May 11, 2022
ABC recently surveyed contractor members regarding Davis-Bacon and Related Acts prevailing wage regulations, and the results clearly demonstrate that ABC members oppose Davis-Bacon regulations and have serious concerns about the changes recently proposed by the U.S. Department of Labor.
The 1931 Davis-Bacon Act and 71 related regulations require contractors and subcontractors that perform work on federal and federally funded construction projects to pay a government-determined prevailing wage and benefit rate on an hourly basis to on-site construction workers. The DBA collectively applies to an estimated $217 billion in federal and federally assisted construction spending per year and provides government-determined wage rates for an estimated 1.2 million U.S. construction workers.
On March 18, the DOL issued an ABC-opposed proposed rule that would undo Reagan-era reforms, expand coverage of prevailing wage requirements and ensure that union wage rates prevail more often. ABC surveyed its members to gauge their opinions on this rulemaking and assist in drafting informed comments.
Highlights from the survey include:
ABC members continue to oppose current DBA regulations and strongly support repeal or reform.
ABC members clearly indicated that the DBA increases administrative burdens and costs, artificially inflates wages and discourages competition.
ABC members believe the existing wage determination process is flawed.
The vast majority of members do not participate in wage surveys, indicating the failure of the WHD to engage the full contractor community and obtain accurate wage data.
ABC members oppose the proposed rule because it will exacerbate existing problems with DBA regulations.
This data will be extremely valuable as ABC pushes back on the proposed changes to the Davis-Bacon Act and files extensive comments before the May 17 deadline. Members can get involved by submitting ABC’s pre-generated comments on the rulemaking or by drafting their own comments and submitting them via regulations.gov at docket number WHD-2022-0001.
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