2022 -- H 7027 | |
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LC003686 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC PROPERTY AND WORKS -- LABOR AND PAYMENT OF DEBTS | |
BY CONTRACTORS | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Edwards, Bennett, Morales, Potter, Kennedy, Kazarian, | |
Date Introduced: January 10, 2022 | |
Referred To: House Labor | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Findings. |
2 | The General Assembly recognizes and declares that: |
3 | (1) It is the intent of the General Assembly in enacting this act to protect the state's |
4 | proprietary and financial interests in major school construction projects by requiring participating |
5 | contractors and subcontractors working on such projects to maintain effective apprenticeship |
6 | training programs as a means for ensuring they will deploy properly trained craft labor required for |
7 | these projects; |
8 | (2) New school construction is a critical and pressing need for Rhode Island. A 2017 report |
9 | commissioned by the School Building Authority, State of Rhode Island Schoolhouses, identified |
10 | more than two billion two hundred million dollars ($2,200,000,000) in deficiencies in the state's |
11 | three hundred six (306) public schools. Subsequently, state and local authorities allocated millions |
12 | of dollars to fund new school construction. It is essential that these vital resources be administered |
13 | carefully to ensure the delivery of safe, timely, high-quality construction projects. To this end, |
14 | public contracts awarded for this work must fully comply with the intent and purpose of existing |
15 | state law provisions requiring the use of qualified, responsible bidders pursuant to § 45-55-5; |
16 | (3) School construction projects valued at five million dollars ($5,000,000) or more are |
17 | inherently complex undertakings that utilize multiple site contractors and subcontractors and |
18 | dozens or even hundreds of skilled craft personnel in various specialized trades. Errors in |
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1 | construction planning on such projects can result in cost overruns, inferior quality, increased safety |
2 | risks, and schedule delays that can disrupt the timely delivery of educational services. Such effects |
3 | are especially problematic where they are caused by flaws in project staffing insofar as construction |
4 | is both a highly skilled and laborintensive industry. While these challenges exist under virtually |
5 | any market conditions, the construction industry is currently facing acute, widespread labor |
6 | shortages that pose unprecedented risks to future project delivery. Unless effective policy responses |
7 | are developed to address this skills crisis, it is estimated there will be a national shortage of one |
8 | million five hundred thousand (1,500,000) construction workers by 2022. Consider the following |
9 | research studies: The Associated General Contractors of America, Eighty Percent of Contractors |
10 | Report Difficulty Finding Qualified Craft Workers to Hire As Association Calls for Measures to |
11 | Rebuild Workforce (August 29, 2018); Construction Labor Market Analyzer, Construction Users |
12 | RoundTable, The Long-Term Outlook for Construction 6 (2017); Petrochemical Update, Heather |
13 | Doyle, Craft Labor Shortage Seriously Affecting Mega Projects: Poll, (June 29, 2017). Given these |
14 | circumstances, Rhode Island, like virtually all other states, has been struggling for several years |
15 | with this skills gap and has been working to address the growing risks posed by this challenge. |
16 | Building Futures, Gerard M. Waites, Ahead of the Curve: Increasing Apprentice Utilization in |
17 | Rhode Island's Construction Industry, (March 2013); Building Futures, Beth Ashman-Collins, |
18 | Phase 1 - Skills Gap Analysis, RI Construction Trades. (April 25, 2008); |
19 | (4) These construction labor shortages, which have been extensively documented in both |
20 | national and local research reports, are already causing serious disruptions to project delivery in |
21 | the form of negative effects on project cost, schedule, safety, and quality. Consider the following |
22 | research studies: Virtual Builders Exchange, Adolfo Pesquera, Labor Shortages Spur Increased |
23 | Pay/Benefits, Yet Construction Firms Bullish on 2019,(January 4, 2019); Associated Builders and |
24 | Contractors, Inc., ABC Highlights Construction Worker Shortage During National Apprenticeship |
25 | Week, (November 15, 2017); The Aspen Institute: Workforce Strategies Initiative, Maureen |
26 | Conway and Allison Gerber, Construction Pre-Apprenticeship Programs: Results from a National |
27 | Survey 6-7 (2009); |
28 | (5) Substantial research also shows that apprenticeship training programs are one of the |
29 | most viable solutions for addressing these challenges because it has long been recognized as a |
30 | matter of public policy and industry practice that using apprenticeship training programs effectively |
31 | and reliably develops a skilled workforce to meet our nation's construction industry needs, |
32 | including critical infrastructure programs, such as educational facilities. To this end, the U.S. |
33 | Congress passed the National Apprenticeship Act, Pub. L. No. 75-308, 50 Stat. 664, in 1937 to |
