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Swartley Bros. Announces New Mechanical Service Department

In late 2023, Swartley formed its new dedicated Mechanical Services department complementing the industrial/commercial electricalcellular, and tower services departmen. The department handles mechanical projects of various types and sizes. The mechanical services team includes management, field technicians, foremen, and mechanics.

Our team collectively brings over 100 years of experience in the mechanical industry. They have worked across diverse market sectors, facility types, and HVAC systems. This extensive expertise enables the team to manage projects ranging from $1,000 to over $5,000,000.

Learn more

 

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OMB Announces New Guidance on Buy America Requirements

On Aug. 14, the Office of Management and Budget announced final guidance to revise OMB’s Guidance for Grants and Agreements. This guidance defines the rules for federal agencies as they distribute funding through grant programs and other financial assistance. The revisions would aid implementation of the Build America, Buy America Act provisions of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. This guidance finalizes a proposal issued by the OMB on Feb. 9.  

The IIJA requires the following expanded Buy America preferences and broadens the preferences to include nonferrous metals, such as copper used in electric wiring; plastic- and polymer-based products; glass, including optical fiber; and certain other construction materials, such as lumber and drywall:

  • All iron and steel used in the project are produced in the United States. This means all manufacturing processes, from the initial melting stage through the application of coatings, occurred in the United States.
  • All manufactured products used in the project are produced in the United States. This means the manufactured product was manufactured in the United States, and the cost of the components of the manufactured product that are mined, produced or manufactured in the United States is greater than 55% of the total cost of all components of the manufactured product, unless another standard for determining the minimum amount of domestic content of the manufactured product has been established under applicable law or regulation.
  • All construction materials are manufactured in the United States. This means that all manufacturing processes for the construction material occurred in the United States.

The final guidance largely implements the guidance as proposed, with some limited technical modifications. It codifies the rules outlined above and is intended to clarify several aspects of Buy America implementation:

  • Defines “cost of components” for manufactured products as acquisition cost and transportation costs for components purchased by the manufacturer, and all costs associated with manufacture of any components created by the manufacturer;
  • Specifies manufacturing standards for various construction materials; and
  • Defines “manufactured products” as products that have been processed into a specific form or shape or combined with other materials, “do not consist wholly or predominantly of iron or steel or both” and are not construction materials.

ABC commented on the proposed guidance to urge OMB to balance Buy America requirements with safeguards against increased costs and delays of infrastructure projects funded by taxpayers. While ABC supports strategies to expand domestic jobs and manufacturing to avoid global supply chain disruptions and capture economic benefits within America, ABC continues to have concerns regarding immediate implementation of the guidance’s domestic content requirements.

The guidance will take effect 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.

 

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DOL Increases Costs for Contractors and Taxpayers With Davis-Bacon Final Rule

On Aug. 8, the U.S. Department of Labor issued its final rule, Updating Davis-Bacon and Related Acts, making drastic revisions to existing regulations concerning government-determined prevailing wage rates that must be paid to construction workers on federal and federally assisted construction projects funded by taxpayers.

The new rule was hailed by Vice President Kamala Harris and Acting DOL Secretary Julie Su in a speech to union construction workers and leaders in Philadelphia, and the White House released a fact sheet on the new rule.

ABC issued a statement opposing the new rule, which was picked up by more than 700 publications, stating,

“This is yet another Biden administration handout to organized labor on the backs of taxpayers, small businesses and the free market,” said ABC Vice President of Regulatory, Labor, and State Affairs Ben Brubeck. “Unfortunately, the DOL’s final rule disregards the feedback of ABC contractors, construction industry stakeholders and thousands of small businesses urging the withdrawal of this unnecessary, costly and burdensome regulation. Instead, the DOL is moving forward with dramatic changes to prevailing wage regulations, reversing much-needed reforms that were established nearly 40 years ago, and unlawfully increasing the regulatory burden on small businesses, new industries and public works projects.” 

ABC also gave interviews to top-tier national media, generating sympathetic coverage in The Washington Examiner, Yahoo! News and dozens of local television stations. Overall, coverage was featured on MSN, The Washington Post, U.S. News and World Report and more, reaching millions of readers and viewers.

In May 2022, ABC submitted nearly 70 pages of comments on the DOL’s ABC-opposed March 2022 proposed rule, and its more than 50 significant changes, urging the DOL to withdraw the proposal. ABC’s comments detailed how the proposed rule violated existing law and would fail to fix the DOL’s unscientific wage determination process, rescind pro-taxpayer reforms made by the Reagan administration and increase regulatory burdens on small businesses, new industries and more public works projects.

