New York City’s infrastructure crisis stems from many
issues, but one of the biggest problems in maintaining and expanding the city’s
arteries are construction costs, which have ballooned into a stratosphere
of unknown numbers and complete non-transparency on the part of city agencies.
But now YIMBY has obtained data showing that salaries are up to 177%
higher for unionized employees of contractors performing public works projects
and building service work for government agencies than the prevailing wages of
their respective private industry counterparts.
The gap in pay is unsurprising considering the lack of
transparency when it comes to New York’s major public works projects, and
bloated salaries often hide gross corruption in local politics. The MTA is currently seeking to close
a $14 billion gap in its five-year capital plan, yet it cannot tell the public how a
$1.5 billion downpayment on the second phase of the Second Avenue
Subway will be spent, or what specifically it is for.
Data shows that the difference in pay is largest for
insulators who make $68,996 if employed by private industry. When on the dole
for government or public work projects, they make an average of $190,223, which
is a jump of 177%.
Similarly jaw-dropping increases hold true across other
professions in the construction trades, with the highest salary going to
structural iron workers, who take home an average of $235,248 on government
projects, compared to $111,920 normally. Steamfitters come in second, with
$221,603 vs $98,328, and electricians in third, with $216,382 vs. $108,515.
High salaries in and of themselves are a good thing, but
when the discrepancy is due to corruption and a lack of transparency rather
than legitimate competition, the city does not benefit. Instead, New York City
is faced with plans that waste billions of taxpayer dollars, with labor costs
that are beyond absurd a major causative factor.
Source: New
York YIMBY
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