34 | promote the use of structured education and training in the skilled crafts and trades through formal |
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1 | apprenticeship training programs; |
2 | (6) The value, benefits, and utility of using apprenticeship-training programs in the |
3 | construction industry have been verified by numerous public and private research projects over the |
4 | past several years. Consider the following research studies: Case Western Reserve University and |
5 | U.S. Department of Commerce, The Benefits and Costs of Apprenticeship: A Business Perspective; |
6 | The Council of Economic Advisors, Addressing America's Reskilling Challenge 7-8 (2018); The |
7 | Workforce Training & Education Coordinating Board, a Washington state agency, Workforce |
8 | Training Results (2015); U.S. Departments of Labor, Commerce, Education, and Health and |
9 | Human Services, What Works in Job Training: A Synthesis of the Evidence 8 (2014); The Aspen |
10 | Institute: Workforce Strategies Initiative, Matt Helmer and Dave Altstadt, Apprenticeship: |
11 | Completion and Cancellation in the Building Trades 8-9 (2013); Mathematica Policy Research, |
12 | Debbie Reed et. al, An Effectiveness Assessment and Cost-Benefit Analysis of Registered |
13 | Apprenticeship in ten (10) States (2012); and Urban Institute, Robert Lerman et al., The Benefits |
14 | and Challenges of Registered Apprenticeship: Sponsors' Perspective ii (2009) . |
15 | (7) Given these factors, apprenticeship programs that are operated in accordance with |
16 | federally established qualification standards under 29 C.F.R. § 29 have been relied upon for more |
17 | than eighty (80) years as the most effective and reliable method for conducting skills training in |
18 | construction, and such programs are broadly relied upon for addressing the industry's current skills |
19 | crisis. Recognizing these benefits, approximately a dozen states have enacted legislation requiring |
20 | contractors to participate in formal apprenticeship programs as a condition for performing public |
21 | works projects. Rhode Island adopted such a policy for general public works projects in 2014 by |
22 | enacting § 37-13-3.1. Private sector construction organizations, such as the Construction Users |
23 | Roundtable, support similar strategies and have recommended that those responsible for large |
24 | capital projects require site contractors to participate in credible skills training programs as a |
25 | condition of performing work on their projects. Consider the following research study: |
26 | Construction Users Roundtable, Skilled Labor Shortage Risk Mitigation (January 2015); and |
27 | (8) Requiring contractors and subcontractors on major school construction projects to |
28 | participate in apprenticeship training programs will help ensure that craft labor personnel on such |
29 | projects are properly trained by verifying that they are either apprentices currently enrolled in bona |
30 | fide programs or graduates of such programs. These efforts will also promote needed workforce |
31 | development efforts in construction that are critical for ensuring future projects are properly staffed |
32 | with qualified construction craft personnel. |
33 | SECTION 2. Sections 37-13-1, 37-13-3.1 and 37-13-14.1 of the General Laws in Chapter |
34 | 37-13 entitled "Labor and Payment of Debts by Contractors" are hereby amended to read as |
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1 | follows: |
2 | 37-13-1. Definitions. |
3 | As used in this chapter: |
4 | (1) "Approved apprenticeship program" or "apprenticeship program" means an |
5 | apprenticeship program that has been approved by the U.S. Department of Labor, or by a |
6 | recognized state apprenticeship agency, pursuant to 29 C.F.R. Parts 29 and 30; however, such |
7 | programs shall not include those that have obtained only provisional approval status. The required |
8 | apprenticeship programs may either be programs that have specifically allocated funding and are |
9 | subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq. |
10 | ("ERISA"), or non-ERISA programs financed by general funds of employers. |
11 | (1)(2) "Public works" means any public work consisting of grading, clearing, demolition, |
12 | improvement, completion, repair, alteration, or construction of any public road or any bridge, or |
13 | portion thereof, or any public building, or portion thereof, or any heavy construction, or any public |
14 | works projects of any nature or kind whatsoever. |
15 | (3) "School construction contract" means any construction contract for a school building |
16 | or any school-related facility that is funded with public money. |
17 | (2)(4) "School transportation services" means those transportation and related services |
18 | provided for the transportation of public and private students pursuant to §§ 16-21-1 and 16-21.1- |
19 | 8. |
20 | (5) "User agency" means the state, municipality, quasi-governmental agency, or other |
21 | entity that is responsible for management of a school construction contract. |
22 | 37-13-3.1. State public works contract apprenticeship requirements. |
23 | Notwithstanding any laws to the contrary, all general contractors and subcontractors who |
24 | perform work on any public works contract awarded by the state after passage of this act and valued |