ABC staff is still conducting thorough analysis on the more than 800-page final rule, but its initial review and this DOL chart confirm several key changes to existing regulations:

  • Changing the definition of “prevailing wage” to a wage paid to at least 30% of workers surveyed in a locality, a reduction from the 50% threshold established during Reagan administration reforms enacted nearly 40 years ago
  • Allowing the DOL to adopt state or local prevailing wage rates as DBA wage rates
  • Making DBA requirements effective by “operation of law,” meaning even if a federal agency fails to include DBA clauses in a contract, contractors are still required to pay prevailing wages
  • Adding new anti-retaliation provisions to DBA contracts

However, the DOL did modify a number of provisions of the proposed rule, in some cases directly referencing ABC’s comments in its decision to mitigate some of the rule’s harmful provisions, including:

  • The proposed rule intended to expand DBA coverage to any off-site facility where a “significant portion of the building or work is constructed,” but the final rule recognized the unfeasible scope of this requirement and instead only covers off-site construction at sites specifically established or dedicated exclusively to a DBA project
  • The proposed rule would have required compensation of delivery drivers at DBA wage rates for almost all on-site delivery work, even for only a few minutes, but the final rule instead exempts drivers spending minimal time on site from DBA

The final rule is effective 60 days following its publication in the Federal Register.

ABC is evaluating compliance, advocacy and litigation strategies.

ABC is offering a members-only webinar on Aug. 21 at 3 p.m. ET and will continue to provide additional resources to assist contractors in complying with these new regulations at abc.org/davisbacon.

The new rule is also opposed by key congressional leaders, including Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Ranking Member Bill Cassidy, R-La., who blasted the Biden administration’s new rule, stating, “This is the last thing our country needs as families continue to live with the painful effects of the Biden administration’s inflation agenda.”

House Education and the Workforce Committee Chairwoman Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., also released a statement calling the new rule “wrong” and stating that it “will also drastically increase the costs of federal construction projects, leading to fewer completed infrastructure projects and a greater burden on taxpayers.”

Cassidy and Foxx have also questioned Su’s indefinite appointment without Senate confirmation in potential violation of the constitutional provision of advice and consent that could open any DOL action under Su’s leadership to legal challenges.

The 1931 Davis-Bacon Act and 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. According to the DOL rulemaking, the Davis-Bacon Act and 71 active Related Acts collectively apply to an estimated $217 billion in federal and federally assisted construction spending per year—about 63% of all government construction put in place—and provide government-determined wage rates for an estimated 1.2 million U.S. construction workers.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates that repealing the 1930s-era Davis-Bacon Act would save the federal government $24.3 billion in spending between 2023 and 2032. A May 2022 study found that the Davis-Bacon Act costs taxpayers an extra $21 billion a year, increases the price tag of construction projects by at least 7.2% and inflates construction workforce wages by 20.2%, compared to local market averages, if the DOL calculated prevailing wages using modern and scientific methodology via the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

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NLRB Overrules Boeing, Creating Confusion in the Workplace

On Aug. 2, the National Labor Relations Board issued a decision in Stericycle Inc., which overruled Boeing and adopted a new legal standard for evaluating employer work rules challenged as facially unlawful under Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act. The Stericycle decision could fundamentally affect the labor policies of many employers in the construction industry.

The ABC-led Coalition for a Democratic Workplace immediately issued a statement, denouncing the decision. “The Board’s decision makes it nearly impossible for employers across the country to provide safe, hostile-free workplaces for workers,” said Kristen Swearingen, ABC vice president of legislative & political affairs and chair of the CDW. “The Board has inserted instability and confusion into the workplace and created risks for employers attempting to implement commonsense policies that protect workers, customers and the community.

“The better approach, by far, was the Board’s decision in Boeing, which ensured the Board would consider both the employer’s legitimate justifications and the potential impact on workers’ NLRB rights when assessing a facially neutral policy, rule or handbook provision,” said Swearingen. “This standard clearly and appropriately balanced the analysis and ensured employers can provide safe workplaces for all.

The Board’s Stericycle decision will only create confusion for the regulated community, and CDW will pursue avenues to reverse this dangerous precedent.”

In a NLRB press release announcing the decision, Chairman Lauren McFerran stated, “Boeing gave too little consideration to the chilling effect that work rules can have on workers’ Section 7 rights. Under the new standard, the Board will carefully consider both the potential impact of work rules on employees and the interests that employers articulate in support of their rules. By requiring employers to narrowly tailor their rules to serve those interests, the Board will better support the policies of the National Labor Relations Act.”

In March 2022, the CDW filed an amicus brief in the Board’s Stericycle case, opposing the NLRB’s announced plan to overturn the 2017 Trump-era NLRB Boeing decision, dealing with the legality of many facially neutral employer handbook provisions. ABC, along with several other organizations, joined the brief.

ABC is continuing to review the Stericycle decision and will provide any new developments in Newsline.

