreement "didn't happen without a whole lot of
consternation and meetings." But he added that some of the 14 unions
represented by the building council "haven't had a hell of a lot of work
in the last couple of years."
Eiding said much of the residential construction in the city
was being done by nonunion contractors.
The agreement, Eiding said, is "probably going to go
down in history as a memorable moment."
He said it was difficult to calculate how much PHA would
save. The dollar sum of the wage reductions, he added, will vary from union to
union, but will remain at 20 percent of total compensation.
In affordable housing, PHA is the main player in the city.
"To be able to get such a significant change in rates
could be dramatic in terms of the number of affordable units they can
build," City Council President Darrell L. Clarke said.
Clarke is leading a drive to add 2,000 units of affordable
housing in the city. He said the building trades approached him to see how they
could help.
Jeremiah said that with existing labor expenses, it can cost
$300,000 for PHA to build a house. If PHA sells the unit as affordable housing
to a lower-income homeowner, it must subsidize the cost.
In the next five years, PHA expects to spend more than $280
million on new construction. That includes a redevelopment of the area around
the Blumberg housing project in North Philadelphia and a new headquarters
building planned for Ridge Avenue in the Sharswood neighborhood.
Eiding acknowledged that giving PHA a discount may lead
other developers to ask for the same. "I hope it does," he said,
adding that in return, the unions would want long-term employment commitments.
"When you get into residential building, some trades
may only have a day or two on a job," Eiding said. "The value is,
you're going to do many of them."
Jeremiah said the labor agreement would allow the authority
to do more with a shrinking $371 million budget.
PHA is not required to hire union contractors. But with the
agreement, the agency would pledge to engage only contractors who hire union
laborers, carpenters, painters, and other workers.
"It ensures that their members have jobs for the long
term," Jeremiah said. "And we have the ability to build more
units."
As part of the agreement, contractors for PHA must pledge to
set aside 25 percent of the jobs for public-housing residents. They must also
ensure that 20 percent of the subcontractors they hire are women or minorities.
The agreement eases tense relations between Jeremiah and the
building trades. When he became acting executive director of the authority two
years ago, Jeremiah clashed with labor leaders over a decision to eliminate
provisional jobs for the construction trades. The move, Jeremiah said at the
time, would save the agency millions by getting rid of overpaid temporary
painters, carpenters, and laborers.
Source: Philly.com
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