25 | at one million dollars ($1,000,000) or more shall employ apprentices required for the performance |
26 | of the awarded contract. The number of apprentices shall comply with the apprentice-to- |
27 | journeyman ratio for each trade approved by the apprenticeship council of the department of labor |
28 | and training. To the extent that any of the provisions contained in this section conflict with the |
29 | requirements for federal aid contracts, federal law and regulations shall control. |
30 | The provisions of this section shall not apply to contracts for school transportation services. |
31 | 37-13-14.1. Enforcement -- Hearings. |
32 | (a) Before issuing an order or determination, the director of labor and training shall order |
33 | a hearing thereon at a time and place to be specified, and shall give notice thereof, together with a |
34 | copy of the complaint or the purpose thereof, or a statement of the facts disclosed upon |
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1 | investigation, which notice shall be served personally or by mail on any person, firm, or corporation |
2 | affected thereby. The person, firm, or corporation shall have an opportunity to be heard in respect |
3 | to the matters complained of at the time and place specified in the notice, which time shall be not |
4 | less than five (5) days from the service of the notice personally or by mail. The hearing shall be |
5 | held within ten (10) thirty (30) days from the order of hearing. The hearing shall be conducted by |
6 | the director of labor and training or his or her designee. The hearing officer in the hearing shall be |
7 | deemed to be acting in a judicial capacity and shall have the right to issue subpoenas, administer |
8 | oaths, and examine witnesses. The enforcement of a subpoena issued under this section shall be |
9 | regulated by Rhode Island civil practice law and rules. The hearing shall be expeditiously |
10 | conducted, and upon such hearing, the hearing officer shall determine the issues raised thereon and |
11 | shall make a determination and enter an order within ten (10) thirty (30) days of the close of the |
12 | hearing, and forthwith serve a copy of the order, with a notice of the filing thereof, upon the parties |
13 | to the proceeding, personally or by mail. The order shall dismiss the charges or direct payment of |
14 | wages or supplements found to be due, including interest at the rate of twelve percentum (12%) per |
15 | annum from the date of the underpayment to the date of payment, and may direct payment of |
16 | reasonable attorney's fees and costs to the complaining party. |
17 | (b) In addition to directing payment of wages or supplements including interest found to |
18 | be due, the order shall also require payment of a further sum as a civil penalty in an amount up to |
19 | three times the total amount found to be due. Further, if the amount of salary owed to an employee |
20 | pursuant to this chapter but not paid to the employee in violation of thereof exceeds five thousand |
21 | dollars ($5,000), it shall constitute a misdemeanor and shall be referred to the office of the attorney |
22 | general. The misdemeanor shall be punishable for a period of not more than one year in prison |
23 | and/or fined not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000). In assessing the amount of the penalty, |
24 | due consideration shall be given to the size of the employer's business, the good faith of the |
25 | employer, the gravity of the violation, the history of previous violations, and the failure to comply |
26 | with recordkeeping or other nonwage requirements. The surety of the person, firm, or corporation |
27 | found to be in violation of the provisions of this chapter shall be bound to pay any penalties assessed |
28 | on such person, firm, or corporation. The penalty shall be paid to the department of labor and |
29 | training for deposit in the state treasury; provided, however, it is hereby provided that the general |
30 | treasurer shall establish a dedicated "prevailing wages enforcement fund" for the purpose of |
31 | depositing the penalties paid as provided herein. There is hereby appropriated to the annual budget |
32 | of the department of labor and training the amount of the fund collected annually under this section, |
33 | to be used at the direction of the director of labor and training for the sole purpose of enforcing |
34 | prevailing wage rates as provided in this chapter. |
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1 | (c) For the purposes of this chapter, each day or part thereof of violation of any provision |
2 | of this chapter by a person, firm, or corporation, whether the violation is continuous or intermittent, |
3 | shall constitute a separate and succeeding violation. |
4 | (d) In addition to the above, any person, firm, or corporation found in violation of any of |
5 | the provisions of this chapter by the director of labor and training, an awarding authority, or the |
6 | hearing officer, shall be ineligible to bid on, or be awarded work by, an awarding authority or |
7 | perform any such work for a period of no less than eighteen (18) months and no more than thirty- |
8 | six (36) months from the date of the order entered by the hearing officer. Once a person, firm, or |
