The historically narrow pipeline for minorities into
Philadelphia’s building trades just got a little wider.
Under an agreement made public for the first time
Tuesday, the trade unions and the city will launch a pre-apprenticeship program
for the forthcoming Rebuild initiative, which is expected to involve
renovations at upward of 150 parks, recreation centers, and libraries over the
next six or more years.
City officials said about 30 people, drawn from
low-income neighborhoods, will be enrolled in the first year, with plans to
increase that number over the project’s lifespan.
“We think we can help the father or mother that is just
looking for a way to provide for his or her family,” Mayor Kenney said at a
Tuesday news conference. “We can help the young high school graduate who may
not want to go to college but is ready to work and earn an honest living. And
we can help our returning citizens who are trying to get their lives back on
track.”
Rebuild, a $500 million project to be paid for with
proceeds from the city’s sweetened beverage tax, has been pitched by Kenney as
a way to fight poverty, create equity among neighborhoods, and diversify the trades. Work
could start later this year.
The city has committed to having 45 percent of workers on
Rebuild sites be minorities, and 50 percent be Philadelphia residents.
Rebuild alone won’t dramatically change the makeup of the
city’s unions. Current diversity data for the building trades isn’t publicly
available, but numbers provided in 2008 as part of the expansion of the Convention
Center showed that a majority of the unions had less than 10 percent black
membership at the time.
But officials say Rebuild can have an outsize impact if
the private sector adopts similar diversity goals and pre-apprenticeship
requirements. Officials on Tuesday pointed to two other pre-apprenticeship
programs as examples, one created as part of the construction of the new
Pavilion at Penn Medicine and another for the construction of Brandywine Realty
Trust’s Schuylkill Yards.
“The expectation, the bar, has been raised for any
project taking place in neighborhoods across the city of Philadelphia,”
Councilwoman Cherelle L. Parker said at Tuesday’s event.
Under the agreement reached for Rebuild, any individual
projects valued at $3 million would be subject to the agreement with the
building trades. City officials have said they can’t estimate how many sites
that will be, since individual projects have yet to be selected.
The pre-apprenticeship program is intended to open entry
to that work — and to the building trades’ own apprenticeship programs — to
those who have traditionally faced barriers to getting into the unions. The
varied trades include carpentry, plumbing, and brick laying.
Those accepted to the pre-apprenticeship program will
take part in a two-week boot camp where they will receive math and work-skills
training and, if needed, help getting a driver’s license.
They then will be put to work on Rebuild sites while
continuing training. They can take an apprenticeship test at any time during
the 12-month pre-apprenticeship program, and will be allowed to take it a
second time if needed.
A second part of the agreement with the unions is focused
on providing union membership for those who are already working in the
construction and building industry. Those employees will have the opportunity
to work on some Rebuild sites managed by the Philadelphia Redevelopment
Authority and will then automatically gain membership to the unions.
Though officials from the trades and the city on Tuesday
touted the agreement as groundbreaking, skepticism remains. As
Council vetted the proposal, some members said the agreement would have little
impact if it didn’t require that the unions accept a specific number of
applicants. That is not part of the final document.
Council pressure did lead the trades to commit to
providing the demographic breakdown of workers on Rebuild sites. Previously,
the agreement required the unions to provide only the workers’ zip codes.
Wayne Miller, president of the Philadelphia Building
Trades Council, said his members are committed to diversity and would welcome
the structure for Rebuild being duplicated elsewhere
“The Philadelphia Building Trades is a good partner,” he
said. “What we want is something that’s consistent on every project. And going
forward, sometimes it’s difficult to change a culture that’s been around for 50
years, but we’re willing to do these things.”
Source: Philly.com
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