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NLRB Overrules Boeing, Upending Commonsense Workplace Policies

On Aug. 2, the National Labor Relations Board issued a decision in Stericycle Inc., which overruled Boeing and adopted a new legal standard for evaluating employer work rules challenged as facially unlawful under Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act. The Stericycle decision could fundamentally affect the labor policies of many employers in the construction industry.

The ABC-led Coalition for a Democratic Workplace immediately issued a statement, denouncing the decision. “The Board’s decision makes it nearly impossible for employers across the country to provide safe, hostile-free workplaces for workers,” said Kristen Swearingen, ABC vice president of legislative & political affairs and chair of the CDW. “The Board has inserted instability and confusion into the workplace and created risks for employers attempting to implement commonsense policies that protect workers, customers and the community.

“The better approach, by far, was the Board’s decision in Boeing, which ensured the Board would consider both the employer’s legitimate justifications and the potential impact on workers’ NLRB rights when assessing a facially neutral policy, rule or handbook provision,” said Swearingen. “This standard clearly and appropriately balanced the analysis and ensured employers can provide safe workplaces for all.

The Board’s Stericycle decision will only create confusion for the regulated community, and CDW will pursue avenues to reverse this dangerous precedent.”

In a NLRB press release announcing the decision, Chairman Lauren McFerran stated, “Boeing gave too little consideration to the chilling effect that work rules can have on workers’ Section 7 rights. Under the new standard, the Board will carefully consider both the potential impact of work rules on employees and the interests that employers articulate in support of their rules. By requiring employers to narrowly tailor their rules to serve those interests, the Board will better support the policies of the National Labor Relations Act.”

In March 2022, the CDW filed an amicus brief in the Board’s Stericycle case, opposing the NLRB’s announced plan to overturn the 2017 Trump-era NLRB Boeing decision, dealing with the legality of many facially neutral employer handbook provisions. ABC, along with several other organizations, joined the brief.

ABC is continuing to review the Stericycle decision and will provide any new developments in Newsline.

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ABC: Nonresidential Construction Employment Increases in July

WASHINGTON, Aug. 4—The construction industry added 19,000 jobs on net in July, according to an Associated Builders and Contractors analysis of data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. On a year-over-year basis, industry employment has expanded by 198,000 jobs, an increase of 2.5%. 

Nonresidential construction employment increased by 10,600 positions on net, with growth in two of the three subcategories. Nonresidential building added 10,500 positions, while heavy and civil engineering added an additional 2,200 jobs. Nonresidential specialty trade lost 2,100 jobs on net.

The construction unemployment rate rose to 3.9% in July. Unemployment across all industries declined from 3.6% in June to 3.5% last month.

“The economy is slowing, and inflation remains problematic,” said ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu. “While many economists have reversed their predictions of a near-term recession and conclude that the Federal Reserve will be able to engineer a soft landing, today’s report is a reminder that risks remain. Not only is the economy slowing, but wage pressures remain. Accordingly, the war on excess inflation has not yet been won, which means that the Federal Reserve may not be done raising rates.

“That said, nonresidential construction contractors continue to expand their payrolls,” said Basu. “General and public works contractors collectively hired thousands of people in July. However, weakness in several commercial real estate segments may help explain job losses among nonresidential contractors last month. Nonetheless, construction worker wages continue to grow rapidly in the context of structural skills shortages. According to data from the ADP Pay Insights report, construction workers who stayed at their job saw a 6.4% wage increase over the past year, or more than twice the rate of inflation.

“ABC’s Construction Confidence Index indicates that contractors will collectively continue to expand staffing for the rest of 2023,” said Basu. “That will presumably keep upward pressure on industry wages even if the broader economy continues to soften.”

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FAR Issues Proposed Rule on Sustainable Procurement in Federal Contracting

The Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council plans to issue a proposed rule on Aug. 3, 2023, that would establish new requirements for “sustainable procurement” in federal contracting. The proposal complies with Executive Order 14057, Catalyzing Clean Energy Industries and Jobs Through Federal Sustainability, signed by President Joe Biden on Dec. 8, 2021.

The proposed rule restructures and updates numerous existing FAR environmental and sustainability requirements, consolidating these requirements under FAR Part 23.

Additionally, the proposal increases sustainable acquisition requirements. Under existing regulations, agencies must ensure that 95% of new contracts for products and services utilize sustainable materials. The proposed rule replaces this provision with a requirement that agencies purchase sustainable products and services “to the maximum extent practicable.” Exceptions are possible where agencies cannot acquire a sustainable product or service on a reasonable schedule, meet performance requirements or obtain a reasonable price.

Comments on the proposed rule will be due 60 days from the date of publication.

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ABC’s August Regulatory Roundup—Learn About the Latest Developments

ABC has prepared a summary of Biden administration regulatory actions of interest to ABC members by agency. 