9 | corporation is found to be in violation of this chapter, all pending bids with any awarding authority |
10 | shall be revoked, and any bid awarded by an awarding authority prior to the commencement of the |
11 | work shall also be revoked. |
12 | (e) In addition to the above, any person, firm, or corporation found to have committed two |
13 | (2) or more willful violations in any period of eighteen (18) months of any of the provisions of this |
14 | chapter by the hearing officer, which violations are not arising from the same incident, shall be |
15 | ineligible to bid on, or be awarded work by, an awarding authority or perform any work for a period |
16 | of sixty (60) months from the date of the second violation. |
17 | (f) The order of the hearing officer shall remain in full force and effect unless stayed by |
18 | order of the superior court. |
19 | (g) The director of labor and training, awarding authority, or hearing officer shall notify |
20 | the bonding company of any person, firm, or corporation suspected of violating any section of this |
21 | chapter. The notice shall be mailed certified mail and shall enumerate the alleged violations being |
22 | investigated. |
23 | (h) In addition to the above, any person, firm, or corporation found to have willfully made |
24 | a false or fraudulent representation on certified payroll records or in reporting their apprenticeship |
25 | information to any government agency shall be referred to the office of the attorney general. A first |
26 | violation of this section shall be considered a misdemeanor and shall be punishable for a period of |
27 | not more than one year in prison and/or fined one thousand dollars ($1,000). A second or |
28 | subsequent violation of this section shall be considered a felony and shall be punishable for a period |
29 | of not more than three (3) years imprisonment, a fine of three thousand dollars ($3,000), or both. |
30 | Further, any person, firm, or corporation found to have willfully made a false or fraudulent |
31 | representation on certified payroll records or in reporting their apprenticeship information to any |
32 | government agency shall be required to pay a civil penalty to the department of labor and training |
33 | in an amount of no less than two thousand dollars ($2,000) and not greater than fifteen thousand |
34 | dollars ($15,000) per representation. |
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1 | SECTION 3. Chapter 37-13 of the General Laws entitled "Labor and Payment of Debts by |
2 | Contractors" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
3 | 37-13-3.3. Public school construction contract apprenticeship requirements. |
4 | (a) Notwithstanding any laws to the contrary, all specifications in any invitations to bid on |
5 | any school construction contract valued at five million dollars ($5,000,000) or more shall include |
6 | a requirement that all bidders responding to an invitation to bid on a school construction contract |
7 | shall have an approved apprenticeship program for all apprenticable crafts or trades that will be |
8 | employed on the project at the time of bid. All bidders responding to such invitation to bid shall |
9 | also provide proof in the bid package of the existence of an approved apprenticeship program for |
10 | all crafts or trades that will be employed on the project by all contractors and subcontractors needed |
11 | for the project. All general contractors and subcontractors who perform work on any school |
12 | construction contract valued at five million dollars ($5,000,000) or more that is awarded after the |
13 | effective date of this chapter shall ensure that no less than ten percent (10%), but with a goal of at |
14 | least fifteen percent (15%), of the labor hours worked on the project shall be performed by |
15 | apprentices for all apprenticable crafts or trades that will be employed on the project. The provisions |
16 | of the section shall only apply to contractors and subcontractors with five (5) or more employees. |
17 | (b) The ten percent (10%) apprenticeship requirement shall be applied per month. |
18 | (c) All bids for such school construction contracts valued at five million dollars |
19 | ($5,000,000) or more must fully comply with the intent and purpose of existing state law provisions |
20 | requiring the use of qualified, responsible bidders pursuant to § 45-55-5, including the criteria that |
21 | invitation for such bids shall reference this chapter when enumerating the objective measurable |
22 | criteria that will be used to make awards, as required by§ 45-55-5 (b). |
23 | (d) Upon petition by a contractor in writing, a user agency may lower the ten percent (10%) |
24 | apprenticeship requirement of this section for a specific project for one or more crafts or trades for |
25 | the following reasons: |
26 | (1) The demonstrated lack of availability of apprentices and/or lack of apprentice programs |
27 | in specific geographic areas; or |
28 | (2) Participating contractors have demonstrated a good faith effort to comply with the |
29 | requirements of this section but have not been able to attain the ten percent (10%) requirement. |
30 | (e) Any determination by a user agency to lower the apprenticeship requirements according |
31 | to this subsection shall be provided in writing, to the contractor and to the state department of labor |
32 | and training. |
