One of Scott Walkers union busting ideas was to scrap the
Davis-Bacon Act. What do you union
supporters think?
The
ugliest and most disturbing events in American history have usually been linked
with state-sponsored or sanctioned racism: Incidents of police brutality,
symbolized by the Rodney King trials. Slavery. The Dred Scott decision.
The post-Civil War Jim Crow laws. School segregation.
Today,
however, most people like to believe that their government fairly represents
the interests of everyone, regardless of race. Unfortunately, the states and
the federal government still discriminate against blacks, but this
state-sponsored racism has taken on more subtle forms. Thus while great strides
have been made since the Jim Crow era, some relics remain. One of them is the Davis-Bacon
Act.
Davis-Bacon,
passed in 1931, requires private contractors to pay “prevailing wages” to
employees on all construction projects receiving more than $2,000 in federal
funding. The Secretary of Labor is charged with conducting surveys of a region’s
wages and setting rates for up to 100 various classifications of workers. Most
often, the “prevailing wage” corresponds to the union wage, especially in urban
areas, where union membership tends to be higher. The Davis-Bacon Act covers
approximately 20 percent of all construction projects in the United States and
affects more than 25 percent of all construction workers in the nation at any
given time.
The Act
was passed in order to prevent non-unionized black and immigrant laborers from
competing with unionized white workers. The discriminatory effects continue, as
even today minorities tend to be vastly under-represented in highly unionized
skilled trades, and over- represented in the pool of unskilled workers.
Davis-Bacon
restricts the economic opportunities of low-income individuals in a number of
ways. Minority contracting firms are often small and non-unionized, and cannot
afford to pay the “prevailing wage.” The Act also requires contractors to pay
unskilled laborers the prevailing wage for any job they perform, essentially
forcing contractors to hire skilled tradesmen, selecting workers from a pool
dominated by whites.
Thus, the
Davis-Bacon Act constitutes a formidable barrier to entry into the construction
industry for unskilled or low-skilled workers. This is especially harmful to
minorities because work in the construction industry pays extraordinarily well
compared to that for other entry-level positions, and could otherwise provide
plentiful opportunities for low-income individuals to enter the economic
mainstream.
In
November 1993, the Institute for Justice, a Washington, D.C., based
public-interest law firm, filed suit challenging Davis-Bacon constitutionality,
as part of the Institute’s litigation program to help restore judicial
protection of “economic liberty” the basic right to pursue a business or
profession free from arbitrary government regulation.
The History of the Davis-Bacon Act
Prior to
the enactment of the Davis-Bacon Act, the construction industry afforded
tremendous opportunities to blacks, especially in the South. In at least six
southern cities, more than 80 percent of unskilled construction workers were
black. Blacks also represented a disproportionate number of unskilled
construction workers in the North, and constituted a sizable portion of the
skilled labor force in both parts of the country.
This was
so despite the fact that most of the major construction unions excluded blacks,
and that blacks faced widespread discrimination in occupational licensing and
vocational training. These unions felt seriously threatened by competition from
blacks, and favored any attempt to restrict it.[1]
The
co-author of the Act, Representative Robert Bacon, represented Long Island. Bacon
was a racist who was concerned lest immigration upset the nation’s “racial
status quo.” In 1927, he introduced H.R. 17069, “A Bill to Require Contractors
and Subcontractors Engaged on Public Works of the United States to Comply With
State Laws Relating to Hours of Labor and Wages of Employees on State Public
Works.” This action was a response to the building of a Veterans’ Bureau
Hospital in Bacon’s district by an Alabama contractor which employed only black
laborers.
Representative
William Upshaw, understanding the racial implications of Bacon’s proposal,
stated: “You will not think that a southern man is more than human if he smiles
over the fact of your reaction to that real problem you are confronted with in
any community with a superabundance or large aggregation of negro labor.”[2]
Over the next four years, Bacon submitted 13 more bills to regulate labor on
federal public works contracts. Finally, the bill submitted by Bacon and
Senator James Davis was passed in 1931, at the height of the depression, with
the support of the American Federation of Labor. The Act required that
contractors working on federally funded projects over $5,000 pay their
employees the “prevailing wage.” The law was amended in 1935, reducing the
minimum to $2,000 and delegating the power of determining the “prevailing wage”
to the Department of Labor. The Department’s regulations governing the
determination of wages, remained basically unchanged for five decades and equated
the prevailing wage with the union wage in any area that was at least 30
percent unionized. In practice, the “prevailing wage” was almost universally
determined to be the same as the union wage.