U.S. Department of Labor

Occupational Safety and Health Administration

Improve Tracking of Workplace Injuries and Illnesses

On July 21, 2023, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration issued its Improve Tracking of Workplace Injuries and Illnesses final rule, which will undo the ABC-supported provisions of the 2019 final rule promulgated under the Trump administration and reprise the 2016 Obama-era rule. The final rule becomes effective on Jan. 1, 2024, for certain employers and OSHA intends to make much of the data it collects publicly available online.

In a press release, ABC announced its opposition to the final rule. “Unfortunately, the Biden administration is moving forward with a final rule that does nothing to achieve OSHA’s stated goal of reducing injuries and illnesses,” said Ben Brubeck, ABC vice president of regulatory, labor and state affairs. “Instead, the final rule will force employers to disclose sensitive information to the public that can easily be manipulated, mischaracterized and misused for reasons wholly unrelated to safety, as well as subject employers to illegitimate attacks and employees to violations of their privacy.”

What does the final rule do?

  • Establishments with 100 or more employees in certain high-hazard industries are required to electronically submit information from their OSHA Forms 300 and 301 to OSHA once a year. They are also required to include their legal company name when making electronic submissions to OSHA.
  • Establishments with 20 to 249 employees in certain high-hazard industries will continue to be required to electronically submit information from their OSHA Form 300A annual summary to OSHA once a year.
  • Establishments with 250 or more employees that must routinely keep records under OSHA’s injury and illness regulation will also continue to be required to electronically submit information from their Form 300A to OSHA once a year.
  • The data must be electronically submitted through OSHA’s Injury Tracking Application.

Learn more about the final rule.

In June 2022, ABC submitted comments urging OSHA to withdraw the proposed rule.

Heat Injury and Illness Prevention in Indoor and Outdoor Settings

On July 27, 2023, OSHA issued a heat hazard alert to remind employers of their obligation to protect workers against heat illness or injury in outdoor and indoor workplaces.

The department also announced that OSHA will intensify its enforcement where workers are exposed to heat hazards, with increased inspections in high-risk industries like construction and agriculture. These actions will fully implement the agency’s National Emphasis Program on heat, announced in April 2022, to focus enforcement efforts in geographic areas and industries with the most vulnerable workers.

OSHA’s actions come after President Joe Biden announced a series of actions aimed at protecting workers from the impact of extreme heat, including asking the DOL to issue a first-ever hazard alert for heat.

ABC strongly supports worker safety and protection from heat injury and illness, while maintaining flexibility for the fluid nature of the construction environment. Employers play a key role in providing training and awareness regarding heat protection, and ABC will continue to support members in ensuring preparedness for heat-related issues through a wide range of resources.

OSHA Actions Related to Heat Illness and Prevention:

On Oct. 27, 2021, OSHA issued an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Heat Injury and Illness Prevention in Outdoor and Indoor Work Settings, which requested information on how to implement regulations to prevent workers from hazardous heat. ABC, as a steering committee member of the Construction Industry Safety Coalition, submitted comments in response to the ANPRM on Jan. 26, 2022.

On April 12, 2022, OSHA announced a National Emphasis Program on Outdoor and Indoor Heat-Related Hazards, which sets out a targeted enforcement effort and reiterates OSHA’s compliance assistance and outreach efforts.

On June 22, 2023, OSHA announced it will be holding Small Business Advocacy Review panel (also known as a SBREFA panel) meetings this summer to gather input on a possible Heat Injury and Illness Prevention in Outdoor and Indoor Work Settings rule. Learn more about the SBREFA panel.

Worker Walkaround Representative Designation Process

On July 17, 2023, the DOL sent its proposed rule on Worker Walkaround Representative Designation Process to the OIRA at the OMB for review. While the text of the proposed rule is not yet available to the public, the regulatory agenda indicates the proposed rule would “clarify the right of workers and certified bargaining units to specify a worker or union representative to accompany an OSHA inspector during the inspection process/facility walkaround, regardless of whether the representative is an employee of the employer, if in the judgment of the Compliance Safety and Health Officer such person is reasonably necessary to an effective and thorough physical inspection.”

On Feb. 21, 2013, OSHA issued a letter of interpretation endorsing union representatives and other nonemployee third parties accompanying OSHA inspectors on walkaround inspections at nonunion workplaces, which ABC adamantly opposed, expressing serious concerns. OSHA eventually rescinded the letter of interpretation on April 25, 2017.  

Additional Background on the 2013 Letter of Interpretation:

ABC will continue to monitor this issue and provide updates as they become available.

Occupational Exposure to COVID-19 in Healthcare Settings

On April 22, 2022, ABC as a member of CISC, submitted comments in response to OSHA’s request for additional comment on its “potential provisions or approaches” to a final Occupational Exposure to COVID-19 in Healthcare Settings rule. CISC opposes OSHA’s proposal to expand coverage under any promulgated final rule and include certain construction work in health care settings.