33 | (f) The state department of labor and training shall provide information and technical |
34 | assistance to any affected user agencies and contractors awarded any school construction contracts |
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1 | relative to their obligations under this chapter. |
2 | (g) Any contractor or subcontractor awarded a school construction contract shall collect |
3 | and submit the following data for each project covered by this section to the user agency on certified |
4 | payroll forms, as required by § 37-13-13: |
5 | (1) The name and dollar value of the project being worked on; |
6 | (2) The name of each apprentice, categorized by trade or craft; each apprentice's |
7 | registration number; the name and address of each apprentice's approved apprenticeship program; |
8 | and the number of hours each apprentice has worked on the project for each month being reported; |
9 | (3) The name of each journey level worker, categorized by trade or craft, and the number |
10 | of hours each has worked on the project for each month being reported; and |
11 | (4) If applicable, the number, type, and rationale for the exceptions granted. |
12 | (h) Upon receiving the data from any contractor or subcontractor awarded a school |
13 | construction contract, the user agency shall provide the department of administration with said data. |
14 | The department of administration shall develop procedures for using and comparing said data and |
15 | shall annually publish a report with aggregate data related to apprenticeships. |
16 | (i) Upon receiving the data from any contractor or subcontractor awarded a school |
17 | construction project, the user agency shall provide the department of administration and the |
18 | department of labor and training with said data. The department of administration shall develop |
19 | procedures for using and comparing said data and shall annually publish a report with aggregate |
20 | data related to apprenticeships. |
21 | (j) The user agency shall withhold the next scheduled payment to any contractor or |
22 | subcontractor who does not submit the information required by the provisions of this section and |
23 | shall also notify the director of labor and training of the contractor's noncompliance. The user |
24 | agency shall withhold final payment until all of the information requested by the provisions of this |
25 | section have been provided. |
26 | (k) The department of labor and training may also impose a penalty of up to five hundred |
27 | dollars ($500) for each calendar day that any contractor or subcontractor does not comply with the |
28 | requirement to submit data pursuant to the provisions of this section, as determined by the director |
29 | of the department of labor and training. Such penalty shall be paid by the contractor or |
30 | subcontractor to the department of labor and training. Mere errors and inadvertent omissions shall |
31 | not be grounds for imposing a penalty under this section. The severity of any penalties shall be |
32 | based on the facts and circumstances involved in the violation including whether there are reports |
33 | or multiple violations and/or willful conduct. |
34 | (l) All penalties assessed pursuant to the provisions of this section shall be paid to the |
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1 | department of labor and training's dedicated "prevailing wage enforcement fund" and be deposited |
2 | in a restricted receipt account. |
3 | (m) Failure of the contractors and subcontractors required to utilize apprentices or be |
4 | exempted shall be considered a material breach of their school construction contract, and they shall |
5 | be subject to any and all applicable penalties under their contract with the user agency. |
6 | (n) Any contractor or subcontractor aggrieved by any action taken by the director of the |
7 | department of labor and training or the director's designated hearing officer, pursuant to the |
8 | provisions of chapter 13 of title 37, may obtain a review thereof for the purpose of obtaining relief |
9 | from the action or lack of action pursuant to§ 37-13-15. |
10 | (o) To the extent that any of the provisions contained in this chapter conflict with the |
11 | requirements for federal aid contracts, federal law and regulations shall control. |
12 | SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage and shall be effective for all contracts |
13 | entered into on and after July 1, 2022. |
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LC003686 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO PUBLIC PROPERTY AND WORKS -- LABOR AND PAYMENT OF DEBTS | |
BY CONTRACTORS | |
*** | |
1 | This act would require that bidders on public school construction contracts valued at five |
2 | million dollars ($5,000,000) or more must have an apprenticeship program that complies with the |
3 | provisions of this act. This act would also provide that any entity with an apprenticeship program |
4 | shall truthfully report information regarding the program to the department of labor and training |
5 | (DLT). |
6 | This act would take effect upon passage and would be effective for all contracts entered |
7 | into on and after July 1, 2022. |
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LC003686 | |
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