The
debate over Bacon’s bills betrayed the racial animus that motivated passage of
the law. Representative John Cochran stated, “I have received numerous
complaints in recent months about southern contractors employing low-paid
colored mechanics getting work and bringing the employees from the South.”[3]
Representative Clayton Algood similarly complained, “That contractor has cheap
colored labor that he transports, and he puts them in cabins, and it is labor
of that sort that is in competition with white labor throughout the country.”[4]
Other derogatory comments were made about the use of “cheap labor,” “cheap,
imported labor,” “transient labor,” and “unattached migratory workmen.”[5]
While supporters of the Act intended to disadvantage immigrant workers of all
races, they were particularly concerned with inhibiting black employment.
Supporters
of Davis-Bacon were also full of anti-capitalist rhetoric. Representative
McCormack said of Davis-Bacon, “It will force the contractor who heretofore has
used cheap, imported labor to submit bids based upon the ‘prevailing wage
scale’ to those employed. It compels the unfair competitor to enter into the
field of fair competition.”[6] This rhetoric of “fairness” dominates much of
the contemporary debate over Davis-Bacon, as well.
Two
important modifications have recently been made in the way that the Davis-Bacon
Act is enforced. In 1982, the Department of Labor altered the basis for
determining the prevailing wage, deciding to equate the union wage with the
“prevailing wage” only in places where the construction industry was 50 percent
unionized. This change has had little effect on minority-owned firms’ ability
to secure contracts because union membership tends to be much higher in urban
areas, where large minority populations reside.
The
Department of Labor has also attempted to alter its regulations to allow
contractors to hire a limited number of unskilled “helpers” to work on
Davis-Bacon projects for less than the prevailing wage. This change, which was
to go into effect on February 4, 1991, would help to diminish some of the
discriminatory effects of the Act, but Congress has so far prevented the
Department from enforcing it. Moreover, labor unions are now pressuring
Congress and the Clinton Administration to repeal the changes. Similarly, while
President Bush suspended the Act in South Florida, coastal Louisiana, and
Hawaii in October of 1992 following Hurricanes An drew and Iniki, President
Clinton reversed course upon entering office.
Last year
Senator Hank Brown (R-Col.) sponsored legislation to repeal the Davis-Bacon
Act. A similar bill was introduced in the House by Representative Tom DeLay
(R-Tex.). Both proposals have attracted congressional co-sponsors, but, not
surprisingly, have failed to attain majority support.
Effects of the Davis-Bacon Act
The
Davis-Bacon Act imposes tremendous economic and social costs—at least $1
billion in extra federal construction costs and $100 million in administrative
expenses each year. Industry compliance costs total nearly $190 million per
year. Repeal of the Act would also create an estimated 31,000 new construction
jobs, most of which would go to members of minority groups.
Davis-Bacon’s
impact on the ability of minorities to find work in the construction industry
has been particularly devastating. The Department of Labor’s initial set of
regulations did not recognize categories of unskilled workers except for union
apprentices. As a result, contractors had to pay an unskilled worker who was
not part of a union apprenticeship program as much as a skilled laborer, which
almost completely excluded blacks from working on Davis-Bacon projects.[7]
This effectively foreclosed the only means by which unskilled blacks could
learn the necessary skills to become skilled workers.
As a
result, while black and white unemployment rates were similar prior to passage
of the Davis-Bacon Act, they began to diverge afterwards. This problem persists
today. In the first quarter of 1992, the black unemployment rate was 14.2
percent, even though the overall national rate was only 7.9 percent.
The
racial difference in unemployment rates is especially pronounced in the
construction industry. According to a recent study by the National Urban
League, in the fourth quarter of 1992, 26.8 percent of all blacks involved in
the construction industry were jobless compared to only 12.6 percent of white
construction workers.[8]
Despite
recent racial progress, Davis-Bacon continues to inhibit minority economic progress
in several ways. For instance, union apprenticeship programs, even if they no
longer discriminate, still strictly limit the number of enrollees and impose
arbitrary educational requirements on potential applicants, thereby excluding
the most disadvantaged workers.[9]
Moreover,
unskilled workers must be paid the same wage as a skilled worker, forcing the
contractor to pay laborers considerably more than the market value of their
work. For example, in Philadelphia, electricians working on projects covered by
the Davis-Bacon Act must be paid $37.97 per hour in wages and fringe benefits.
The average wage of electricians working for private contractors on
non-Davis-Bacon projects is $15.76 per hour, with some laborers working for as
little as $10.50 per hour.