ABC also submitted comments on April 22 as a steering committee member of the Coalition for Workplace Safety. The CWS believes unequivocally that OSHA is not permitted to, and must not, issue a permanent standard after having withdrawn the health care emergency temporary standard in December 2021

While a final rule was slated for June 2023, it has not yet been issued.

Personal Protective Equipment in Construction

On July 20, 2023, OSHA issued a proposed rule clarifying the requirements for the fit of personal protective equipment in construction. ABC plans to submit comments by the deadline of Sept. 18. Read the DOL’s press release.

Powered Industrial Truck Design Standard Update

On May 17, 2022, ABC, as a steering committee member of CISC, submitted comments to OSHA voicing compliance and cost concerns on the proposed rule on powered industrial trucks design standard update.

According to the regulatory agenda, OSHA planned to analyze the comments from the NPRM through July 2023.

Welding in Construction Confined Spaces

In August 2023, OSHA intends to issue a proposed rule to amend the Welding and Cutting Standard in construction to eliminate any perceived ambiguity about the definition of “confined space” that applies to welding activities in construction.

Procedures for the Use of Administrative Subpoenas 

OSHA intends to adopt a regulation addressing the use of subpoenas during OSHA investigations to provide helpful clarity to the agency and the regulated public on these issues while promoting transparency and uniform subpoena practice across the agency.

An interim final rule is slated for August 2023.

Infectious Diseases

In March 2024, OSHA intends to issue a proposed rule on infectious diseases and examine regulatory alternatives for control measures to protect employees from infectious disease exposures to pathogens that can cause significant disease. The agency listed several workplaces where these control measures might be necessary, including health care, emergency response, correctional facilities, homeless shelters, drug treatment programs and other occupational settings where employees can be at increased risk of exposure.

Wage and Hour Division

Updating the Davis-Bacon and Related Acts Regulations

On March 18, 2022, the DOL’s Wage and Hour Division issued a proposed rule that would “modernize” the Davis-Bacon Act and related regulations. Despite its stated purpose, the rulemaking would instead reverse course by undoing Reagan administration reforms, making union rates more likely to be adopted as prevailing wages and expanding prevailing wage requirements to cover certain prefabrication work, transportation and flaggers, among other concerns.

ABC also surveyed contractor members to gather insight on the potentially harmful impacts of this proposal and utilized the data gathered in its comment letter, which was filed on May 17. In nearly 70 pages of comments on the proposed rule, ABC opposed and provided feedback on many of the more than 50 significant changes in the proposed rule.

On Dec. 16, the DOL sent its final rule updating Davis-Bacon and Related Acts prevailing wage regulations to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs at the Office of Management and Budget for review. The final rule is expected to be issued imminently.

ABC supports the full repeal of the Davis-Bacon Act (H.R. 2218/S. 805) as well as any state and local prevailing wage laws that mandate wage and benefit rates. In the absence of full repeal of the Davis-Bacon Act and state prevailing wage laws, ABC continues to support legislative and regulatory reform efforts designed to mitigate its negative effects on industry and taxpayer stakeholders and failure to reflect the current market rate. ABC opposes expansion of Davis-Bacon and state and local prevailing wage laws into areas of public and private projects in which it has not been previously mandated.

Independent Contractor

In January 2021, the Trump-era DOL issued an independent contractor final rule under the Fair Labor Standards Act, which ABC strongly supported. The 2021 final rule placed emphasis on two “core” factors—a worker’s control over their work and their opportunity for profit or loss, both of which are paramount in making an independent contractor determination.

Soon after the 2021 final rule was issued, the DOL froze and then rescinded the Trump rule over the opposition of ABC and other industry associations. On March 26, 2021, ABC, the ABC Southeast Texas chapter and the Coalition for Workforce Innovation filed suit against the DOL. On March 15, 2022, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas dealt a blow to the Biden administration’s efforts to delay and rescind the Trump administration’s 2021 independent contractor final rule in that case. Under a decision applauded by ABC, the ABC-supported rule went into effect as scheduled on March 8, 2021, and remains in effect today.

The DOL filed an appeal to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which remains pending. But on Oct. 11, 2022, the DOL announced a new proposed rule to rescind and replace the ABC-supported 2021 final rule on independent contractors. The appeal is now in abeyance awaiting the DOL’s final rule.  

On Dec. 13, ABC submitted comments opposing the DOL’s new proposed rule. In the comments, ABC argued that the proposal creates an ambiguous and difficult-to-interpret standard under which employers will be forced to guess which factors will be more important in the determination and how to analyze the facts of their contractual relationships under multiple factors. This confusion will lead to more litigation, as employers and workers alike will not understand who qualifies as independent contractors.

A final rule is currently targeted for release in August 2023.

