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Ogdensburg City Council Awards WWTP Project Bid, Despite Complaints From Non-Union Labor Representative
Ogdensburg City Council took a tongue lashing after accepting a $35.9 million wastewater treatment plant rehabilitation project bid from Jett Industries.
Amanda Bertram, vice president of public affairs for the Associated Builders and Contractors, called the award shameful and told city councilors they should have heeded her warnings about entering into a project labor agreement just to please Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo.
Editorial ā Too Hot to Handle: Labor Pact Didnāt Save Ogdensburg Any Money on Project Bids
āItās not shocking, this is a pattern that we have seen with public works projects across New York state that are bid with project labor agreements,ā Amanda Bertram, vice president of public affairs for the Associated Builders and Contractors/Empire State, said in a story published Saturday by the Times. āAcross the board, they all come in millions of dollars over engineering estimates. This is a trend.ā
Associated Builders and Contractors is a national trade organization representing those in the construction industry who donāt belong to unions. Ms. Bertram met with City Council members in November to discuss the disadvantages of using PLAs.
Contractors: High Bids on Project Are No Surprise
A spokeswoman for the state chapter of the national Associated Builders and Contractors, Inc., said City Council members should not be surprised that bids for the cityās wastewater treatment plant came in over estimate.
Marijuana Decriminalization to Pass, Wage Mandate Stalls
On Thursday, Cuomo declared a bill expanding a “prevailing wage” requirement that would apply to larger construction projects likely dead. The law would have expanded the definition of “public works” in New York to include projects receiving more than 30 percent of their funding from the government ā making those projects eligible for the wage requirement. Powerful building trades unions, who are among Cuomo’s most significant political supporters, had pushed the mandate this session.
Brian Sampson on Capital Press Room Discussing Prevailing Wage Expansion
Brian Sampson joined Mike Elmedorf, President of AGC on Capital Press Room to discuss prevailing wage
Statement by Brian Sampson, President of the Associated Builders and Contractors Empire State Chapter Regarding Assemblyman Bronsonās New Prevailing Wage Bill (A.8418)
The new Bronson prevailing wage bill is another sad attempt by the people we elect to do nothing more than appease the unions at the expense of the taxpayers.
Empire Chapter President, Brian Sampson Discusses The Devastating Impact of The New Prevailing Wage Bill
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Whatās Pushing Prevailing Wage Into The ‘Big Ugly’
A lack of public hearings on the issue and the rush to get the bill passed by the end of session also means that final details of the bill will be determined behind closed doors, according to Brian Sampson, president of Empire Chapter of the Associated Builders and Contractors. āThe potential impact of this bill, as drafted, could stop economic development in parts of this state for a long time,ā he said. āWhy aren’t we talking about this bill more openly, and having more discussions and dialogue about it, instead of wrapping it up with a pretty little bow in the āBig Ugly?āā
Union Requirement Inflates Cost of State Fair Bridge
A shortage of bids on theĀ New York State Fairgrounds pedestrian bridge projectĀ will leave New Yorkers paying more, but getting less. When plans for the project were released with an accompanying project labor agreement (PLA), the playing field narrowed from 20 companies interested in the project to just two submitting bids, with the lowest bid coming in well in excess of $1 million over engineering estimates. Why the drastic decrease in competition and increase in costs? The answer can be found in three simple letters: PLA.
Another Voice: Benefits Add Hidden Costs to Prevailing Wage Projects
Letās not be fooled. Proponents of the expansion of prevailing wage are already doing great damage to taxpayers. They shouldnāt be allowed to ruin what little positive job growth we now have in New York.