Thus,
even minority, open-shop contractors have no incentive to hire unskilled
workers. Ralph C. Thomas, former executive director of the National Association
of Minority Contractors, stated that a minority contractor who acquires a
Davis-Bacon contract has “no choice but to hire skilled tradesmen, the majority
of which are of the majority.” As a result, Thomas said, “Davis-Bacon closes
the door in such activity in an industry most capable of employing the largest
numbers of minorities.”[10]
The
paperwork a contractor must fill out pursuant to Davis-Bacon contracts also
discriminates against small, minority-owned firms. Many do not have personnel
with the necessary expertise to complete the myriad forms and reports required.
As a
result of all these factors, the Davis-Bacon Act prevents rural and inner-city
laborers and contractors from working on projects in their own communities.
Ironically this is one problem Davis-Bacon was intended to prevent. Bacon said
during debate over the Act, “Members of Congress have been flooded with
protests from all over the country that certain Federal con tractors on current
jobs are bringing into local communities outside labor,” and “that the
government is in league with contract practices that make it possible to
further demoralize local labor conditions.”[11]
Such a
claim could easily be made today by inner-city and rural contractors. Yale
Brozen, an economist at the University of Chicago, found that the “prevailing
wage” for the Appalachian region of western Pennsylvania is set at the same
level as that of Pittsburgh, despite the fact that the wages normally paid by
the rural contractors are only half the levels of union contractors in
Pittsburgh. The same is true of inner cities, where small, minority-owned,
open-shop firms are forced to pay union wages when working on Davis-Bacon
projects, because of the high concentration of unionized workers in other parts
of the city.
As a
result, rural and inner-city contractors are deterred from seeking Davis-Bacon
contracts because they cannot afford to pay the higher wages to their employees
and larger and more highly unionized firms are encouraged to seek out such
contracts. The result makes it clear that the government is in fact “in league
with contract practices” that “demoralize local labor conditions,” only now at
the expense of minorities rather than whites.
The
results of this practice were clearly demonstrated in Los Angeles. In the parts
of the city where the riots occurred, the rate of unemployment for black
workers is 27.6 percent. Despite an ample supply of local labor to help rebuild
the city, Davis-Bacon has and continues to freeze out local unskilled minority
workers from those available jobs. In contrast is the situation in South
Florida and coastal Louisiana, where the suspension of Davis-Bacon created
5,000 to 11,000 jobs.
In
addition to this statistical evidence, individuals involved in the construction
and renovation of low-cost public housing have testified as to the disastrous
effects of the Act. When Ralph L. Jones, president of a company that manages
housing projects for the Department of Housing and Urban Development, gained
control of a pair of dilapidated 200-unit buildings in Tulsa, Oklahoma, he
intended to hire many of the building’s unemployed residents to help restore
the property. But the Davis-Bacon Act required him to pay everyone working on
the project union wages, forcing him to hire only skilled laborers, very few of
whom were minorities.
Mary
Nelson, director of Bethel New Life, Inc., a social service organization
located in Chicago, has found that Davis-Bacon adds up to 25 percent to her
total costs and frequently prevents her from hiring unskilled, low-income
workers to work on projects renovating the public housing that they themselves
live in. Elzie Higgin-bottom, builder of low-income housing in Chicago’s South
Side, has had similar problems. Davis-Bacon requires him to pay carpenters
(defined by the Act as someone who hammers in a nail) $23 per hour. As a
result, he complained, “I’ve got to start out a guy at $16 per hour to find out
if he knows how to dig a hole. I can’t do that.”[12]
Conclusion
The
constitutional challenge to Davis-Bacon is a cornerstone of the Institute for
Justice’s program to restore economic liberty as a fundamental civil right. The
Institute is challenging Davis-Bacon on the grounds that it is racially
discriminatory, since it was passed to discriminate against blacks and
immigrants, and as a result, violates the equal protection guarantee of the
Fifth Amendment. The courts need only look to the legislative and
administrative history of the law to determine that racial discrimination was
among its purposes. The courts could also void the Davis-Bacon Act for
impinging on the right of individuals to pursue employment opportunities,
thereby violating the Fifth Amendment’s due process clause. The Institute for
Justice has brought together a unique coalition of plaintiffs to challenge the
law. Complainants range from individual minority contractors, who have either
lost opportunities to successfully acquire government contracts or who have
gone out of business altogether because of the application of Davis-Bacon, to
resident-management corporations who because of the law have been unsuccessful
in their attempts to involve public-housing residents in rebuilding programs at
their own developments.