Overtime

The DOL is expected to issue a proposed rule in August 2023 on the “exemption of bona fide executive, administrative, and professional employees from the Fair Labor Standards Act’s minimum wage and overtime requirements” (also known as the “white-collar” exemptions). The proposed rule is currently at the OMB’s OIRA for review.

In 2016, the DOL issued a final overtime rule that would have doubled the minimum salary level for exemption from $23,660 to $47,476 per year. ABC, along with several other business groups, sued the DOL in federal court and succeeded in blocking the rule from taking effect.

In 2019, the Trump-era’s DOL issued a new overtime proposal to formally rescind the 2016 rule and readjusted the salary threshold to $35,568 per year. The final rule went into effect on Jan. 1, 2020.  

ABC continues to urge the Biden DOL to abandon or postpone any future overtime rulemaking, since it was just modified in 2019. Further, any new overtime rule would fail to recognize the lingering economic consequences of inflation, global supply chain disruptions, rising materials prices and workforce shortages.

Nondisplacement of Qualified Workers Under Service Contracts

On Aug. 15, 2022, ABC submitted comments to the DOL identifying a number of concerns with its proposed rule on Nondisplacement of Qualified Workers Under Service Contracts, which would implement Executive Order 14055.

Issued on Nov. 18, 2021, by President Joe Biden, the EO requires that federal agencies include a clause about nondisplacement of workers in solicitations and contracts for projects covered by the McNamara-O’Hara Service Contract Act of 1965. The required clause states that successor contractors and subcontractors who win a bid for covered work must offer qualified employees employed under the predecessor contract a right of first refusal of employment under the successor contract.

ABC believes that, due to conflicts between the DOL’s proposal and the statutory language of the SCA, the proposed rule must be withdrawn in its entirety. Further, ABC is disappointed that the DOL’s new proposal fails to address any of ABC’s concerns expressed in its 2010 comment letter related to the Obama rule and EO and instead imposes additional burdens on service contractors. Should the DOL decide to proceed with this rulemaking, the proposal as written will create substantial inefficiencies in the federal procurement process.

While the final rule was targeted for June 2023, it has not yet been issued.

Office of Labor-Management Standards

Form LM-10 Employer Report

On July 28, 2023, the DOL’s Office of Labor-Management Standards published its final revision to the Form LM-10 Employer Report, which adds a checkbox to the Form LM-10 report requiring certain reporting entities to indicate whether such entities were federal contractors or subcontractors in their prior fiscal year, and two lines for entry of filers’ unique entity identifier and federal contracting agency or agencies, if applicable. The revision will be effective for reports filed on or after Aug. 28, 2023.

In October 2022, ABC submitted a comment letter to the DOL opposing the proposed revision, stating it is clear that the intent of the proposed revision is to discourage persuader activities by federal contractors, despite the fact that these activities are lawfully permitted by the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act within certain limitations. The revision would accomplish this goal by increasing public pressure on these federal contractors and assisting advocacy efforts against these companies and federal agencies that choose to employ them, as well as potentially providing a basis for federal agencies to “blacklist” these contractors in future regulations.

Employers must file the Form LM-10 report with the OLMS to disclose certain payments, expenditures, agreements and arrangements, including the hiring of outside labor relations consultants to help inform their employees regarding union organizing or collective bargaining, known as “persuader activities.”

Here are DOL resources on the final revision to the Form LM-10 Employer Report:

Continue to monitor Newsline for any new developments on this topic.

Office of Apprenticeship

National Apprenticeship System Enhancements

On July 31, 2023, the DOL’s Office of Apprenticeship sent a proposed rule on National Apprenticeship System Enhancements to OMB’s OIRA for review. The text has not yet been made public. However, according to the regulatory agenda, the proposed rule would overhaul the government-registered apprenticeship system, with the stated goal of “enhancing worker protections and equity, improving the quality of registered apprenticeships, revising the state governance provisions, and more clearly establishing critical pipelines to registered apprenticeships such as pre-apprenticeships so that the National Apprenticeship System is more responsive to current worker and employer needs.” 

On May 9, an ABC-led coalition of construction and business associations submitted a letter to the Advisory Committee on Apprenticeships opposing the committee’s recommendations to the DOL for changes to the GRAP system. These recommendations included a proposal to establish a new “Quality Seal” program to give preferential treatment to GRAPs meeting certain requirements.

U.S. Department of the Treasury

Inflation Reduction Act Prevailing Wage and Apprenticeship Regulations

The ABC-opposed Inflation Reduction Act was signed into law on Aug. 16, 2022, and provides over $270 billion in tax credits for the construction of solar, wind, hydrogen, carbon sequestration, electric vehicle charging stations and other clean energy projects.

A new policy in Subtitle D-Energy Security of the IRA grants developers/taxpayers a bonus tax credit 500% greater than a baseline tax credit of 6%. However, this is conditioned on requirements that project contractors meet prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements outlined in the legislation and IRS guidance. This new policy is an unprecedented expansion of prevailing wage and government-registered apprenticeship requirements/enticements onto private construction projects via the federal tax code.