Borne of
racial animus, the Davis-Bacon Act has undermined the efforts of economic
outsiders to find employment in the construction industry for more than six
de-cades. Given the influence of organized labor over Congress and the extent
to which the Clinton administration’s support of NAFTA alienated this key
constituency, it is highly unlikely that either branch will risk further
undermining union support by pursuing reform or repeal of the Davis-Bacon Act.
Thus, the only avenue that remains open is the judiciary. The courts should
bury this relic of the Jim Crow era.
This is
exactly the kinds of institutionalized policy that is supported by people all
over this country. It makes a mockery of the whites who have a hissyfit over the
confederate flag... a diversion from
their own sins... a diversion from placing the blame for racial tensions of
this country at the feet of a federal government that refuses to uphold the
real law of the land and not its subverted, precedence created perversions such
as this.
This is also the kinds of law that creates distortions in the free market, making determining a 'living wage' a generally impossible and job destroying exercise.
This is also the kinds of law that creates distortions in the free market, making determining a 'living wage' a generally impossible and job destroying exercise.
This article was written in Tuesday, February 01, 1994. The Wall Street Journal did a recent article covering Scott Walkers calls to dismantle such discriminatory union supporting laws, created at the behest of unions by grateful lawmakers.
http://fee.org/freeman/davis-bacon-jim-crows-last-stand
Davis-Bacon is one of the reasons the VA hospital In Aurora, Co will be over 1 billion over budget not to mention over 2 years behind schedule.
ReplyDeleteNot 1 person fired for the massive over run however 2 retired early instead of facing congressional questioning.
This is too close to a racist debate for a foreigner to have a right to contribute. However, for that same foreigner, this is a first class history lesson and I thank you for posting it.
ReplyDeleteDo Prevailing Wage Laws Disadvantage Minorities?
ReplyDeleteThe most recent line of attack on Davis-Bacon and other prevailing wage legislation has
been that the laws were passed to exclude African-Americans from construction employment.
It is also argued that by requiring payment of prevailing wages, the laws prevent minority
employees from being hired into the construction trades.
These arguments originated with ABC (an association of nonunion contractors and
construction users) to argue for repeal of prevailing wage laws and for the creation of a
low-wage ‘helper’ category (BNA 1975). They have since been repeated by the CATO
Institute (a conservative think tank) and received considerable play from editorial writers and
opinion columnists. It is clear, however, that repetition, no matter how frequent, does not
make an argument true.
The first allegation, that the Davis-Bacon Act was passed specifically to exclude African
Americans from the construction trade, is based on remarks of two congressmen, which are
quoted out of context, and from creative interpretation of the remarks of other members of
Congress. The CATO Institute publication makes reference to the remarks by Rep. Upshaw
- 14
of Georgia in a 1927 debate over a prevailing wage bill which was not passed. CATO
fails to note that the bill’s sponsor (Rep. Bacon) immediately took issue with the racist
remarks of Upshaw:
“I merely mention that fact because that was the fact in this particular case, but the same thing would be true if you should bring in a lot of Mexican laborers or if you brought in any nonunion laborers from any other State… In the case that I cite the contractor has also brought in skilled nonunion labor from the South to do this work, some of them Negroes and some of them white, but all of them are being paid very much less than the wage scale prevailing in New York.”
-Hours of Labor and Wages on Public Works: Hearings on H.R. 17069 before the Committee on Labor, 69th Congress, 2d Session, 2 (February 18, 1927).
The second leg of the argument that Davis-Bacon is discriminatory is that by requiring
payment of prevailing wages to all but apprentices, the law precludes the hiring of ‘helpers’
at wages suited to their skills. Since a higher percentage of minority workers fall in the low
wage category, the lack of a lower wage ‘helper’ classification supposedly reduces their
employment prospects in the industry.
Do these arguments have any basis in fact? Did minorities gain when states repealed
prevailing wage laws? Contrary to these claims,
r e p e a l o f p r e v a i l i n g w a g e l a w s h a s t y p i c a l l y
ReplyDeleteh u r t m i n o r i t i e s .
The repeal of prevailing wage laws has caused a reduction in resources for
construction training which has had a disproportionately negative impact on minorities. In the
nine states which repealed their laws in the 1980’s, minority participation in apprenticeship
programs fell from 19.4% of all apprentices to 12.5% of all apprentices after repeal. In states
that retained prevailing wage laws, minority participation in apprenticeship programs rose
slightly in the same period. By 1993, minorities were somewhat over-represented in construction
apprenticeship programs in the states with prevailing wage laws (at 103% of their population
in the same states). In repeal states, minority participation dropped to reflect only 85% of the
minority population, almost reaching the low level of states that never had the prevailing wages
laws. Moreover, repeal did not increase minority employment in construction. The ratio of
African-American to white unemployment in these states did not improve with repeal. In
fact, African-American-white unemployment ratios increased after repeal.