While Treasury was expected to issue a proposed rule to provide additional guidance on these requirements by July 2023, it has not yet been issued. As additional information becomes available, it will be added to ABC’s IRA Resources and Guidance for Contractors and Developers.

Federal Acquisition Regulation Council

Use of Project Labor Agreement for Federal Construction Projects 

On Feb. 4, 2022, President Biden signed Executive Order 14063, Use of Project Labor Agreements for Federal Construction Projects. Once implemented following a rulemaking by the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council that is expected to be completed in 2023, federal agencies will require that every prime contractor and subcontractor on a federal construction project of $35 million or more performed within the United States sign a PLA as a condition of winning a taxpayer-funded contract.

In 2022, an ABC-led coalition of associations and organizations representing tens of thousands of companies and millions of employees in the construction industry sent a Feb. 15 letter to the White House and a Feb. 28 letter to Congress highlighting concerns with President Biden’s efforts to require controversial government-mandated PLAs on federal and federally assisted construction contracts. Governors, members of the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. senators sent letters to the White House opposing its pro-PLA policies.

Additionally, ABC sent the White House a letter on April 6 with more than 1,200 signatures from member companies and chapters strongly opposing the executive order and other efforts by the Biden administration to push PLAs on federally assisted projects.

Nevertheless, on Aug. 19, the FAR Council published a proposed rule requiring federal construction contracts of $35 million or more to be subjected to project labor agreements, in accordance with EO 14063.

ABC condemned the proposal and included the results of its Sept. 7, 2022, survey of ABC contractor members’ opinions and experiences with government-mandated PLAs in more than 40 pages of comments submitted to the FAR Council opposing the rule on Oct. 18. In addition, members of Congress, governors and construction industry anti-PLA coalition members submitted comments to the FAR Council opposing the rule.

A final rule is targeted for release in September 2023.

Disclosure of Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Climate-Related Financial Risk

On Nov. 14, 2022, the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council issued a proposed rule to amend the Federal Acquisition Regulation to require certain federal contractors to disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and set GHG emission reduction targets. Under the proposed rule, certain federal contractors would be required to inventory their annual GHG emissions, disclose this information to the federal government and set targets for reducing GHG emissions. Contractors that fail to comply with these requirements would be deemed nonresponsible and ineligible for federal awards.

On Feb. 13, 2023, ABC submitted comments opposing the proposal’s overly burdensome, costly and punitive approach to regulating GHG emissions of federal contractors. While ABC understands the need for sensible environmental policies that balance the protection of the environment with the costs that compliance with these regulations requires, the comments outline how the proposed rule fails to strike that balance.

The FAR is expected to issue a final rule by December 2023.

National Labor Relations Board

Joint Employer

On Sept. 6, 2022, the NLRB announced a new joint employer proposed rule, which would rescind and replace the ABC-supported 2020 final rule on Joint Employer Status Under the National Labor Relations Act. As NLRB members Marvin E. Kaplan and John F. Ring explained in their dissent, the proposed rule “would not merely return the Board to the Browning-Ferris Industries standard but would implement a standard considerably more extreme than BFI.” ABC was a vocal opponent of the expanded definition of joint employer that was created by the NLRB’s 2015 BFI decision, and has supported legal and legislative efforts to restore the standard that was in place for more than 30 years.

On Dec. 7, ABC submitted comments to the NLRB urging the Board to withdraw the new proposed rule and retain the current 2020 NLRB final rule, which provides clear criteria for companies to apply when determining status.

In the comments, ABC argued that the new proposal will greatly expand joint-employer liability by trying to make indirect or even just reserved, unexercised control sufficient to trigger joint-employer status. This overbroad joint-employer standard will have an adverse impact not only on our member contractors but also on the overall economy.

Further, the proposal will cause confusion and impose unnecessary barriers and burdens on contractor and subcontractor relationships throughout the construction industry. As a result, contractors may be vulnerable to increased liability, making them less likely to hire subcontractors, most of which are small businesses.

A final rule is expected in August 2023.

Election Protection Rule

On Feb. 2, 2023, ABC submitted comments to the NLRB opposing its proposed rule on Representation-Case Procedures, which addresses election-blocking charges, voluntary recognition and construction industry bargaining relationships. The proposal would rescind the ABC-supported 2020 NLRB final rule, which is intended to “better protect employees’ statutory right of free choice on questions concerning representation.”

A final rule is targeted for August 2023.

Federal Trade Commission

Ban on Noncompete Agreements

On April 19, 2023, ABC submitted comments urging the Federal Trade Commission to withdraw its unprecedented proposal to ban all noncompete agreements nationwide. ABC argued that the FTC lacks the statutory or constitutional authority to issue this proposed rule and regulate competition in the market—there is no congressional authorization for such action. Recent U.S. Supreme Court cases indicate this will likely be viewed by the courts as improper delegation of legislative authority.

ABC members have valid business justifications for utilizing noncompete agreements, such as protecting confidential information and intellectual property. This new rule will have a harmful effect on their companies, as well as their employees, and force companies to rethink their compensation and talent strategies. Ultimately, this vastly overbroad rule will invalidate millions of reasonable contracts around the country that are beneficial for both businesses and employees.

According to the regulatory agenda, staff planned to review comments through June 2023.

Additional Rules To Monitor Include:

Environmental Protection Agency

Revised Definition of “Waters of the United States” Phase 2—The EPA has withdrawn this proposed rule. However, the agency has announced its intent to issue a new final rule by Sept. 1 in light of the Sackett Supreme Court decision.

Council on Environmental Quality

National Environmental Policy Act Implementing Regulations Revisions Phase 2—A proposed rule to further revise NEPA regulations of federal environmental reviews was issued on July 31. Read more.

ABC will continue to provide updates on these and other rulemakings in Newsline.

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Council on Environmental Quality Proposes Expansive Changes to NEPA Permitting Rules

On July 31, the Council on Environmental Quality released a proposed rule to implement Phase 2 of revisions to the National Environmental Policy Act implementing regulations. The proposal makes wide-ranging changes to the rules for federal agencies conducting the environmental review and permitting process.

Disappointingly, the proposed rule reverses critical streamlining provisions of the ABC-supported 2020 NEPA rule, including by doing the following:

  • Widening the scope of agency review of “context and intensity” of proposed actions
  • Removal of language specifying that NEPA does not mandate particular results
  • Expanding judicial review of NEPA reviews
  • Removing rules placing reasonable limitations on the public engagement process

On the other hand, the proposed rule would enact much-needed reforms supported by ABC in the Fiscal Responsibility Act, including:

  • Consolidation of the review process for multiagency projects under a single “lead agency”
  • Establishment of a two-year time limit on “environmental impact statements” and a one-year limit on “environmental assessments,” with the caveat that agencies may extend the deadline in consultation with stakeholders
  • Expansion of the usage of “categorical exclusions” to exempt projects that an agency has determined do not normally impact the environment

The rule follows the Phase 1 final rule issued in April 2022, which began the process of undoing key aspects of the ABC-supported 2020 NEPA revisions.

ABC staff are continuing to review the proposal and plan to submit comments by the deadline of Sept. 29.

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ABC-Supported Legislation To Overturn the Northern Long-Eared Bat’s Endangered Species Listing Heads to President Biden’s Desk

On July 26, the U.S. House of Representatives passed S.J. Res. 24, a Congressional Review Act resolution on the Endangered Species Status for Northern Long-Eared Bat with a bipartisan vote of 220-209. The passage of S.J. Res. 24 would, if enacted, prevent the ABC-opposed U.S. Department of Interior’s Fish and Wildlife Service’s proposed rule uplisting of the Northern Long-Eared Bat to “endangered” from “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act. Ahead of the vote, the U.S. House Committee on Natural Resources released a one-pager and a myth vs. fact sheet for S.J. Res. 24.  

In support of the resolution, Kristen Swearingen, ABC vice president of legislative & political affairs, said that “ABC supports S.J. Res 24, providing for congressional disapproval of the rule submitted by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service relating to Endangered Species Status for Northern Long-Eared Bat. ABC members work to be good stewards of the environment, and we support the Endangered Species Act’s purpose of protecting species threatened with extinction and recognize the need for science-based, data-driven actions that conserve those species and the habitats on which they depend.

“However, ABC opposes the FWS’s rule listing the NLEB as an endangered species. The species, which has not been significantly affected by human activities and instead has suffered decline due to a disease known as ‘white-nose syndrome,’ is found in 37 states and the District of Columbia. This rule affects construction activities, including permitting requirements for activities unlikely to impact the NLEB such as building construction, renovation and demolition. ABC urges the House to approve this resolution and further calls on the FWS to withdraw the NLEB’s endangered listing.”

Additionally, on May 23, ABC, joining a coalition of industry stakeholders, submitted comments to the FWS-proposed rule. The NLEB was previously listed as a threatened species in 2015, which ABC also opposed.  

On May 11, the U.S. Senate passed S.J. Res. 24 by a bipartisan 51-49 vote. Under the Congressional Review Act, Congress has the ability to formally pass measures overturning certain federal agency actions. If a CRA joint resolution is approved by both the House and Senate and signed by the president, the rule cannot go into effect or continue in effect. President Joe Biden will now have the option to sign the resolution, ending the misguided listing of the Northern Long-Eared Bat as endangered, and continue to protect the bat as a threatened species.

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