In contrast, prevailing wage laws help minorities in several ways. First, the wage reporting
requirements and anti-kickback regulations serve to protect members of minority groups
from victimization by unscrupulous contractors. Equally important, the apprenticeship system
in the building trades provides minority group members a means to achieve employment at
the living wage. Nationally, minority participation in apprenticeship programs has risen to
22.5% on average (GAO 1992). In Wisconsin, minority enrollment in several construction
apprenticeship programs exceeds their representation in the state’s population – including the
- 15
trades of plasterer, painter/decorator, iron worker, cement mason, and sprinkler fitter. Although
progress is still needed in other trades, minority representation has been growing. Repeal of
prevailing wage statutes, and the subsequent decline in apprenticeships, will reduce rather
than increase minority access to good jobs.
To conclude, there is no evidence that the position of minorities in the building trades will
be improved either by repeal of the Davis Bacon Act or by repeal of the Wisconsin prevailing
wage law. Neither the weakening of the prevailing wage laws through the exemption of more
projects from regulatory standards nor the creation of a low-skill, low-wage helper category
will increase minority participation in the trades.
R a t h e r, p r e v a i l i n g w a g e l a w s a i d d i s a d v a n t a g e d
g r o u p s b y p r o v i d i n g w e l l - p a i d e m p l o y m e n t a n d a s y s t e m o f t r a i n i n g w h i c h p r o v i d e s
a c c e s s t o t h o s e j o b s
http://www.faircontracting.org/PDFs/prevailing_wages/PrevailingWage%20Laws%20in%20Construction_%20Cost%20of%20Repeal%20to%20Wisconsin.pdf
This is from a study done for Scott Walker that determined that the repeal of Davis Bacon would hurt the economy of Wisconsin. The study was conducted by Dale Belman, Associate Professor of Economics and Industrial Relations, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee and Paula B. Voos, Professor of Economics, University of Wisconsin – Madison. Maybe there is a reason Walker didn't push the issue.
ReplyDeleteFirstly... It is with reasonable certainty that that I believe that Junior Assemblyman Walker didn’t commission this study and I can just as readily believe that the figures given for the economic conditions that prevailed in the hyped economy of the Clinton era has changed significantly since it was written 1995.
ReplyDeleteRep. Bacon... he was a racist. We know this if for no other reason than from comments he made on the floor of the House about immigration in 1927 when he first tried to get this act passed
“We urge the extension of the quota system to all countries of North and South America from which we have substantial immigration and in which the population is not predominantly of the white race. . . . Only by this method can that large proportion of our population which is descended from the colonists . . . have their proper racial representation. . . . Congress wisely concluded that only by such a system of proportional representation . . . could the racial status quo be maintained.”
The comments made by various congressmen during the debate over the different bills submitted by Bacon betrayed the racial animus that motivated the passage of the law. Representative John Cochran stated, "I have received numerous complaints in recent months about southern contractors employing low-paid colored mechanics getting work and bringing the employees from the South." Representative Clayton Allgood similarly complained, "That contractor has cheap colored labor that he transports, and he puts them in cabins, and it is labor of that sort that is in competition with white labor throughout the country."
I’ll agree with you that the civil war was as much about slavery as tariffs if you will agree with me that Rep Bacon’s reason for this bill was as much about black southern labor as union protectionism... Deal?
The fact that the extra monies somehow found their ways into apprentice programs suggests to me that people weren’t getting the wages that they were suppose to get... oh... that is the case because a year later congress had to add an anti-kickback provision to keep the union shop from charging employees for the privilege. It also added a wrath of tracking requirements that further burden the process and you can also bet that those who were picked up in the apprentice program were middle class whites and not their southern black competitors.
A little article I ran across about Walter Williams, an economist at George Mason University. It caught my eye because of this subject and because of a book of his ‘The State Against Blacks’ which I had read several years ago. (You might want to seek out his perspective... he’s knowledgeable, came from a poor background and is black.)
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704881304576094221050061598
I will be happy to point / counter point the merits of this legislation but I will do so from the standpoint of the free market and the huge cost to the taxpayer and society which this legislation, like minimum wage, cannot stand on.